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A New Year's Eve
Christina Rossetti died December 29, 1894The stars are strong in the deeps of the lustrous night,Cold and splendid as death if his dawn be bright;Cold as the cast-off garb that is cold as clay,Splendid and strong as a spirit intense as light.A soul more sweet than the morning of new-born MayHas passed with the year that has passed from the world away.A song more sweet than the morning's first-born songAgain will hymn not among us a new year's day.Not here, not here shall the carol of joy grown strongRing rapture now, and uplift us, a spell-struck throng,From dream to vision of life that the soul may seeBy death's grace only, if death do its trust no wrong.Scarce yet the days and the starry nights are threeSince here among us a spirit abo...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Poem For The Dedication Of The Fountain At Stratford-On-Avon, Presented By George W. Childs, Of Philadelphia
Welcome, thrice welcome is thy silvery gleam,Thou long-imprisoned stream!Welcome the tinkle of thy crystal beadsAs plashing raindrops to the flowery meads,As summer's breath to Avon's whispering reeds!From rock-walled channels, drowned in rayless night,Leap forth to life and light;Wake from the darkness of thy troubled dream,And greet with answering smile the morning's beam!No purer lymph the white-limbed Naiad knowsThan from thy chalice flows;Not the bright spring of Afric's sunny shores,Starry with spangles washed from golden ores,Nor glassy stream Bandusia's fountain pours,Nor wave translucent where Sabrina fairBraids her loose-flowing hair,Nor the swift current, stainless as it roseWhere chill Arveiron steals from Alpine snows.<...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Friendship
Here's to the four hinges of Friendship -Swearing, Lying, Stealing and Drinking.When you swear, swear by your country;When you lie, lie for a pretty woman,When you steal, steal away from bad companyAnd when you drink, drink with me.
Unknown
A Dream
My dead love came to me, and said, 'God gives me one hour's rest,To spend with thee on earth again: How shall we spend it best?''Why, as of old,' I said; and so We quarrell'd, as of old:But, when I turn'd to make my peace, That one short hour was told.
Stephen Phillips
The White Doe Of Rylstone, Or, The Fate Of The Nortons - Canto First
From Bolton's old monastic towerThe bells ring loud with gladsome power;The sun shines bright; the fields are gayWith people in their best arrayOf stole and doublet, hood and scarf,Along the banks of crystal Wharf,Through the Vale retired and lowly,Trooping to that summons holy.And, up among the moorlands, seeWhat sprinklings of blithe company!Of lasses and of shepherd grooms,That down the steep hills force their way,Like cattle through the budded brooms;Path, or no path, what care they?And thus in joyous mood they hieTo Bolton's mouldering Priory.What would they there? Full fifty yearsThat sumptuous Pile, with all its peers,Too harshly hath been doomed to tasteThe bitterness of wrong and waste:Its courts are ravaged; bu...
William Wordsworth
The Servant Girl Justified
BOCCACE alone is not my only source;T'another shop I now shall have recourse;Though, certainly, this famed Italian witHas many stories for my purpose fit.But since of diff'rent dishes we should taste;Upon an ancient work my hands I've placed;Where full a hundred narratives are told,And various characters we may behold;From life, Navarre's fair queen the fact relates;My story int'rest in her page creates;Beyond dispute from her we always find,Simplicity with striking art combin'd.Yet, whether 'tis the queen who writes, or not;I shall, as usual, here and there allotWhate'er additions requisite appear;Without such license I'd not persevere,But quit, at once, narrations of the sort;Some may be long, though others are too short.LET...
Jean de La Fontaine
So Proud She Was To Die
So proud she was to dieIt made us all ashamedThat what we cherished, so unknownTo her desire seemed.So satisfied to goWhere none of us should be,Immediately, that anguish stoopedAlmost to jealousy.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
The Little Old Women
for Victor HugoI.In sinuous coils of the old capitalsWhere even horror weaves a magic spell,Gripped by my fatal humours, I observeSingular beings with appalling charms.These dislocated wrecks were women once,Were Eponine or Lais! hunchbacked freaks,Though broken let us love them! they are souls.Under cold rags, their shredded petticoats,They creep, lashed by the merciless north wind,Quake from the riot of an omnibus,Clasp by their sides like relics of a saintEmbroidered bags of flowery design;They toddle, every bit like marionettes,Or drag themselves like wounded animals,Or dance against their will, poor little bellsThat a remorseless demon rings! Worn outThey are, yet they have eyes piercing like...
Charles Baudelaire
Lamentin' An Repentin'.
Awst be better when spring comes, aw think,But aw feel varry sickly an waik,Awve noa relish for mait nor for drink,An awm ommost too weary to laik.What's to come on us all aw can't tell,For we havn't a shillin put by;Ther's nowt left to pop nor to sell,An aw cannot get trust if aw try.My wife has to turn aght to wark,An th' little uns all do a share;An they're tewin throo dayleet to dark,To keep me sittin here i' mi chair.It doesn't luk long sin that dayWhen Bessy wor stood bi mi side;An shoo promised to love an obey,An me to protect an provide.Shoo wor th' bonniest lass i' all th' taan,An fowk sed as they saw us that day,When we coom aght o' th' church, arm i' arm,Shoo wor throwin' hersen reight away.<...
John Hartley
Dooant Forget the Old Fowks.
Dooant forget the old fowks, -They've done a lot for thee;Remember tha'd a mother once,Who nursed thi on her knee.A father too, who tew'd all dayTo mak thi what tha art,An dooant forget tha owes a debt,An strive to pay a part.Just think ha helpless once tha wor, -A tiny little tot;But tha wor given th' cosiest nookI' all that little cot.Thy ivvery want wor tended to,An soothed thy ivvery pain,They didn't spare love, toil or care,An they'd do it o'er ageean.An all they crave for what they gave,Is just a kindly word; -A fond "God bless yo parents,"Wod be th' sweetest saand they've heard.Then dooant forget the old fowks, &c.Tha's entered into business nah, -Tha'rt dooin pratty weel;Th...
Sonnet To ----.
Ay, thou art for the grave; thy glances shineToo brightly to shine long; another SpringShall deck her for men's eyes, but not for thine,Sealed in a sleep which knows no wakening.The fields for thee have no medicinal leaf,And the vexed ore no mineral of power;And they who love thee wait in anxious griefTill the slow plague shall bring the fatal hour.Glide softly to thy rest then; Death should comeGently, to one of gentle mould like thee,As light winds wandering through groves of bloomDetach the delicate blossom from the tree.Close thy sweet eyes, calmly, and without pain;And we will trust in God to see thee yet again.
William Cullen Bryant
To Carmen Sylva.
Oh, that the golden lyre divineWhence David smote flame-tones were mine!Oh, that the silent harp which hung Untuned, unstrung,Upon the willows by the river,Would throb beneath my touch and quiverWith the old song-enchanted spell Of Israel!Oh, that the large prophetic VoiceWould make my reed-piped throat its choice!All ears should prick, all hearts should spring, To hear me singThe burden of the isles, the wordAssyria knew, Damascus heard,When, like the wind, while cedars shake, Isaiah spake.For I would frame a song to-dayWinged like a bird to cleave its wayO'er land and sea that spread between, To where a QueenSits with a triple coronet.Genius and Sorrow both have setThe...
Emma Lazarus
Voyaging
for Maxime du CampI.The wide-eyed child in love with maps and plansFinds the world equal to his appetite.How grand the universe by light of lamps,How petty in the memory's clear sight.One day we leave, with fire in the brain,Heart great with rancour, bitter in its mood;Outward we travel on the rolling main,Lulling infinity in finitude:Some gladly flee their homelands gripped in vice,Some, horrors of their childhood, others stillAstrologers lost in a woman's eyesSome perfumed Circe with a tyrant's will.Not to become a beast, each desperate oneMakes himself drunk on space and blazing skies;The gnawing ice, the copper-burning sunEfface the scars of kisses and of lies.But the true voyagers set out to ...
Malay Song
The Stars await, serene and white, The unarisen moon;Oh, come and stay with me to-night, Beside the salt Lagoon!My hut is small, but as you lie, You see the lighted shore,And hear the rippling water sigh Beneath the pile-raised floor.No gift have I of jewels or flowers, My room is poor and bare:But all the silver sea is ours, And all the scented airBlown from the mainland, where there grows Th' "Intriguer of the Night,"The flower that you have named Tube rose, Sweet scented, slim, and white.The flower that, when the air is still And no land breezes blow,From its pale petals can distil A phosphorescent glow.I see your ship at anchor ride; Her "captive li...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
To A Lady Playing The Harp
Thy tones are silver melted into sound,And as I dreamI see no walls around,But seem to hearA gondolierSing sweetly down some slow Venetian stream.Italian skies--that I have never seen--I see above.(Ah, play again, my queen;Thy fingers whiteFly swift and lightAnd weave for me the golden mesh of love.)Oh, thou dusk sorceress of the dusky eyesAnd soft dark hair,'T is thou that mak'st my skiesSo swift to changeTo far and strange:But far and strange, thou still dost make them fair.Now thou dost sing, and I am lost in theeAs one who drownsIn floods of melody.Still in thy artGive me this part,Till perfect love, the love of loving crowns.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Nocturne: In Provence.
The blue night, like an angel, came into the room,--Came through the open window from the silent skyDown trellised stairs of moonlight into the dear roomAs if a whisper breathed of some divine one nigh.The nightingales, like brooks of song in Paradise,Gurgled their serene rapture to the silent sky--Like springs of laughter bubbling up in Paradise,The serene nightingales along the riversidePurled low in every tree their star-cool melodiesOf joy--in every tree along the riverside.Did the vain garments melt in music from your side?Did you rise from them as a lily flowers i' the air?--But you were there before me like the Night's own bride--I dared not call you mine. So still and tall you were,I never dreamed that you were mine--I never dreamedI lo...
Bliss Carman
Dreaming
The moan of a wintry soulMelted into a summer song,And the words, like the wavelet's roll,Moved murmuringly along.And the song flowed far and away,Like the voice of a half-sleeping rill --Each wave of it lit by a ray --But the sound was so soft and so still,And the tone was so gentle and low,None heard the song till it had passed;Till the echo that followed its flowCame dreamingly back from the past.'Twas too late! -- a song never returnsThat passes our pathway unheard;As dust lying dreaming in urnsIs the song lying dead in a word.For the birds of the skies have a nest,And the winds have a home where they sleep,And songs, like our souls, need a rest,Where they murmur the while we may weep. ...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Spring
Now that the winter's gone, the earth hath lostHer snow-white robes, and now no more the frostCandies the grass, or casts an icy creamUpon the silver lake or crystal stream;But the warm sun thaws the benumbed earth,And makes it tender; gives a sacred birthTo the dead swallow; wakes in hollow treeThe drowsy cuckoo, and the humble-bee.Now do a choir of chirping minstrels bringIn triumph to the world the youthful Spring.The valleys, hills, and woods in rich arrayWelcome the coming of the long'd-for May.Now all things smile, only my love doth lour;Nor hath the scalding noonday sun the powerTo melt that marble ice, which still doth holdHer heart congeal'd, and makes her pity cold.The ox, which lately did for shelter flyInto the sta...
Thomas Carew