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The Fog
Out of the lamp-bestarred and clouded dusk -Snaring, illuding, concealing,Magically conjuring -Turning to fairy-coachesBeetle-backed limousinesScampering under the great Arch -Making a decoy of blue overallsAnd mystery of a scarlet shawl -Indolently -Knowing no impediment of its sure advance -Descends the fog.
Lola Ridge
Sunstroke
Oh, straight, white road that runs to meet, Across green fields, the blue green sea,You knew the little weary feet Of my child bride that was to be!Her people brought her from the shore One golden day in sultry June,And I stood, waiting, at the door, Praying my eyes might see her soon.With eager arms, wide open thrown, Now never to be satisfied!Ere I could make my love my own She closed her amber eyes and died.Alas! alas! they took no heed How frail she was, my little one,But brought her here with cruel speed Beneath the fierce, relentless sun.We laid her on the marriage bed The bridal flowers in her hand,A maiden from the ocean led Only, alas! to die inland.I w...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
"Have You Got A Brook In Your Little Heart,"
Have you got a brook in your little heart,Where bashful flowers blow,And blushing birds go down to drink,And shadows tremble so?And nobody knows, so still it flows,That any brook is there;And yet your little draught of lifeIs daily drunken there.Then look out for the little brook in March,When the rivers overflow,And the snows come hurrying from the hills,And the bridges often go.And later, in August it may be,When the meadows parching lie,Beware, lest this little brook of lifeSome burning noon go dry!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Spring.
I am coming, I am coming, With my carpet soft and green;I have spread it o'er the common, And a prettier ne'er was seen.Soon I'll spangle it with clover, And the dandelions bright;You shall pick them in your aprons, Yellow, red, and snowy white.I am coming, and the tree-tops, That all winter were so bare,You shall see, with small leaves covered, Wave their branches in the air.I am coming! Little children, Can you tell me who am I?If not, you will soon remember, For I'm just now passing by.
H. P. Nichols
Till All the Bad Things Came Untrue
By blacksoil plains burned grey with droughtWhere desert shrubs and grasses grow,Along the Land of Furthest OutThat only Overlanders know.I dreamed I camped on river grassIn bends where river timber grew,I dreamed, I dreamed the days to passTill all the bad things came untrue.I dreamed that I was young again,But was not young as I had been,My path through life seemed fair and plain,My sight and hearing clear and keen.No longer bent nor lined and grey,I met and loved and worshipped you,I dreamed, I dreamed the days awayTill all the sad things came untrue.I dreamed a home of freestone stoodWith toned tiled roofs as roofs should be,By cliff and fall and beach and woodWith wide verandahs to the sea.I dreamed a ha...
Henry Lawson
On The Sight Of Spring.
How sweet it us'd to be, when April firstUnclos'd the arum-leaves, and into viewIts ear-like spindling flowers their cases burst,Beting'd with yellowish white or lushy hue:Though manhood now with such has small to do,Yet I remember what delight was mineWhen on my Sunday walks I us'd to go,Flower-gathering tribes in childish bliss to join;Peeping and searching hedge-row side or woods,When thorns stain green with slow unclosing buds.Ah, how delighted, humming on the timeSome nameless song or tale, I sought the flowers;Some rushy dyke to jump, or brink to climb,Ere I obtain'd them; while from hasty showersOft under trees we nestled in a ring,Culling our "lords and ladies."--O ye hours!I never see the broad-leav'd arum springStained with spot...
John Clare
Rugby Chapel
Coldly, sadly descendsThe autumn-evening. The fieldStrewn with its dank yellow driftsOf wither'd leaves, and the elms,Fade into dimness apace,Silent; hardly a shoutFrom a few boys late at their play!The lights come out in the street,In the school-room windows; but cold,Solemn, unlighted, austere,Through the gathering darkness, ariseThe chapel-walls, in whose boundThou, my father! art laid.There thou dost lie, in the gloomOf the autumn evening. But ah!That word, gloom, to my mindBrings thee back, in the lightOf thy radiant vigour, again;In the gloom of November we pass'dDays not dark at thy side;Seasons impair'd not the rayOf thy buoyant cheerfulness clear.Such thou wast! and I standIn the autumn e...
Matthew Arnold
Memory Of Sun
Memory of sun seeps from the heart.Grass grows yellower.Faintly if at all the early snowflakesHover, hover.Water becoming ice is slowing inThe narrow channels.Nothing at all will happen here again,Will ever happen.Against the sky the willow spreads a fanThe silk's torn off.Maybe it's better I did not becomeYour wife.Memory of sun seeps from the heart.What is it? -- Dark?Perhaps! Winter will have occupied usIn the night.
Anna Akhmatova
The Portrait
I watch you, gazing at me from the wall,And wonder how you'd match your dreams with mine,If, mastering time's illusion, I could callYou back to share this quiet candle-shine.For you were young, three hundred years ago;And by your looks I guess that you were wise ...Come, whisper soft, and Death will never knowYou've slipped away from those calm, painted eyes.Strange is your voice ... Poor ninny, dead so long,And all your pride forgotten like your name.'One April morn I heard a blackbird's song.And joy was in my heart like leaves aflame.'And so you died before your songs took wing;While Andrew Marvell followed in your wake.'Love thrilled me into music. I could singBut for a moment, - but for beauty's sake.'W...
Siegfried Sassoon
Wandered
The wind blows shrill along the hill,--Black is the night and cold--The sky hangs low with its weight of snow,And the drifts are deep on the wold.But what care I for wind or snow?And what care I for the cold? Oh ... where is my lamb-- My one ewe lamb-- That strayed from the fold?The beasts are safely gathered in,--Black is the night and cold--They are snug and warm, and safe from harm,In stall and byre and fold.And the dogs and I, by the blazing fire,Care nought for the snow and the cold. Oh ... where is my lamb-- My one ewe lamb-- That strayed from the fold?The barns are bursting with their storeOf grain like yellow gold;A full, fat year h...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Inspiration
Noonday upon the Alpine meadowsPours its avalanche of LightAnd blazing flowers: the very shadowsTranslucent are and bright.It seems a glory that nought surpasses--Passion of angels in form and hue--When, lo! from the jewelled heaven of the grassesLeaps a lightning of sudden blue.Dimming the sun-drunk petals,Bright even unto pain,The grasshopper flashes, settles,And then is quenched again.
Aldous Leonard Huxley
In Memory Of John And Robert Ware
No mystic charm, no mortal art,Can bid our loved companions stay;The bands that clasp them to our heartSnap in death's frost and fall apart;Like shadows fading with the day,They pass away.The young are stricken in their pride,The old, long tottering, faint and fall;Master and scholar, side by side,Through the dark portals silent glide,That open in life's mouldering wallAnd close on all.Our friend's, our teacher's task was done,When Mercy called him from on high;A little cloud had dimmed the sun,The saddening hours had just begun,And darker days were drawing nigh:'T was time to die.A whiter soul, a fairer mind,A life with purer course and aim,A gentler eye, a voice more kind,We may not look on eart...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Home.
A spirit is out to-night!His steeds are the winds; oh, list,How he madly sweeps o'er the clouds,And scatters the driving mist.We will let the curtains fallBetween us and the storm;Wheel the sofa up to the hearth,Where the fire is glowing warm.Little student, leave your book,And come and sit by my side;If you dote on Tennyson so,I'll be jealous of him, my bride.There, now I can call you my own!Let me push back the curls from your brow,And look in your dark eyes and seeWhat my bird is thinking of now.Is she thinking of some high perchOf freedom, and lofty flight?You smile; oh, little wild bird,You are hopelessly bound to-night!You are bound with a golden ring,And your captor, like some g...
Marietta Holley
Spring And Autumn.
Every season hath its pleasures; Spring may boast her flowery prime,Yet the vineyard's ruby treasures Brighten Autumn's soberer time.So Life's year begins and closes; Days tho' shortening still can shine;What tho' youth gave love and roses, Age still leaves us friends and wine.Phillis, when she might have caught me, All the Spring looked coy and shy,Yet herself in Autumn sought me, When the flowers were all gone by.Ah, too late;--she found her lover Calm and free beneath his vine,Drinking to the Spring-time over, In his best autumnal wine.Thus may we, as years are flying, To their flight our pleasures suit,Nor regret the blossoms dying, While we still may taste the fruit,Oh, whil...
Thomas Moore
The Last Word
Before the April night was lateA rider came to the castle gate;A rider breathing human breath,But the words he spoke were the words of Death."Greet you well from the King our lord,He marches hot for the eastward ford;Living or dying, all or one,Ye must keep the ford till the race be run.Sir Alain rose with lips that smiled,He kissed his wife, he kissed his child:Before the April night was lateSir Alain rode from the castle gate.He called his men-at-arms by name,But one there was uncalled that came:He bade his troop behind him ride,But there was one that rode beside. "Why will you spur so fast to die? Be wiser ere the night go by. A message late is a message lost; For all your...
Henry John Newbolt
Epitaph X. On Mr Elijah Fenton,[1] At Easthamstead, In Berks, 1730.
This modest stone, what few vain marbles can,May truly say, Here lies an honest man:A poet, blest beyond the poet's fate,Whom Heaven kept sacred from the proud and great:Foe to loud praise, and friend to learned ease,Content with science in the vale of peace.Calmly he look'd on either life, and hereSaw nothing to regret, or there to fear;From Nature's temperate feast rose satisfied,Thank'd Heaven that he had lived, and that he died.
Alexander Pope
Cardinal Bembo's Epitaph On Raphael
Here's one in whom Nature feared - faint at such vying -Eclipse while he lived, and decease at his dying.
Thomas Hardy
Sic Semper Liberatoribus!
March 13, 1881.As one who feels the breathless nightmare gripHis heart-strings, and through visioned horrors fares,Now on a thin-ledged chasm's rock-crumbling lip,Now on a tottering pinnacle that dareThe front of heaven, while always unawaresWeird monsters start above, around, beneath,Each glaring from some uglier mask of death,So the White Czar imperial progress madeThrough terror-haunted days. A shock, a cryWhose echoes ring the globe - the spectre's laid.Hurled o'er the abyss, see the crowned martyr lieResting in peace - fear, change, and death gone by.Fit end for nightmare - mist of blood and tears,Red climax to the slow, abortive years.The world draws breath - one long, deep-shuddering sigh,At that whic...
Emma Lazarus