Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 359 of 525
Previous
Next
The Little Go-Cart
It was long, long ago that a soul like a flowerUnfolded, and blossomed, and passed in an hour.It was long, long ago; and the memory seemsLike the pleasures and sorrows that come in our dreams.The kind years have crowned me with many a joySince the going away of my wee little boy;Each one as it passed me has stooped with a kiss,And left some delight - knowing one thing I miss.But when in the park or the street, all elateA baby I see in his carriage of state,As proud as a king, in his little go-cart -I feel all the mother-love stir in my heart!And I seem to be back in that long-vanished May;And the baby, who came but to hurry awayIn the little white hearse, is not dead, but alive,And out in his little go-cart for a drive.I...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Inconsistent
I say, "She was as good as fair,"When standing by her mound;"Such passing sweetness," I declare,"No longer treads the ground."I say, "What living Love can catchHer bloom and bonhomie,And what in newer maidens matchHer olden warmth to me!"- There stands within yon vestry-nookWhere bonded lovers sign,Her name upon a faded bookWith one that is not mine.To him she breathed the tender vowShe once had breathed to me,But yet I say, "O love, even nowWould I had died for thee!"
Thomas Hardy
Little Florence Gray
I was in Greece. It was the hour of noon,And the Ægean wind had dropped asleepUpon Hymettus, and the thymy islesOf Salamis and Ægina lay hungLike clouds upon the bright and breathless sea.I had climbed up th Acropolis at morn,And hours had fled as time will in a dreamAmid its deathless ruins, for the airIs full of spirits in these mighty fanes,And they walk with you! As it sultrier grew,I laid me down within a shadow deepOf a tall column of the Parthenon,And in an absent idleness of thoughtI scrawled upon the smooth and marble base.Tell me, O memory, what wrote I there?The name of a sweet child I knew at Rome!I was in Asia. Twas a peerless nightUpon the plains of Sardis, and the moon,Touching my eyelids through the wind-stir...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
A Paraphrase, By Dr. I.W.
Why, Mistress Chloe, do you botherWith prattlings and with vain adoYour worthy and industrious mother,Eschewing them that come to woo?Oh, that the awful truth might quickenThis stern conviction to your breast:You are no longer now a chickenToo young to quit the parent nest.So put aside your froward carriage,And fix your thoughts, whilst yet there's time,Upon the righteousness of marriageWith some such godly man as I'm.
Eugene Field
At The Gill-Nets
Tug at the net,Haul at the net,Strip off the quivering fish;Hid in the mistThe winds whist,Is like my heart's wish.What is your wish,Your heart's wish?Is it for home on the hills?Strip off the fish,The silver fish,Caught by their rosy gills.How can I know,I love you so,Each little thought I getIs held so,It dies you know,Caught in your heart's net.Tug at your net,Your heart's net,Strip off my silver fancies;Keep them in rhyme,For a dull time,Fragile as frost pansies.
Duncan Campbell Scott
To A Red-Haired Beggar Girl
Pale girl with russet hair,Tatters in what you wearShow us your povertyAnd your beauty,For me, poor poet, inThe frail and freckled skinOf your young fleshIs a sweetness.You move in shoes of woodMore gallantly than couldA velvet-buskined QueenPlaying a scene;In place of rags for clothesLet a majestic robeTrail in its bustling pleatsDown to your feet;Behind the holes in seamsLet a gold dagger gleamLaid for the roue's eyeAlong your thigh;Let loosened ribbons, then,Unveil us for our sinsTwo breasts as undisguisedAnd bright as eyes;As for your other charms,Let your resistant armsFrustrate with saucy blowsThe groping rogues;Pearls of a lu...
Charles Baudelaire
The Confession.
I am glad that you have come, Arthur, from the dusty town;You must throw aside your cares, And relax your legal frown.Coke and Littleton, avaunt! You have ruled him through the day;In this quiet, sylvan haunt, Be content to yield your sway.It is pleasant, is it not, Sitting here beneath the trees,While the restless wind above Ripples over leafy seas?Often, when the twilight falls, In the shadow, quite alone,I have sat till starlight came, Listening to its monotone.Yet not always quite alone,-- Brother, let me take the placeJust behind you now the moon Shines no longer in my face.It is near two months ago Since I met him, as I think,By God's mercy, when my hor...
Horatio Alger, Jr.
Strike The Chords Softly
Strike the chords softly with tremulous fingers, While, on the threshold of happiest years,For a brief moment fond memory lingers, Ere we go forth to life's conflicts and fears!Strike the chords softly! - yet no, as we tarry, Swiftly the morning is gliding away;Weary ones droop 'neath the burdens they carry, Toiling ones faint in the heat of the day.Let us not linger! - Earth's millions are crying "Come to us, aid us, we grope in the night!Come to us, aid us, we're perishing, dying - Give us, oh, give us, the heavenly Light!"Let us not linger! - our brethren are calling, - "Aid us, the harvest increases each day; -Some have grown weary, alas, of their toiling! - Others have passed from their labors away."
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
The Youth And The Millstream.
YOUTH.Say, sparkling streamlet, whither thouArt going!With joyous mien thy waters nowAre flowing.Why seek the vale so hastily?Attend for once, and answer me!MILLSTREAM.Oh youth, I was a brook indeed;But latelyMy bed they've deepen'd, and my speedSwell'd greatly,That I may haste to yonder mill.And so I'm full and never still.YOUTH.The mill thou seekest in a moodContented,And know'st not how my youthful blood'S tormented.But doth the miller's daughter fairGaze often on thee kindly there?MILLSTREAM.She opes the shutters soon as lightIs gleaming;And comes to bathe her features brightAnd beaming.So ful...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Sweethearts Wait On Every Shore
She sits beside the tinted tide,Thats reddened by the tortured sand;And through the East, to ocean wide,A vessel sails from sight of land.But she will wait and watch in vain,For it is said in Cupids lore,That he who loved will love again,And sweethearts wait on every shore.
Henry Lawson
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LVI.
L' aura e l' odore e 'l refrigerio e l' ombra.HER OWN VIRTUES IMMORTALISE HER IN HEAVEN, AND HIS PRAISES ON EARTH. The air and scent, the comfort and the shadeOf my sweet laurel, and its flowery sight,That to my weary life gave rest and light,Death, spoiler of the world, has lowly laid.As when the moon our sun's eclipse has made,My lofty light has vanish'd so in night;For aid against himself I Death invite;With thoughts so dark does Love my breast invade.Thou didst but sleep, bright lady, a brief sleep,In bliss amid the chosen spirits to wake,Who gaze upon their God, distinct and near:And if my verse shall any value keep,Preserved and praised 'mid noble minds to makeThy name, its memory shall be deathless here....
Francesco Petrarca
The City
The Sun hung like a red balloon As if he would not rise; For listless Helios drowsed and yawned. He cared not whether the morning dawned, The brother of Eos and the Moon Stretched him and rubbed his eyes. He would have dreamed the dream again That found him under sea: He saw Zeus sit by Hera's side, He saw Hæphestos with his bride; He traced from Enna's flowery plain The child Persephone. There was a time when heaven's vault Cracked like a temple's roof. A new hierarchy burst its shell, And as the sapphire ceiling fell, From stern Jehovah's mad assault, Vast spaces stretched aloof: Great blue black depths of frozen air Engulfed the soul of Zeus.
Edgar Lee Masters
The Fortune-Favored. [53]
Ah! happy he, upon whose birth each godLooks down in love, whose earliest sleep the brightIdalia cradles, whose young lips the rodOf eloquent Hermes kindles to whose eyes,Scarce wakened yet, Apollo steals in light,While on imperial brows Jove sets the seal of might!Godlike the lot ordained for him to share,He wins the garland ere he runs the race;He learns life's wisdom ere he knows life's care,And, without labor vanquished, smiles the grace.Great is the man, I grant, whose strength of mind,Self-shapes its objects and subdues the fatesVirtue subdues the fates, but cannot blindThe fickle happiness, whose smile awaitsThose who scarce seek it; nor can courage earnWhat the grace showers not from her own free urn!From aught unworthy, the determined ...
Friedrich Schiller
To A Picture Of Eleanor Duse
Was ever any face like this before,So light a veiling for the soul within,So pure and yet so pitiful for sin?They say the soul will pass the Heavy Door,And yearning upward, learn creation's lore,The body buried 'neath the earthly din.But thine shall live forever, it hath beenSo near the soul, and shall be evermore.Oh eyes that see so far thro' misted tears,Oh Death, behold, these eyes can never die!Yea, tho' your kiss shall rob these lips of breath,Their faint, sad smile will still elude thee, Death.Behold the perfect flower this neck uprears,And bow thy head and pass the wonder by.
Sara Teasdale
Chiarascuro: Rose
HeFill your bowl with roses: the bowl, too, have of crystal.Sit at the western window. Take the sunBetween your hands like a ball of flaming crystal,Poise it to let it fall, but hold it still,And meditate on the beauty of your existence;The beauty of this, that you exist at all.SheThe sun goes down, but without lamentation.I close my eyes, and the stream of my sensationIn this, at least, grows clear to me:Beauty is a word that has no meaning.Beauty is naught to me.HeThe last blurred raindrops fall from the half-clear sky,Eddying lightly, rose-tinged, in the windless wake of the sun.The swallow ascending against cold waves of cloudSeems winging upward over huge bleak stairs of stone.The raindrop finds...
Conrad Aiken
Ther's Much Expected.
Life's pathway is full o' deep ruts,An we mun tak gooid heed lest we stumble;Man is made up of "ifs" and of "buts,"It seems pairt ov his natur to grumble.But if we'd all anxiously takTo makkin things smooth as we're able,Ther'd be monny a better clooath'd back,An' monny a better spread table.It's a sad state o' things when a manCannot put ony faith in his brother,An fancies he'll chait if he can,An rejoice ovver th' fall ov another.An it's sad when yo see some at standHigh in social position an power,To know at ther fortuns wor plann'd,An built, aght oth' wrecks o' those lower.It's sad to see luxury rife,An fortuns being thowtlessly wasted;While others are wearin out life,With the furst drops o' pleasur...
John Hartley
To A Friend Who Sent Me A Box Of Violets
Nay, more than violetsThese thoughts of thine, friend!Rather thy reedy brook--Taw's tributary--At midnight murmuring,Descried them, the delicateDark-eyed goddesses,There by his cressy bedDissolved and dreamingDreams that distilled into dewAll the purple of night,All the shine of a planet.Whereat he whispered;And they arising--Of day's forget-me-notsThe duskier sisters--Descended, relinquishedThe orchard, the trout-pool,Torridge and Tamar,The Druid circles,Sheepfolds of Dartmoor,Granite and sandstone;By Roughtor, Dozmare,Down the vale of the FoweyMoving in silence,Brushing the nightshadeBy bridges cyclopean,By Trevenna, Treverbyn,Lawharne and Largin,By Glyn...
Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
Written Upon Receiving A New Year's Gift.
I have a little Grandchild dear,Who sends to me on each new year A valuable present:Not costly gift from store-house bought,But one that her own hands have wrought, Therefore to me more pleasant.Accept, dear child, the wish sincere,For you much happiness this year, And length of days be given;Here may you act well your part,Serving the Lord with all your heart, And find your rest in heaven.Jan. 1852.
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow