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A Wife And Another
"War ends, and he's returningEarly; yea,The evening next to-morrow's!" -- This I sayTo her, whom I suspiciously survey,Holding my husband's letterTo her view. -She glanced at it but lightly,And I knewThat one from him that day had reached her too.There was no time for scruple;SecretlyI filched her missive, conned it,Learnt that heWould lodge with her ere he came home to me.To reach the port before her,And, unscanned,There wait to intercept themSoon I planned:That, in her stead, I might before him stand.So purposed, so effected;At the innAssigned, I found her hidden:-O that sinShould bear what she bore when I entered in!Her heavy lids grew ladenWith ...
Thomas Hardy
The Sister's Appeal. A Fragment.
You remember--don't you, brother-- In our early years,The counsels of our poor, dear mother, And her hopes and fears?She told us to love one another-- Brother, dry your tears!We are only two, dear brother, In his babel wide!In the churchyard sleeps poor mother, By our father's side!--Then let us cherish one another Till in death we bide.
George Pope Morris
To The Rising Full Moon.
Wilt thou suddenly enshroud thee,Who this moment wert so nigh?Heavy rising masses cloud thee,Thou art hidden from mine eye.Yet my sadness thou well knowest,Gleaming sweetly as a star!That I'm loved, 'tis thou that showest,Though my loved one may be far.Upward mount then! clearer, milder,Robed in splendour far more bright!Though my heart with grief throbs wilder,Fraught with rapture is the night!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Ave, Soror
I left behind the ways of care, The crowded hurrying hours, I breathed again the woodland air, I plucked the woodland flowers: Bluebells as yet but half awake, Primroses pale and cool, Anemones like stars that shake In a green twilight pool-- On these still lay the enchanted shade, The magic April sun; With my own child a child I strayed And thought the years were one. As through the copse she went and came My senses lost their truth; I called her by the dear dead name That sweetened all my youth.
Henry John Newbolt
An Unmarked Festival
There's a feast undated yet: Both our true lives hold it fast,-The first day we ever met. What a great day came and passed! -Unknown then, but known at last.And we met: You knew not me, Mistress of your joys and fears;Held my hands that held the key Of the treasure of your years, Of the fountain of your tears.For you knew not it was I, And I knew not it was you.We have learnt, as days went by. But a flower struck root and grew Underground, and no one knew.Days of days! Unmarked it rose, In whose hours we were to meet;And forgotten passed. Who knows, Was earth cold or sunny, Sweet, At the coming of your feet?One mere day, we thought; the measure Of such ...
Alice Meynell
Sea Dreams.
I.Oh, to see in the night in a May moon's lightA nymph from siren caves,With a crown of pearl, sea-gems in each curlDance down white, star-stained waves!Oh, to list in the gloam by the pearly foamOf a sad, far-sounding shoreThe strain of the shell of an ocean belleFrom caves where the waters roar!With a hollow shell drift up in the moonTo sigh in my ears this ocean tune: - II."Wilt follow, wilt follow to caverns hollow,That echo the tumbling spry?Wilt follow thy queen to islands green,Vague islands of witchery?O follow, follow to grottoes hollow,And isles in a purple sea,Where rich roses twine and the lush woodbineWeaves a musky canopy!" III.Oh, to flo...
Madison Julius Cawein
Lurline
(Inscribed to Madame Lucy Escott.)As you glided and glided before us that time,A mystical, magical maiden,We fancied we looked on a face from the climeWhere the poets have builded their Aidenn!And oh, the sweet shadows! And oh, the warm gleamsWhich lay on the land of our beautiful dreams,While we walked by the margins of musical streamsAnd heard your wild warbling around us!We forgot what we were when we stood with the treesNear the banks of those silvery waters;As ever in fragments they came on the breeze,The songs of old Rhine and his daughters!And then you would pass with those radiant eyesWhich flashed like a light in the tropical skiesAnd ah! the bright thoughts that would sparkle and riseWhile we heard your wild warbling...
Henry Kendall
A New Year's Gift.
A little lad, - bare wor his feet,His 'een wor swell'd an red,Wor sleepin, one wild New Year's neet, -A cold doorstep his bed.His little curls wor drippin weet,His clooas wor thin an old,His face, tho' pinched, wor smilin sweet, -His limbs wor numb wi' cold.Th' wind whistled throo th' deserted street,An snowflakes whirled abaat, -It wor a sorry sooart o' neet,For poor souls to be aght.'Twor varry dark, noa stars or mooin,Could shine throo sich a storm; -Unless some succour turns up sooin,God help that freezin form!A carriage stops at th' varry haase, -A sarvent oppens th' door;A lady wi' a pale sad face,Steps aght o'th' cooach to th' floor.Her 'een fell on that huddled form,Shoo gives a startled cry;
John Hartley
Nursery Rhyme. CCCLXXV. Paradoxes.
My true love lives far from me, Perrie, Merrie, Dixie, Dominie. Many a rich present he sends to me, Petrum, Partrum, Paradise, Temporie, Perrie, Merrie, Dixie, Dominie. He sent me a goose, without a bone; He sent me a cherry, without a stone. Petrum, & c. He sent me a Bible, no man could read; He sent me a blanket, without a thread. Petrum, & c. How could there be a goose without a bone? How could there be a cherry without a stone? Petrum, & c. How could there be a Bible no man could read? How could there be a bla...
Unknown
The Clod And The Pebble
"Love seeketh not itself to please,Nor for itself hath any care,But for another gives it ease,And builds a heaven in hell's despair."So sang a little clod of clay,Trodden with the cattle's feet,But a pebble of the brookWarbled out these metres meet:"Love seeketh only Self to please,To bind another to its delight,Joys in another's loss of ease,And builds a hell in heaven's despite."
William Blake
Red Maples
In the last year I have learned,How few men are worth my trust;I have seen the friend I lovedStruck by death into the dust,And fears I never knew before,Have knocked and knocked upon my door,"I shall hope little and ask for less,"I said, "There is no happiness."I have grown wise at last, but how,Can I hide the gleam on the willow-bough,Or keep the fragrance out of the rainNow that April is here again?When maples stand in a haze of fire,What can I say to the old desire,What shall I do with the joy in me,That is born out of agony?
Sara Teasdale
A Song: When June Is Past, The Fading Rose
Ask me no more where Jove bestows,When June is past, the fading rose;For in your beauty's orient deepThese flowers as in their causes, sleep.Ask me no more whither doth strayThe golden atoms of the day;For in pure love heaven did prepareThose powders to enrich your hair.Ask me no more whither doth hasteThe nightingale when May is past;For in your sweet dividing throatShe winters and keeps warm her note.Ask me no more where those stars lightThat downwards fall in dead of night;For in your eyes they sit, and there,Fixed become as in their sphere.Ask me no more if east or westThe phnix builds her spicy nest;For unto you at last she flies,And in your fragrant bosom dies.
Thomas Carew
Forever
I had not known beforeForever was so long a word.The slow stroke of the clock of timeI had not heard.'Tis hard to learn so late;It seems no sad heart really learns,But hopes and trusts and doubts and fears,And bleeds and burns.The night is not all dark,Nor is the day all it seems,But each may bring me this relief--My dreams and dreams.I had not known beforeThat Never was so sad a word,So wrap me in forgetfulness--I have not heard.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Marthy's Younkit.
The mountain brook sung lonesomelikeAnd loitered on its wayEz if it waited for a childTo jine it in its play;The wild flowers of the hillsideBent down their heads to hearThe music of the little feetThat had, somehow, grown so dear;The magpies, like winged shadders,Wuz a-flutterin' to and froAmong the rocks and holler stumpsIn the ragged gulch below;The pines 'nd hemlock tosst their boughs(Like they wuz arms) 'nd madeSoft, sollum music on the slopeWhere he had often played.But for these lonesome, sollum voicesOn the mountain side,There wuz no sound the summer dayThat Marthy's younkit died.We called him Marthy's younkit,For Marthy wuz the nameUv her ez wuz his mar, the wifeUv Sorry Tom--the same
Eugene Field
Dust
When I went to look at what had long been hidden,A jewel laid long ago in a secret place,I trembled, for I thought to see its dark deep fire,But only a pinch of dust blew up in my face.I almost gave my life long ago for a thingThat has gone to dust now, stinging my eyes,It is strange how often a heart must be broken,Before the years can make it wise.
Future Poetry
No new delights to our desire The singers of the past can yield. I lift mine eyes to hill and field,And see in them your yet dumb lyre, Poets unborn and unrevealed.Singers to come, what thoughts will start To song? what words of yours be sent Through man's soul, and with earth be blent?These worlds of nature and the heart Await you like an instrument.Who knows what musical flocks of words Upon these pine-tree tops will light, And crown these towers in circling flightAnd cross these seas like summer birds, And give a voice to the day and night?Something of you already is ours; Some mystic part of you belongs To us whose dreams your future throngs,Who look on hills, and trees, and flo...
The Mother's Return
A month, sweet Little-ones, is pastSince your dear Mother went away,,And she tomorrow will return;Tomorrow is the happy day.O blessed tidings! thought of joy!The eldest heard with steady glee;Silent he stood; then laughed amain,,And shouted, " Mother, come to me!"Louder and louder did he shout,With witless hope to bring her near;"Nay, patience! patience, little boy!Your tender mother cannot hear."I told of hills, and far-off town,And long, long vale to travel through;,He listens, puzzled, sore perplexed,But he submits; what can he do ?No strife disturbs his sister's breast;She wars not with the mysteryOf time and distance, night and day;The bonds of our humanity.Her joy is like an instinct, ...
William Wordsworth
A Maid Who Died Old
Frail, shrunken face, so pinched and worn,That life has carved with care and doubt!So weary waiting, night and morn,For that which never came about!Pale lamp, so utterly forlorn,In which God's light at last is out.Gray hair, that lies so thin and primOn either side the sunken brows!And soldered eyes, so deep and dim,No word of man could now arouse!And hollow hands, so virgin slim,Forever clasped in silent vows!Poor breasts! that God designed for love,For baby lips to kiss and press;That never felt, yet dreamed thereof,The human touch, the child caress -That lie like shriveled blooms aboveThe heart's long-perished happiness.O withered body, Nature gaveFor purposes of death and birth,That never knew, and ...