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How Still, How Happy!
How still, how happy! Those are wordsThat once would scarce agree together;I loved the plashing of the surge,The changing heaven the breezy weather,More than smooth seas and cloudless skiesAnd solemn, soothing, softened airsThat in the forest woke no sighsAnd from the green spray shook no tears.How still, how happy! now I feelWhere silence dwells is sweeter farThan laughing mirth's most joyous swellHowever pure its raptures are.Come, sit down on this sunny stone:'Tis wintry light o'er flowerless moors,But sit, for we are all aloneAnd clear expand heaven's breathless shores.I could think in the withered grassSpring's budding wreaths we might discern;The violet's eye might shyly flashAnd young leaves shoo...
Emily Bronte
Sonnet V
A tide of beauty with returning MayFloods the fair city; from warm pavements fumeOdors endeared; down avenues in bloomThe chestnut-trees with phallic spires are gay.Over the terrace flows the thronged cafe;The boulevards are streams of hurrying sound;And through the streets, like veins when they abound,The lust for pleasure throbs itself away.Here let me live, here let me still pursuePhantoms of bliss that beckon and recede, -Thy strange allurements, City that I love,Maze of romance, where I have followed tooThe dream Youth treasures of its dearest needAnd stars beyond thy towers bring tidings of.
Alan Seeger
The Earl's Minstrel.
I had a passion when I was a childFor a most pleasant idleness. In June,When the thick masses of the leaves were stirr'dWith a just audible murmur, and the streamsFainted in their cool places to a lowUnnotic'd tinkle, and the reapers hungTheir sickles in the trees and went to sleep,Then might you find me in an antique chairCushion'd with cunning luxury, which stoodIn the old study corner, by a nookCrowded with volumes of the old romance;And there, the long and quiet summer day,Lay I with half clos'd eyelids, turning o'erLeaf after leaf, until the twilight blurr'dTheir singular and time-stain'd characters.'Twas a forgetful lore, and it is blentWith dreams that in my fitful slumber came,And is remember'd faintly. But to-dayWith the st...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
A Love Letter
Oh, I des received a letter f'om de sweetest little gal;Oh, my; oh, my.She's my lovely little sweetheart an' her name is Sal:Oh, my; oh, my.She writes me dat she loves me an' she loves me true,She wonders ef I'll tell huh dat I loves huh, too;An' my heaht's so full o' music dat I do' know what to do;Oh, my; oh, my.I got a man to read it an' he read it fine;Oh, my; oh, my.Dey ain' no use denying dat her love is mine;Oh, my; oh, my.But hyeah's de t'ing dat's puttin' me in such a awful plight,I t'ink of huh at mornin' an' I dream of huh at night;But how's I gwine to cou't huh w'en I do' know how to write?Oh, my; oh, my.My heaht is bubblin' ovah wid de t'ings I want to say;Oh, my; oh, my.An' dey's lots of folks to copy what ...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
To Laura In Death. Sonnet VII.
Occhi miei, oscurato è 'l nostro sole.HE ENDEAVOURS TO FIND PEACE IN THE THOUGHT THAT SHE IS IN HEAVEN. Mine eyes! our glorious sun is veil'd in night,Or set to us, to rise 'mid realms of love;There we may hail it still, and haply proveIt mourn'd that we delay'd our heavenward flight.Mine ears! the music of her tones delightThose, who its harmony can best approve;My feet! who in her track so joy'd to move.Ye cannot penetrate her regions bright!But wherefore should your wrath on me descend?No spell of mine hath hush'd for ye the joyOf seeing, hearing, feeling, she was near:Go, war with Death--yet, rather let us bendTo Him who can create--who can destroy--And bids the ready smile succeed the tear.WOLLASTON....
Francesco Petrarca
A Summer Ramble.
The quiet August noon has come,A slumberous silence fills the sky,The fields are still, the woods are dumb,In glassy sleep the waters lie.And mark yon soft white clouds that restAbove our vale, a moveless throng;The cattle on the mountain's breastEnjoy the grateful shadow long.Oh, how unlike those merry hoursIn early June when Earth laughs out,When the fresh winds make love to flowers,And woodlands sing and waters shout.When in the grass sweet voices talk,And strains of tiny music swellFrom every moss-cup of the rock,From every nameless blossom's bell.But now a joy too deep for sound,A peace no other season knows,Hushes the heavens and wraps the ground,The blessing of supreme repose.Away! I ...
William Cullen Bryant
History
The listless beauty of the hourWhen snow fell on the apple treesAnd the wood-ash gathered in the fireAnd we faced our first miseries.Then the sweeping sunshine of noonWhen the mountains like chariot carsWere ranked to blue battle - and you and ICounted our scars.And then in a strange, grey hourWe lay mouth to mouth, with your faceUnder mine like a star on the lake,And I covered the earth, and all space.The silent, drifting hoursOf morn after mornAnd night drifting up to the nightYet no pathway worn.Your life, and mine, my lovePassing on and on, the hateFusing closer and closer with loveTill at length they mate.THE CEARNE
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Song From Heine
I scanned her picture dreaming,Till each dear line and hueWas imaged, to my seeming,As if it lived anew.Her lips began to borrowTheir former wondrous smile;Her fair eyes, faint with sorrow,Grew sparkling as erstwhile.Such tears as often ran notRan then, my love, for thee;And O, believe I cannotThat thou are lost to me!
Thomas Hardy
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - September.
1. WE are a shadow and a shining, we! One moment nothing seems but what we see, Nor aught to rule but common circumstance-- Nought is to seek but praise, to shun but chance; A moment more, and God is all in all, And not a sparrow from its nest can fall But from the ground its chirp goes up into his hall. 2. I know at least which is the better mood. When on a heap of cares I sit and brood, Like Job upon his ashes, sorely vext, I feel a lower thing than when I stood The world's true heir, fearless as, on its stalk, A lily meeting Jesus in his walk: I am not all mood--I can judge betwixt. 3. ...
George MacDonald
The Wind.
It's like the light, --A fashionless delightIt's like the bee, --A dateless melody.It's like the woods,Private like breeze,Phraseless, yet it stirsThe proudest trees.It's like the morning, --Best when it's done, --The everlasting clocksChime noon.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
The Two Trees
Beloved, gaze in thine own heart,The holy tree is growing there;From joy the holy branches start,And all the trembling flowers they bear.The changing colours of its fruitHave dowered the stars with metry light;The surety of its hidden rootHas planted quiet in the night;The shaking of its leafy headHas given the waves their melody,And made my lips and music wed,Murmuring a wizard song for thee.There the Joves a circle go,The flaming circle of our days,Gyring, spiring to and froIn those great ignorant leafy ways;Remembering all that shaken hairAnd how the winged sandals dart,Thine eyes grow full of tender care:Beloved, gaze in thine own heart.Gaze no more in the bitter glassThe demons, with their subtle guile.L...
William Butler Yeats
"The Heart Asks Pleasure First,"
The heart asks pleasure first,And then, excuse from pain;And then, those little anodynesThat deaden suffering;And then, to go to sleep;And then, if it should beThe will of its Inquisitor,The liberty to die.
His Lady Friend
Who is Sylvia? What is sheThat early every morningYou desert your familyAnd rush to see her, scorningYour once cherished ma and me?Are her playthings such a treat?I will steal 'em from her;Better that than not to meetMy son and heir all summer,Save when he comes home to eat.Or is she herself the oneAnd only real attraction?Has your little heart begunTo get that sort of action?Better wait a few years, son.
Ringgold Wilmer Lardner
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet XXVIII
You that with Allegories curious frameOf others children changelings vse to make,With me those pains, for Gods sake, do not take:I list not dig so deep for brazen fame,When I say Stella I do meane the samePrincesse of beauty for whose only sakeThe raines of Loue I loue, though neuer slake,And ioy therein, though nations count it shame.I beg no subiect to vse eloquence,Nor in hid wayes to guide philosophy:Looke at my hands for no such quintessence;But know that I in pure simplicitieBreathe out the flames which burn within my heart,Loue onely reading vnto me this arte.
Philip Sidney
The Coquette.
Alone she sat with her accusing heart, That, like a restless comrade frightened sleep, And every thought that found her, left a dart That hurt her so, she could not even weep. Her heart that once had been a cup well filled With love's red wine, save for some drops of gall She knew was empty; though it had not spilled Its sweets for one, but wasted them on all. She stood upon the grave of her dead truth, And saw her soul's bright armor red with rust, And knew that all the riches of her youth Were Dead Sea apples, crumbling into dust. Love that had turned to bitter, biting scorn, Hearthstones despoiled, and homes made desolate, Made her cry out that she was ever b...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To Emma.
Far away, where darkness reigneth,All my dreams of bliss are flown;Yet with love my gaze remainethFixed on one fair star alone.But, alas! that star so brightSheds no lustre save by night.If in slumbers ending never,Gloomy death had sealed thine eyes,Thou hadst lived in memory everThou hadst lived still in my sighs;But, alas! in light thou livestTo my love no answer givest!Can the sweet hopes love once cherishedEmma, can they transient prove?What has passed away and perishedEmma, say, can that be love?That bright flame of heavenly birthCan it die like things of earth?
Friedrich Schiller
In A Copy Of Mr. Swinburne's Tristram Of Lyonesse
Dear Heart, what thing may symbolise for usA love like ours, what gift, whate'er it be,Hold more significance 'twixt thee and meThan paltry words a truth miraculous;Or the poor signs that in astronomyTell giant splendours in their gleaming might:Yet love would still give such, as in delightTo mock their impotence - so this for thee.This song for thee! our sweetest honeycombOf lovesome thought and passion-hearted rhyme,Builded of gold and kisses and desire,By that wild poet who so many a timeOur hungering lips have blessed, until a fireBurnt speech up and the wordless hour had come.
Richard Le Gallienne
J. H. On The Death Of His Wife.
Oh, when I found that Death had setHis awful stamp on thee,Deserted on Life's stormy shore,I thought that Time could have in storeNot one more shaft for me.Long I had watched thy lingering bloomThat brightened 'mid decay;And then its eloquent appealWould ask my heart if death could stealSuch loveliness away.And oh! could pure unsullied worthOr peerless beauty save,We had not stood as mourners here,And shed the unavailing tearO'er thy untimely grave.But we have seen thee lowly laid,And I am here alone;Each morn I shuddering wake to feelThe consciousness around me steal,That all my hopes are flown.All, did I say? Ingrate indeed!Oh, be the thought forgiven;Has he not hopes and inte...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney