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The Clouds Return After The Rain.
Dark and yet darker my day's clouded o'er;Are its bright joys all fled, and its sunshine no more?I look to the skies for the bright bow in vain,For constantly "clouds return after the rain."Must it always be thus, peace banished forever,And joy to this sad heart returned again never?I long for the rest that I cannot obtain,For the clouds, so much dreaded, return after rain.Is there not in this wide world one spot that is blessedWith exemption from suffering, where one may find rest;Where sickness and sorrow no entranpe can gain,And the clouds do not return after the rain?Ah! deceive not thyself by a vain hope like this,Nor expect in this world to enjoy lasting peace:But bow with submission to God's holy will,For the hand that afflic...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
To A Moralist.
Are the sports of our youth so displeasing?Is love but the folly you say?Benumbed with the winter, and freezing,You scold at the revels of May.For you once a nymph had her charms,And Oh! when the waltz you were wreathing,All Olympus embraced in your armsAll its nectar in Julia's breathing.If Jove at that moment had hurledThe earth in some other rotation,Along with your Julia whirled,You had felt not the shock of creation.Learn this that philosophy beatsSure time with the pulse, quick or slowAs the blood from the heyday retreats,But it cannot make gods of us No!It is well icy reason should thawIn the warm blood of mirth now and then,The gods for themselves have a lawWhich they never intended for men.
Friedrich Schiller
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet LXV
Loue, by sure proofe I may call thee vnkind,That giu'st no better ear to my iust cries;Thou whom to me such good turnes should bind,As I may well recount, but none can prize:For when, nak'd Boy, thou couldst no harbour findeIn this old world, growne now so too, too wise,I lodgd thee in my heart, and being blindBy nature borne, I gaue to thee mine eyes;Mine eyes! my light, my heart, my life, alas!If so great seruices may scorned be,Yet let this thought thy Tygrish courage passe,That I perhaps am somewhat kinne to thee;Since in thine armes, if learnd fame truth hath spread,Thou bear'st the Arrow, I the Arrow-head.
Philip Sidney
Gertrude.
When first I gazed on GERTRUDE'S face,Beheld her loveliness and grace;Her brave gray eyes, her raven hair,Her ways, more winsome than the kissSpring gives the flowers; her smile, that isBrighter than all the summer airMade sweet with birds: - I did declare, -And still declare! - there is no one,No girl beneath the moon or sun,So beautiful to look upon!And to my thoughts, that on her dwell,Nothing seems more desirable -Not OPHIR gold nor ORIENT pearls -Than seems this jewel-girl of girls.
Madison Julius Cawein
Jacobs Wives
These are the words of Jacobs wives, the wordsWhich Leah spake and Rachel to his ears,When, in the shade at eventide, he satBy the tent door, a palm-tree overhead,A spring beside him, and the sheep around.And Rachel spake and said, The nightfall comesNight, which all day I wait for, and for thee.And Leah also spake, The day is done;My lord with toil is weary and would rest.And Rachel said, Come, O my Jacob, come;And we will think we sit beside the well,As in that day, the long long years agone,When first I met thee with my fathers flock.And Leah said, Come, Israel, unto me;And thou shalt reap an harvest of fair sons,Een as before I bare thee goodly babes;For when was Leah fruitless to my lord?And Rachel sa...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Epigrams.
I*.[* In the folio of 1611, these four short pieces are appended to the Sonnets. The second and third are translated from Marot's Epigrams, Liv. III. No. 5, De Diane, and No. 24, De Cupido et de sa Dame. C.]In youth, before I waxed old,The blynd boy, Venus baby,For want of cunning, made me boldIn bitter hyve to grope for honny: But when he saw me stung and cry, He tooke his wings and away did fly.II.As Diane hunted on a day,She chaunst to come where Cupid lay, His quiver by his head:One of his shafts she stole away,And one of hers did close convay, Into the others stead:With that Love wounded my Loves hart,But Diane, beasts with Cupids dart.III.I saw, in secret to m...
Edmund Spenser
My Prayer.
O God! forgive the erring thought,The erring word and deed,And in thy mercy hear the ChristWho comes to intercede.My sins, like mountain-weights of lead,Weigh heavy on my soul;I'm bruised and broken in this strife,But Thou canst make me whole.Allay this fever of unrest,That fights against the Will;And in Thy still small voice do ThouBut whisper, "Peace, be still!"Until within this heart of mineThy lasting peace come down,Will all the waves of Passion roll,Each good resolve to drown.We walk in blindness and dark nightThrough half our earthly way;Our clouds of weaknesses obscureThe glory of the day.We cannot lead the lives we would,But grope in dumb amaze,Leaving the straight and f...
Charles Sangster
Th' Short-Timer.
Some poets sing o' gipsy queens,An some o' ladies fine;Aw'll sing a song o' other scenes, -A humbler muse is mine.Jewels, an' gold, an silken frills,Are things too heigh for me;But wol mi harp wi vigour thrills,Aw'll strike a chord for thee.Poor lassie wan,Do th' best tha can,Although thi fate be hard.A time ther'll beWhen sich as theeShall have yor full reward.At hauf-past five tha leaves thi bed,An off tha goes to wark;An gropes thi way to mill or shed,Six months o'th' year i'th' dark.Tha gets but little for thi pains,But that's noa fault o' thine;Thi maister reckons up his gains,An ligs i bed till nine.Poor lassie wan, &c.He's little childer ov his own'At's qu...
John Hartley
Sunday
DECEMBER 28, 1879.A dim, vague shrinking haunts my soul, My spirit bodeth ill--As some far-off restraining bankHad burst, and waters, many a rank, Were marching on my hill;As if I had no fire within For thoughts to sit about;As if I had no flax to spin,No lamp to lure the good things in And keep the bad things out.The wind, south-west, raves in the pines That guard my cottage round;The sea-waves fall in stormy linesBelow the sandy cliffs and chines, And swell the roaring sound.The misty air, the bellowing wind Not often trouble me;The storm that's outside of the mindDoth oftener wake my heart to find More peace and liberty.Why is not such my fate to-night?...
George MacDonald
When Lilacs Last In The Door-yard Bloom'd
When lilacs last in the door-yard bloomd,And the great star early droopd in the western sky in the night,I mourndand yet shall mourn with ever-returning spring.O ever-returning spring! trinity sure to me you bring;Lilac blooming perennial, and drooping star in the west,And thought of him I love.O powerful, western, fallen star!O shades of night! O moody, tearful night!O great star disappeard! O the black murk that hides the star!O cruel hands that hold me powerless! O helpless soul of me!O harsh surrounding cloud, that will not free my soul!In the door-yard fronting an old farm-house, near the white-washd palings,Stands the lilac bush, tall-growing, with heart-shaped leaves of rich green,With many a pointed blossom, rising, de...
Walt Whitman
To Miss E.P.
1.Eliza! what fools are the Mussulman sect,Who to woman deny the soul's future existence,Could they see thee, Eliza! they'd own their defect,And this doctrine would meet with a general resistance.2.Had their Prophet possess'd but an atom of sense,He ne'er would have woman from Paradise driven,But instead of his Houris a flimsy pretence,With woman alone, he had peopled his Heaven.3.But still to increase your calamities more,Not content with depriving your bodies of spirit,He allots but one husband to share amongst four,With souls you'd dispense - but this last who could bear it.4.His religion to please neither party is made,On husbands 'tis hard, to the wives most uncivil;But I can't contradi...
George Gordon Byron
Amarillis I Did Woo
Amarillis I did woo,And I courted Phillis too;Daphne, for her love, I chose;Cloris, for that damask roseIn her cheek, I held as dear;Yea, a thousand liked well near.And, in love with all together,Fearèd the enjoying either;'Cause to be of one possest,Barred the hope of all the rest.
George Wither
The Dark Fire
Love me not lessYet ease me of this fever,That in my wondering heartBurns, sinks, burns again ever.Is it your loveIn me so fiercely burning,Or my love leaping to youThen requickened returning?Come not to me,Bring not your body nearer,Though you overleapt the milesI could not behold you clearer.I could not clasp youThan in my thought more surely;Breast to breast, heart to heartMight cling no more securely.I do not know you,Seeing you, more than unseeing.What you are that you areHere in my spiritual being.Leave me you cannot,Nor can I remove meFrom the sevenfold dark fireYou have lit here since you love me.Yet love unsureNo wilder could be burning.Come...
John Frederick Freeman
The Death Of The Old Year.
The weary Old Year is dead at last;His corpse 'mid the ruins of Time is cast,Where the mouldering wrecks of lost Thought lie,And the rich-hued blossoms of Passion dieTo a withering grass that droops o'er his grave,The shadowy Titan's refuge cave.Strange lights from pale moony Memory lieOn the weedy columns beneath its eye;And strange is the sound of the ghostlike breeze,In the lingering leaves on the skeleton trees;And strange is the sound of the falling shower,When the clouds of dead pain o'er the spirit lower;Unheard in the home he inhabiteth,The land where all lost things are gathered by Death.Alone I reclined in the closing year;Voice, nor breathing, nor step was near;And I said in the weariness of my breast:Weary Old Year, thou...
April.
God's garden is this dim old wood, And hidden in its bosom The bursting bud, the feathery leaf And soft, sweet smelling blossom. Ho! May is fair, and glorious June, In rose leaves doth enfold her; Their bloom is richer than my own, But mine is sweeter, bolder. God's garden is this dim old wood, And I, the pretty vagrant, I am the gardener He sends To make it fair and fragrant.
Jean Blewett
The Other One
"Gather around me, children dear;The wind is high and the night is cold;Closer, little ones, snuggle near;Let's seek a story of ages old;A magic tale of a bygone day,Of lovely ladies and dragons dread;Come, for you're all so tired of play,We'll read till it's time to go to bed."So they all are glad, and they nestle in,And squat on the rough old nursery rug,And they nudge and hush as I begin,And the fire leaps up and all's so snug;And there I sit in the big arm-chair,And how they are eager and sweet and wise,And they cup their chins in their hands and stareAt the heart of the flame with thoughtful eyes.And then, as I read by the ruddy glowAnd the little ones sit entranced and still . . .He's drawing near, ah! I kno...
Robert William Service
Tuesday
Another morning's banners are unfurled -Another day looks smiling on the world.It holds new laurels for thy soul to win;Mar not its grace by slothfulness or sin, Nor sad, away, Send it to yesterday.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Peace-Offering
It was but a little thing,Yet I knew it meant to meEase from what had given a stingTo the very birdsingingLatterly.But I would not welcome it;And for all I then declinedO the regrettings infiniteWhen the night-processions flitThrough the mind!
Thomas Hardy