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The Shock
Thinking of these, of beautiful brief things,Of things that are of sense and spirit made,Of meadow flowers, dense hedges and dark bushesWith roses trailing over nests of thrushes;Of dews so pure and bright and flush'd and cool,And like the flowers as brief as beautiful;Thinking of the tall grass and daisies tallAnd whispered music of the waving bents;Of these that like a simple child I loveSince they are life and life is flowers and grass;Thinking of trees, and water at their feetAnswering the trees with murmur childlike sweet;Thinking of those high thoughts that passed like the windYet left their brightness lying on the mind,As the white blossoms the raw airs shake downThat lie awhile yet lovely on the chill grass;Think...
John Frederick Freeman
Love Letters of a Violinist. Letter I. Prelude.
Letter I. Prelude.I. Teach me to love thee as a man, in prayer, May love the picture of a sainted nun, And I will woo thee, when the day is done, With tears and vows, and fealty past compare, And seek the sunlight in thy golden hair, And kiss thy hand to claim thy benison.II. I shall not need to gaze upon the skies, Or mark the message of the morning breeze, Or heed the notes of birds among the trees, If, taught by thee to yearn for Paradise, I may confront thee with adoring eyes ...
Eric Mackay
In Memory Of Charles Wentworth Upham, Jr.
He was all sunshine; in his faceThe very soul of sweetness shone;Fairest and gentlest of his race;None like him we can call our own.Something there was of one that diedIn her fresh spring-time long ago,Our first dear Mary, angel-eyed,Whose smile it was a bliss to know.Something of her whose love impartsSuch radiance to her day's decline,We feel its twilight in our heartsBright as the earliest morning-shine.Yet richer strains our eye could traceThat made our plainer mould more fair,That curved the lip with happier grace,That waved the soft and silken hair.Dust unto dust! the lips are stillThat only spoke to cheer and bless;The folded hands lie white and chillUnclasped from sorrow's last caress.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Afridi Love
Since, Oh, Beloved, you are not even faithful To me, who loved you so, for one short night,For one brief space of darkness, though my absence Did but endure until the dawning light;Since all your beauty - which was mine - you squandered On that which now lies dead across your door;See here this knife, made keen and bright to kill you. You shall not see the sun rise any more.Lie still! Lie still! In all the empty village Who is there left to hear or heed your cry?All are gone to labour in the valley, Who will return before your time to die?No use to struggle; when I found you sleeping, I took your hands and bound them to your side,And both these slender feet, too apt at straying, Down to th...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
The Rainbow.
The shower is past, and the skyO'erhead is both mild and serene,Save where a few drops from on high,Like gems, twinkle over the green:And glowing fair, in the black north,The rainbow o'erarches the cloud;The sun in his glory comes forth,And larks sweetly warble aloud.That dismally grim northern skySays God in His vengeance once frowned,And opened His flood-gates on high,Till obstinate sinners were drowned:The lively bright south, and that bow,Say all this dread vengeance is o'er;These colours that smilingly glowSay we shall be deluged no more.Ever blessed be those innocent days,Ever sweet their remembrance to me;When often, in silent amaze,Enraptured, I'd gaze upon thee!Whilst arching adown the black sky
Patrick Bronte
Daniel Wheeler
O Dearly loved!And worthy of our love! No moreThy aged form shall rise beforeThe bushed and waiting worshiper,In meek obedience utterance givingTo words of truth, so fresh and living,That, even to the inward sense,They bore unquestioned evidenceOf an anointed Messenger!Or, bowing down thy silver hairIn reverent awfulness of prayer,The world, its time and sense, shut outThe brightness of Faith's holy tranceGathered upon thy countenance,As if each lingering cloud of doubt,The cold, dark shadows resting hereIn Time's unluminous atmosphere,Were lifted by an angel's hand,And through them on thy spiritual eyeShone down the blessedness on high,The glory of the Better Land!The oak has fallen!While, meet for no ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Love's Proud Farewell
I am too proud of loving thee, too proudOf the sweet months and years that now have end, To feign a heart indifferent to this loss,Too thankful-happy that the gods allowed Our orbits cross,Beloved and lovely friend;And though I wendLonely henceforth along a road grown gray,I shall not be all lonely on the way,Companioned with the attar of thy rose,Though in my garden it no longer blows.Thou canst not give elsewhere thy gifts to me,Or only seem to give;Yea, not so fugitiveThe glory that hath hallowed me and thee,Not thou or I alone that marvel wroughtImmortal is the paradise of thought,Nor ours to destroy,Born of our hearts together, where bright streamsRan through the woods for joy,That heaven of our dreams.<...
Richard Le Gallienne
Stanzas To A Lady, On Leaving England.
1.Tis done - and shivering in the galeThe bark unfurls her snowy sail;And whistling o'er the bending mast,Loud sings on high the fresh'ning blast;And I must from this land be gone,Because I cannot love but one.2.But could I be what I have been,And could I see what I have seen -Could I repose upon the breastWhich once my warmest wishes blest -I should not seek another zone,Because I cannot love but one.3.'Tis long since I beheld that eyeWhich gave me bliss or misery;And I have striven, but in vain,Never to think of it again:For though I fly from Albion,I still can only love but one.4.As some lone bird, without a mate,My weary heart is desolate;<...
George Gordon Byron
To George Cruikshank, Esq.
Artist, whose hand, with horror wingd, hath tornFrom the rank life of towns this leaf: and flungThe prodigy of full-blown crime amongValleys and men to middle fortune born,Not innocent, indeed, yet not forlorn:Say, what shall calm us, when such guests intrude,Like comets on the heavenly solitude?Shall breathless glades, cheerd by shy Dians horn.Cold-bubbling springs, or caves? Not so! The SoulBreasts her own griefs: and, urgd too fiercely, says:Why tremble? True, the nobleness of manMay be by man effacd: man can controlTo pain, to death, the bent of his own days.Know thou the worst. So much, not more, he can.
Matthew Arnold
The Finest View
Away, away! The plains of IndHave set their victim free;I give my sorrows to the wind,My sun-hat to the sea;And, standing with a chosen few,I watch a dying glow,The passing of the Finest ViewThat all the world can show.It would not fire an artist's eye,This View whereof I sing;Poets, no doubt, would pass it byAs quite a common thing;The Tourist with belittling sniffWould find no beauties there -He couldn't if he would, and ifHe could he wouldn't care.Only for him that turns the backOn dark and evil daysIt throws a glory down his trackThat sets his heart ablaze;A charm to make the wounded whole,Which wearied eyes may drawLuxuriously through the soul,Like cocktails through a straw....
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
Epitaph.
These are two friends whose lives were undivided;So let their memory be, now they have glidedUnder the grave; let not their bones be parted,For their two hearts in life were single-hearted.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
When Love Goes
IO mother, I am sick of love,I cannot laugh nor lift my head,My bitter dreams have broken me,I would my love were dead."Drink of the draught I brew for thee,Thou shalt have quiet in its stead."IIWhere is the silver in the rain,Where is the music in the sea,Where is the bird that sang all dayTo break my heart with melody?"The night thou badst Love fly away,He hid them all from thee."
Sara Teasdale
The Rose
I took the love you gave, Ah, carelessly,Counting it only as a rose to wearA little moment on my heart no more,So many roses had I worn before,So lightly that I scarce believed them there.But, Lo! this rose between the dusk and dawnHath turned to very flame upon my breast,A flame that burns the day-long and the night,A flame of very anguish and delightThat not for any moment yields me rest.And I am troubled with a strange, new fear,How would it be if even to your doorI came to cry your pitying one day,And you should lightly laugh and lightly say,"That was a rose I gave you--nothing more."
Theodosia Garrison
A Letter From A Girl To Her Own Old Age
Listen, and when thy hand this paper presses,O time-worn woman, think of her who blessesWhat thy thin fingers touch, with her caresses.O mother, for the weight of years that break thee!O daughter, for slow time must yet awake thee,And from the changes of my heart must make thee.O fainting traveller, morn is grey in heaven.Dost thou remember how the clouds were driven?And are they calm about the fall of even?Pause near the ending of thy long migration,For this one sudden hour of desolationAppeals to one hour of thy meditation.Suffer, O silent one, that I remind theeOf the great hills that stormed the sky behind thee,Of the wild winds of power that have resigned thee.Know that the mournful plain where thou must wander
Alice Meynell
The Suicides Grave
This is the scene of a mans despair, and a souls releaseFrom the difficult traits of the flesh; so, it seeking peace,A shot rang out in the night; deaths doors were wide;And you stood alone, a stranger, and saw inside.Coward flesh, brave soul, which was it? One feared the world,The pity of men, or their scorn; yet carelessly hurledAll on the balance of Chance for a state unknown;Fled the laughter of men for the anger of God-alone.Perhaps when the hot blood streamed on the daisied sod,Poor soul, you were likened to Cain, and you fled from God;Men say you fought hard for your life, when the deed was done;But your body would rise no more neath this worlds sun.Id choose-should I do the act-such a night as this,When the sea throws up white ...
Dora Sigerson Shorter
Two Nights
(Suggested by the lives of Napoleon and Josephine.)I.One night was full of rapture and delight - Of reunited arms and swooning kisses, And all the unnamed and unnumbered blissesWhich fond souls find in love of love at night.Heart beat with heart, and each clung into each With twining arms that did but loose their hold To cling still closer; and fond glances toldThese truths for which there is no uttered speech.There was sweet laughter and endearing words, Made broken by the kiss that could not wait, And cooing sounds as of dear little birdsThat in spring-time love and woo and mate.And languid sighs that breathed of love's contentAnd all too soon this night of rapture went.II.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Dirge
Place this bunch of mignonetteIn her cold, dead hand;When the golden sun is set,Where the poplars stand,Bury her from sun and day,Lay my little love awayFrom my sight.She was like a modest flowerBlown in sunny June,Warm as sun at noon's high hour,Chaster than the moon.Ah, her day was brief and bright,Earth has lost a star of light;She is dead.Softly breathe her name to me,--Ah, I loved her so.Gentle let your tribute be;None may better knowHer true worth than I who weepO'er her as she lies asleep--Soft asleep.Lay these lilies on her breast,They are not more whiteThan the soul of her, at rest'Neath their petals bright.Chant your aves soft and low,Solemn be your tread an...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
First Love
I ne'er was struck before that hourWith love so sudden and so sweet.Her face it bloomed like a sweet flowerAnd stole my heart away complete.My face turned pale as deadly pale,My legs refused to walk away,And when she looked "what could I ail?"My life and all seemed turned to clay.And then my blood rushed to my faceAnd took my sight away.The trees and bushes round the placeSeemed midnight at noonday.I could not see a single thing,Words from my eyes did start;They spoke as chords do from the stringAnd blood burnt round my heart.Are flowers the winter's choice?Is love's bed always snow?She seemed to hear my silent voiceAnd love's appeal to know.I never saw so sweet a faceAs that I stood before:My hea...
John Clare