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Perfect Character.
He lives but half who never stood By the grave of one held dear,And out of the deep, dark lonelinessOf a heart bereaved and comfortless, From sorrow's crystal plentitude, Feeling his loss severe, Dropped a regretful tear. Oh, life's divinest draught doth not In the wells of joy abound!For the purest streams are those that flowOut of the depths of crushing woe, As from the springs of love and thought Hid in some narrow mound, Making it holy ground. He hath been blessed who sometimes knelt Owning that God is just,And in the stillness of cypress shadeRosemary's tender symbol laid Upon a cherished shrine, and felt Strengthened in faith and trust Over the precious dust...
Hattie Howard
Sonnet XIII.
Io mi rivolgo indietro a ciascun passo.ON QUITTING LAURA. With weary frame which painfully I bear,I look behind me at each onward pace,And then take comfort from your native air,Which following fans my melancholy face;The far way, my frail life, the cherish'd fairWhom thus I leave, as then my thoughts retrace,I fix my feet in silent pale despair,And on the earth my tearful eyes abase.At times a doubt, too, rises on my woes,"How ever can this weak and wasted frameLive from life's spirit and one source afar?"Love's answer soon the truth forgotten shows--"This high pure privilege true lovers claim,Who from mere human feelings franchised are!"MACGREGOR. I look behind each step I onward trace,
Francesco Petrarca
Acrostic.
Even now I seem to see thee,Lovely boy, with thy sweet smile,Bright and beautiful as whenReading that holy book, the whileI listened to thee, little dreaming,Docile, gentle, pleasant child,God who gave, so soon would take thee,Even thee, so sweet, so mild.But how merciful in chasteningOur father is - oh! bless his name -Your little face was decked with smiles,Dear child, just when the summons came.Escaped from lingering sickness, thou hadstNought to mar thy little frame.While ye mourn the dear departed,Each bitter feeling disallow;Look to heaven, ye broken hearted,Look, and with submission bow.In thy hour of deepest sorrow,Never murmur, dare not blame;God, who wounds, alone can heal thee;Trust ...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
To Sarah.
I.One happy year has fled, Sall,Since you were all my own,The leaves have felt the autumn blight,The wintry storm has blown.We heeded not the cold blast,Nor the winter's icy air;For we found our climate in the heart,And it was summer there.II.The summer's sun is bright, Sall,The skies are pure in hue;But clouds will sometimes sadden them,And dim their lovely blue;And clouds may come to us, Sall,But sure they will not stay;For there's a spell in fond heartsTo chase their gloom away.III.In sickness and in sorrowThine eyes were on me still,And there was comfort in each glanceTo charm the sense of ill.And were they absent now, Sall,I'd seek my bed of pain,And bless ...
Joseph Rodman Drake
Our Forefathers (January 13, 1864)
(See Note 23)High memories with powerShine through the wintry NorthOn every peak's white tower,On Kattegat so swarth.All is so still and spacious, `The Northern Lights flow free,Creating bright and graciousA day of memory.Each deed the North defending,Each thought for greater might,A star-like word is sendingDown through the frosty night!To hope they call and boldness,And call with double cheerTo him, defying coldness,On guard the Eider near.No anxious shadows clouding,No languid, lukewarm mistOur heaven of mem'ries shrouding,This eve of battle-tryst!May, as of yore, while ringingThe bells unseen loud swelled,Come leaders vict'ry bringing,Whom th' army ne'er beheld.
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Ode To The New Century.
The dial has pointed the hour and the hour has rounded the day, The day has finished the year that dies with a century's birth;Eastward the morning stars sing as they go their way: "Lo! the Great Mother travaileth, a king is born to the earth!King of a hundred years, and king of a million tombs, Sovereign of infinite joys, keeper of countless tears;Peace to the throneless dead, hail to the ruler who comes, King of a million tombs, and king of a hundred years!"Time and his tenant Death, for the space of a moment's flight Stand on the bare, black ridge dividing eternities twain;One looks back to his realm all waste in the hopeless night, One with the eyes of hope sees it rebuilded again.Behind are the gray, gleaned fields with their worthless stu...
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
On His Grotto At Twickenham
Thou who shalt stop, where Thames' translucent waveShines a broad Mirror thro' the shadowy Cave;Where ling'ring drops from min'ral Roofs distill,And pointed Crystals break the sparkling Rill,Unpolish'd Gems no ray on Pride bestow,And latent Metals innocently glow.Approach! Great Nature studiously behold;And eye the Mine without a wish for Gold.Approach; but awful! Lo! th' Egerian Grot,Where, nobly-pensive, St. John sate and thought;Where British sighs from dying Wyndham stole,And the bright flame was shot thro' Marchmont's Soul.Let such, such only tread this sacred Floor,Who dare to love their Country, and be poor.
Alexander Pope
Elegiac Stanzas In Memory Of My Brother, John Commander Of The E. I. Companys Ship The Earl Of Abergavenny In Which He Perished By Calamitous Shipwreck, Feb.6, 1805
IThe Sheep-boy whistled loud, and lo!That instant, startled by the shock,The Buzzard mounted from the rockDeliberate and slow:Lord of the air, he took his flight;Oh! could he on that woeful nightHave lent his wing, my Brother dear,For one poor moment's space to Thee,And all who struggled with the Sea,When safety was so near.IIThus in the weakness of my heartI spoke (but let that pang be still)When rising from the rock at will,I saw the Bird depart.And let me calmly bless the PowerThat meets me in this unknown Flower.Affecting type of him I mourn!With calmness suffer and believe,And grieve, and know that I must grieve,Not cheerless, though forlorn.IIIHere did we stop; and he...
William Wordsworth
The Triumph Of Chastity.
Quando ad un giogo ed in Un tempo quivi. When to one yoke at once I saw the heightOf gods and men subdued by Cupid's might,I took example from their cruel fate,And by their sufferings eased my own hard state;Since Phoebus and Leander felt like pain,The one a god, the other but a man;One snare caught Juno and the Carthage dame(Her husband's death prepared her funeral flame--'Twas not a cause that Virgil maketh one);I need not grieve, that unprepared, alone,Unarm'd, and young, I did receive a wound,Or that my enemy no hurt hath foundBy Love; or that she clothed him in my sight,And took his wings, and marr'd his winding flight;No angry lions send more hideous noiseFrom their beat breasts, nor clashing thunder's voiceRen...
A Song
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 light,That downwards fall in dead of night;For in your eyes they sit, and thereFixed become, as in their sphere.Ask me no more if east or westThe phoenix builds her spicy nest;For unto you at last she flies,And in your fragrant bosom dies.
Thomas Carew
A Ballad Of The Kind Little Creatures
I had no where to go, I had no money to spend:"O come with me," the Beaver said, "I live at the world's end.""Does the world ever end!" To the Beaver then said I:"O yes! the green world ends," he said, "Up there in the blue sky."I walked along with him to home, At the edge of a singing stream -The little faces in the town Seemed made out of a dream.I sat down in the little house, And ate with the kind things -Then suddenly a bird comes out Of the bushes, and he sings:"Have you no home? O take my nest, It almost is the sky;"And then there came along the creek A purple dragon-fly."Have you no home?" he said; "O come along with me,Get on my wings - t...
Richard Le Gallienne
To The Same
(Ode to Lycoris. May 1817)Enough of climbing toil! Ambition treadsHere, as 'mid busier scenes, ground steep and rough,Or slippery even to peril! and each step,As we for most uncertain recompenceMount toward the empire of the fickle clouds,Each weary step, dwarfing the world below,Induces, for its old familiar sights,Unacceptable feelings of contempt,With wonder mixed, that Man could e'er be tied,In anxious bondage, to such nice arrayAnd formal fellowship of petty things!Oh! 'tis the 'heart' that magnifies this life,Making a truth and beauty of her own;And moss-grown alleys, circumscribing shades,And gurgling rills, assist her in the workMore efficaciously than realms outspread,As in a map, before the adventurer's gaze,Ocean an...
Thoughts Suggested By A College Examination.
High in the midst, surrounded by his peers,Magnus [1] his ample front sublime uprears:Plac'd on his chair of state, he seems a God,While Sophs [2] and Freshmen tremble at his nod;As all around sit wrapt in speechless gloom,His voice, in thunder, shakes the sounding dome;Denouncing dire reproach to luckless fools,Unskill'd to plod in mathematic rules.Happy the youth! in Euclid's axioms tried,Though little vers'd in any art beside;Who, scarcely skill'd an English line to pen,Scans Attic metres with a critic's ken.What! though he knows not how his fathers bled,When civil discord pil'd the fields with dead,When Edward bade his conquering bands advance,Or Henry trampled on the crest of France:Though marvellin...
George Gordon Byron
To Sunnydale
There lies the trail to Sunnydale, Amid the lure of laughter. Oh, how can we unhappy be Beneath its leafy rafter! Each perfect hour is like a flower, Each day is like a posy. How can you say the skies are grey? You're wrong, my friend, they're rosy. With right good will let's climb the hill, And leave behind all sorrow. Oh, we'll be gay! a bright to-day Will make a bright to-morrow. Oh, we'll be strong! the way is long That never has a turning; The hill is high, but there's the sky, And how the West is burning! And if through chance of circumstance We have to go bare-foot, sir, We'll not repine - a friend of mine Has got no feet to boot, sir. Thi...
Robert William Service
Mediocrity In Love Rejected
Give me more love or more disdain;The torrid, or the frozen zone,Bring equal ease unto my pain;The temperate affords me none;Either extreme, of love, or hate,Is sweeter than a calm estate.Give me a storm; if it be love,Like Danae in that golden show'rI swim in pleasure; if it proveDisdain, that torrent will devourMy vulture-hopes; and he's possess'dOf heaven, that's but from hell releas'd.Then crown my joys, or cure my pain;Give me more love, or more disdain.
To Her Most Honoured Father
Dear Sir of late delighted with the sightOf your four Sisters cloth'd in black and white,Of fairer Dames the Sun ne'r saw the face;Though made a pedestal for Adams Race;Their worth so shines in those rich lines you showTheir paralels to finde I scarely knowTo climbe their Climes, I have nor strength nor skillTo mount so high requires an Eagle's quill;Yet view thereof did cause my thoughts to soar,My lowly pen might wait upon those fourI bring my four times four, now meanly cladTo do their homage, unto yours, full glad:Who for their Age, their worth and qualityMight seem of yours to claim precedency:But by my humble hand, thus rudely pen'dThey are your bounden handmaids to attendThese same are they, from whom we being haveThese are o...
Anne Bradstreet
Lagrimas.
God send me tears!Loose the fierce band that binds my tired brain,Give me the melting heart of other years, And let me weep again! Before me passThe shapes of things inexorably true.Gone is the sparkle of transforming dew From every blade of grass. In life's high noonAimless I stand, my promised task undone,And raise my hot eyes to the angry sun That will go down too soon. Turned into gallAre the sweet joys of childhood's sunny reign;And memory is a torture, love a chain That binds my life in thrall. And childhood's painCould to me now the purest rapture yield;I pray for tears as in his parching field The husbandman for rain.
John Hay