Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 376 of 525
Previous
Next
Song.
Oh! go to sleep, my baby dear,And I will hold thee on my knee;Thy mother's in her winding sheet,And thou art all that's left to me.My hairs are white with grief and age,I've borne the weight of every ill,And I would lay me with my child,But thou art left to love me still.Should thy false father see thy face,The tears would fill his cruel e'e,But he has scorned thy mother's wo,And he shall never look on thee:But I will rear thee up alone,And with me thou shalt aye remain;For thou wilt have thy mother's smile,And I shall see my child again.
Joseph Rodman Drake
South Africa
Lived a woman wonderful,(May the Lord amend her!)Neither simple, kind, nor true,But her Pagan beauty drewChristian gentlemen a fewHotly to attend her.Christian gentlemen a fewFrom Berwick unto Dover;For she was South Africa,Ana she was South Africa,She was Our South Africa,Africa all over!Half her land was dead with drouth,Half was red with battle;She was fenced with fire and swordPlague on pestilence outpoured,Locusts on the greening swardAnd murrain on the cattle!True, ah true, and overtrue.That is why we love her!For she is South Africa,And she is South Africa,She is Our South Africa,Africa all over!Bitter hard her lovers toild,Scandalous their paymen,,Food f...
Rudyard
Unity In Space.
Take me away into a storm of snowSo white and soft, I feel no deathly chill,But listen to the murmuring overflowOf clouds that fall in many a frosty rill!Take me away into the sunset's glow,That holds a summer in a glorious bloom;Or take me to the shadowed woods that growOn the sky's mountains, in the evening gloom!Give me an entrance to the limpid lakeWhen moonbeams shine across its purity!A life there is, within the life we takeSo commonly, for which 't were well to die.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Twilight Calm
Oh, pleasant eventide! Clouds on the western sideGrow grey and greyer hiding the warm sun:The bees and birds, their happy labours done, Seek their close nests and bide. Screened in the leafy wood The stock-doves sit and brood:The very squirrel leaps from bough to boughBut lazily; pauses; and settles now Where once he stored his food. One by one the flowers close, Lily and dewy roseShutting their tender petals from the moon:The grasshoppers are still; but not so soon Are still the noisy crows. The dormouse squats and eats Choice little dainty bitsBeneath the spreading roots of a broad lime;Nibbling his fill he stops from time to time And listens where he sits. ...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Lord, Speak Again
When God had formed the Universe, He thoughtOf all the marvels therein to be wroughtAnd to His aid then Motherhood was brought.'My lesser self, the feminine of Me,She will go forth throughout all time,' quoth He,'And make My world what I would have it be.'For I am weary, having laboured so,And for a cycle of repose would goInto that silence which but God may know.'Therefore I leave the rounding of My planTo Motherhood; and that which I beganLet woman finish in perfecting man.'She is the soil: the human Mother Earth:She is the sun, that calls the seed to earth.She is the gardener, who knows its worth.'From Me, all seed, of any kind must spring.Divine the growth such seed and soil will bring.For all is Me, a...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Peace Be Around Thee. (Scotch Air.)
Peace be around thee, wherever thou rov'st; May life be for thee one summer's day,And all that thou wishest and all that thou lov'st Come smiling around thy sunny way!If sorrow e'er this calm should break, May even thy tears pass off so lightly,Like spring-showers, they'll only make The smiles, that follow shine more brightly.May Time who sheds his blight o'er all And daily dooms some joy to deathO'er thee let years so gently fall, They shall not crush one flower beneath.As half in shade and half in sun This world along its path advances.May that side the sun's upon Be all that e'er shall meet thy glances!
Thomas Moore
The Lady And The Dame
So, thou hast the art, good dame, thou swearest, To keep Time's perishing touch at bayFrom the roseate splendour of the cheek so tender, And the silver threads from the gold away.And the tell-tale years that have hurried by us Shall tip-toe back, and, with kind good-will,They shall take the traces from off our faces, If we will trust to thy magic skill.Thou speakest fairly; but if I listen And buy thy secret, and prove its truth,Hast thou the potion and magic lotion To give me also the HEART of youth?With the cheek of rose and the eye of beauty, And the lustrous looks of life's lost prime,Wilt thou bring thronging each hope and longing That made the glory of that dead Time?When the sap in the trees sets young...
A Ballad Of Too Much Beauty
There is too much beauty upon this earth For lonely men to bear,Too many eyes, too enchanted skies, Too many things too fair;And the man who would live the life of a manMust turn his eyes away - if he can.He must not look at the dawning day, Or watch the rising moon;From the little feet, so white, so fleet, He must turn his eyes away;And the flowers and the faces he must pass byWith stern self-sacrificing eye.For beauty and duty are strangers forever, Work and wonder ever apart,And the laws of life eternally sever The ways of the brain from the ways of the heart;Be it flower or pearl, or the face of a girl,Or the ways of the waters as they swirl.Lo! beauty is sorrow, and sorrowful men Hav...
Richard Le Gallienne
Ode
When, to my deadly pleasure,When to my lively torment,Lady, mine eyes remainedJoined, alas! to your beams.With violence of heavenlyBeauty, tied to virtue;Reason abashed retired;Gladly my senses yielded.Gladly my senses yielding,Thus to betray my heart's fort,Left me devoid of all life.They to the beamy suns went,Where, by the death of all deaths,Find to what harm they hastened.Like to the silly Sylvan,Burned by the light he best liked,When with a fire he first met.Yet, yet, a life to their death,Lady you have reserved;Lady the life of all love.For though my sense be from me,And I be dead, who want sense,Yet do we both live in you.Turned anew, by your means,
Philip Sidney
The Knight Of Normandy.
Clear shone the moon, my mansion wallsTowered white above the wood,Near, down the dark oak avenueAn humble cottage stood.My gardener's cottage, small and brown,Yet precious unto me;For there she dwelt, who sat by meThat night beside the sea.So sweet, the white rose on her neckWas not more fair than she,As silently her soft brown eyesLooked outward o'er the sea.So still, the muslin o'er her heartSeemed with no breath to stir,As silently she sat and heardThe tale I told to her."It was a knight of Normandy,He vowed on his good swordHe would not wed his father's choice,The Lady Hildegarde."Near dwelt the beauteous Edith,A lowly maiden she - "Ah! still unmoved, her dark sweet eyes
Marietta Holley
In Such an Hour
Sometimes, when everything goes wrong:When days are short, and nights are long;When wash-day brings so dull a skyThat not a single thing will dry.And when the kitchen chimney smokes,And when there's naught so "queer" as folks!When friends deplore my faded youth,And when the baby cuts a tooth.While John, the baby last but one,Clings round my skirts till day is done;When fat, good-tempered Jane is glum,And butcher's man forgets to come.Sometimes, I say, on days like these,I get a sudden gleam of bliss."Not on some sunny day of ease,He'll come . . but on a day like this!"And, in the twinkling of an eye,These tiresome things will all go by!And, 'tis a curious thing, but JaneIs sure, just then, to smile again;Or, ...
Fay Inchfawn
Vain Questioning
What needest thou? - a few brief hours of restWherein to seek thyself in thine own breast;A transient silence wherein truth could saySuch was thy constant hope, and this thy way? - O burden of life that is A livelong tangle of perplexities!What seekest thou? - a truce from that thou art;Some steadfast refuge from a fickle heart;Still to be thou, and yet no thing of scorn,To find no stay here, and yet not forlorn? - O riddle of life that is An endless war 'twixt contrarieties.Leave this vain questioning. Is not sweet the rose?Sings not the wild bird ere to rest he goes?Hath not in miracle brave June returned?Burns not her beauty as of old it burned? O foolish one to roam So far in thine own mind away from home...
Walter De La Mare
The Better Lot.
Her life was bound to crutches: pale and bent,But smiling ever, she would go and come:For of her soul GOD made an instrumentOf strength and comfort to an humble home.Better a life of toil and slow diseaseThat LOVE companions through the patient years,Than one whose heritage is loveless ease,That never knows the blessedness of tears.
Madison Julius Cawein
Alone.
Alone in my chamber, forsaken, unsought,My spirit's enveloped in shadows of night,Is there no one to give me a smile or a thought?Is there none to restore to me faded delight?The zephyrs disport with a light-bosomed song,And the joy-laden songsters flit over the lea--Yet the hours of the spring as they hurry alongBring nothing but sadness and sighing to me!There were friends--but their love is departed and dead,And alone must the tear-drop disconsolate start,All the beauty of Life, all its sweetness is fled,Oh, who shall unburden this weight at my heart!
Lennox Amott
The Beauty
O do not praise my beauty more,In such word-wild degree,And say I am one all eyes adore;For these things harass me!But do for ever softly say:"From now unto the endCome weal, come wanzing, come what may,Dear, I will be your friend."I hate my beauty in the glass:My beauty is not I:I wear it: none cares whether, alas,Its wearer live or die!The inner I O care for, then,Yea, me and what I am,And shall be at the gray hour whenMy cheek begins to clam.
Thomas Hardy
Reed Call For April.
I.When April comes, and pelts with budsAnd apple-blooms each orchard space,And takes the dog-wood-whitened woodsWith rain and sunshine of her moods,Like your fair face, like your fair face:It's honey for the bloom and dew,And honey for the heart!And, oh, to be away with youBeyond the town and mart.II.When April comes, and tints the hillsWith gold and beryl that rejoice,And from her airy apron spillsThe laughter of the winds and rills,Like your young voice, like your young voice:It's gladness for God's bending blue,And gladness for the heart!And, oh, to be away with youBeyond the town and mart.III.When April comes, and binds and girdsThe world with warmth that breathes above,
Oglethorpe
An Ode to be read on the laying of the foundation stone of the new Oglethorpe University, January, 1915, at Atlanta, GeorgiaI.As when with oldtime passion for this LandHere once she stood, and in her pride, sent forthWorkmen on every hand,Sowing the seed of knowledge South and North,More gracious now than ever, let her rise,The splendor of a new dawn in her eyes;Grave, youngest sister of that company,That smiling wearLaurel and pineAnd wild magnolias in their flowing hair;The sisters Academe,With thoughts divine,Standing with eyes a-dream,Gazing beyond the world, into the sea,Where lie the Islands of Infinity.II.Now in these stormy days of stress and strain,When Gospel seems in vain,And Christiani...
The River
Still glides the stream, slow drops the boatUnder the rustling poplars shade;Silent the swans beside us floatNone speaks, none heeds ah, turn thy head.Let those arch eyes now softly shine,That mocking mouth grow sweetly bland:Ah, let them rest, those eyes, on mine;On mine let rest that lovely hand.My pent-up tears oppress my brain,My heart is swoln with love unsaid:Ah, let me weep, and tell my pain,And on thy shoulder rest my head.Before I die, before the soul,Which now is mine, must re-attainImmunity from my control,And wander round the world again:Before this teasd oerlabourd heartFor ever leaves its vain employ,Dead to its deep habitual smart,And dead to hopes of future joy.
Matthew Arnold