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Natural Progress
In all faith, we did our part:generated punctually, prepared adequately,ejected promptly,and swam in the approved mannerin the appropriate direction;did all instinctive things well,even eagerlyan exemplary start.But then the barrier: unexpectednessunexpectedly.(They did not tell us this).To go back impossible, unnatural:so round; many times;we tired ourselves.Where were the promised homes,embedded in the soft wall?Or the anticipated achievementso momentous, fulfilling?So we died:what else was there to do?But in all faith, we did our part!
Ben Jonson
Answers
What is the end of each man's toil, Brother, O Brother?A handful of dust in a bit of soil -His name forgotten as centuries roll,Though blazoned to-day on Glory's scroll;For the lordliest work of brain or handIs only an imprint made on sand;When the tidal wave sweeps over the shore It is there no more, Brother, my Brother.Then what is the use of striving at all, Brother, O Brother?Because each effort or great or smallIs a step on the long, long road that leadsTo the Kingdom of Growth on the River of Deeds:And that is the kingdom no man can gain Till he uses his hand and his mind and brain,And when he has used them and learned control He finds his soul, Brother, my Brother.And after he find...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Ode To Man.
A man is not what oft he seems,On this terrestrial sphere,No pow'r to wield, no honor'd place,Oft curb his spirit here.He knows not what within him lies,Until his pow'rs be tried,And when for them some use is found,They spring from where they hide,To startle and to puzzle him,Who never knew their force,Because his unfreed spirit keptA low and shackl'd course.Dishearten'd and despairing, heHad often sigh'd alone,Not thinking that in other waysHis spirit might have grown.Not thinking that another course,Which needed pluck and vim,Might raise his drowning spirit high,And teach it how to swim;To battle with the rolling tide,That hurries onward men,And raise his head above the waves,<...
Thomas Frederick Young
Lines Suggested By A Portrait From The Pencil Of F. Stone
Beguiled into forgetfulness of careDue to the day's unfinished task; of penOr book regardless, and of that fair sceneIn Nature's prodigality displayedBefore my window, oftentimes and longI gaze upon a Portrait whose mild gleamOf beauty never ceases to enrichThe common light; whose stillness charms the air,Or seems to charm it, into like repose;Whose silence, for the pleasure of the ear,Surpasses sweetest music. There she sitsWith emblematic purity attiredIn a white vest, white as her marble neckIs, and the pillar of the throat would beBut for the shadow by the drooping chinCast into that recess, the tender shade,The shade and light, both there and everywhere,And through the very atmosphere she breathes,Broad, clear, and toned harmon...
William Wordsworth
The Second Best
Moderate tasks and moderate leisure,Quiet living, strict-kept measureBoth in suffering and in pleasureTis for this thy nature yearns.But so many books thou readest,But so many schemes thou breedest,But so many wishes feedest,That thy poor head almost turns.And (the worlds so madly jangled,Human things so fast entangled)Natures wish must now be strangledFor that best which she discerns.So it must be! yet, while leadingA straind life, while overfeeding,Like the rest, his wit with reading,No small profit that man earns,Who through all he meets can steer him,Can reject what cannot clear him,Cling to what can truly cheer him!Who each day more surely learnsThat an impulse, from the distance
Matthew Arnold
Faith Is A Fine Invention
Faith is a fine inventionFor gentlemen who see;But microscopes are prudentIn an emergency!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
The Enthusiast
"Though He slay me yet will I trust in Him."Shall hearts that beat no base retreatIn youth's magnanimous years--Ignoble hold it, if discreetWhen interest tames to fears;Shall spirits that worship lightPerfidious deem its sacred glow,Recant, and trudge where worldlings go,Conform and own them right?Shall Time with creeping influence coldUnnerve and cow? the heartPine for the heartless ones enrolledWith palterers of the mart?Shall faith abjure her skies,Or pale probation blench her downTo shrink from Truth so still, so loneMid loud gregarious lies?Each burning boat in Caesar's rear,Flames--No return through me!So put the torch to ties though dear,If ties but tempters be.Nor cringe if come the...
Herman Melville
Finis Exoptatus - A Metaphysical Song
Theres something in this world amissShall be unriddled by-and-bye.- Tennyson.Boot and saddle, see, the slantingRays begin to fall,Flinging lights and colours flauntingThrough the shadows tall.Onward! onward! must we travel?When will come the goal?Riddle I may not unravel,Cease to vex my soul.Harshly break those peals of laughterFrom the jays aloft,Can we guess what they cry after?We have heard them oft;Perhaps some strain of rude thanksgivingMingles in their song,Are they glad that they are living?Are they right or wrong?Right, tis joy that makes them call so,Why should they be sad?Certes! we are living also,Shall not we be glad?Onward! onward! must we travel?Is the go...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Ashamed, But Not Afraid
O God, I am ashamed to die,But not the least afraid;Tho' death's dark shadow draweth nigh,Atonement has been madeFor every member of our race,And I on it rely,And hope immortal blooms thro' grace;I'm not afraid to die.But Thou hast done great things for me,And I have nothing done.To set my sin-bound spirit free,Was sacrificed Thy Son;And every day by Thy kind handRich blessings are bestowed;Oh, how can I before Thee stand,Or rest in Thine abodeWith self-respect, or feel at homeWith no returns to show,My whole life like the worthless foamOn time's incessant flow.Oh, that in life's great harvest field,I may some reaping do;Early and late the sickle wield,And prove a reaper tr...
Joseph Horatio Chant
The Dreamer.
Spirit of Song! whose whispersDelight my pensive brain,When will the perfect harmonyRing through my feeble strain?When will the rills of melodyBe widened to a stream!When will the bright and gladsome DaySucceed this morning dream?"Mortal," the spirit whispered,"If thou wouldst truly winThe race thou art pursuing,Heed well the voice within:And it shall gently teach theeTo read thy heart, and knowNo human strain is perfect,However sweet it flow.And if thou readest truly,As surely shalt thou findThat truths, like rills, though diverse,Are choicest in their kind.The souls of Poet-DreamersTouch heaven on their way;With the light of Song to guide themIt should be always Day."
Charles Sangster
If
'Twixt what thou art, and what thou wouldst be, letNo "If" arise on which to lay the blame.Man makes a mountain of that puny word,But, like a blade of grass before the scythe,It falls and withers when a human will,Stirred by creative force, sweeps toward its aim.Thou wilt be what thou couldst be. CircumstanceIs but the toy of genius. When a soulBurns with a god-like purpose to achieve,All obstacles between it and its goalMust vanish as the dew before the sun."If" is the motto of the dilettanteAnd idle dreamer; 'tis the poor excuseOf mediocrity. The truly greatKnow not the word, or know it but to scorn,Else had Joan of Arc a peasant died,Uncrowned by glory and by men unsung.
Wishing.
When I reflect how little I have done, And add to that how little I have seen,Then furthermore how little I have won Of joy, or good, how little known, or been: I long for other life more full, more keen,And yearn to change with such as well have run - Yet reason mocks me - nay, the soul, I ween,Granted her choice would dare to change with none;No, - not to feel, as Blondel when his lay Pierced the strong tower, and Richard answered it -No, - not to do, as Eustace on the day He left fair Calais to her weeping lit -No, - not to be, Columbus, waked from sleepWhen his new world rose from the charmèd deep.
Jean Ingelow
Tabernacles
The little tents the wildflowers raiseAre tabernacles where Love praysAnd Beauty preaches all the days.I walk the woodland through and through,And everywhere I see their blueAnd gold where I may worship too.All hearts unto their inmost shrineOf fragrance they invite; and mineEnters and sees the All Divine.I hark; and with some inward earSoft words of praise and prayer I hear,And bow my head and have no fear.For God is present as I seeIn them; and gazes out at meKneeling to His divinity.Oh, holiness that Nature knows,That dwells within each thing that grows,Vestured with dreams as is the rose.With perfume! whereof all things preachThe birds, the brooks, the leaves, that reachOur hearts ...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Higher Pantheism
The Higher PantheismThe sun, the moon, the stars, the seas, the hills and the plainsAre not these, O Soul, the Vision of Him who reigns?Is not the Vision He? tho He be not that which He seems?Dreams are true while they last, and do we not live in dreams?Earth, these solid stars, this weight of body and limb,Are they not sign and symbol of thy division from Him?Dark is the world to thee: thyself art the reason why;For is He not all but that which has power to feel I am I?Glory about thee, without thee; and thou fulfillest thy doomMaking Him broken gleams, and a stifled splendour and gloom.Speak to Him thou for He hears, and Spirit with Spirit can meetCloser is He than breathing, and nearer than hands and feet.G...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Adoniram. A Legend of the Temple.
The dew was gone,The morn was bright, the skies were fair,The flowers smiled neath the sunbeams ray,Tall cedars grew in beauty there.As Adoniram took his way, To Lebanon. Praise his heart filled,More than four hundred years had fled,Since from stern Egypt marched the bands,Whose sons, with Solomon at their head,And Tyrian brethern's skilful hands, Prepare to build. He watched them there,Round every block, and every stone,Masonic implements were laid,But around one were many thrown,And yet it seemed already made, Tried, true and square. He wandering spake,"Are not all from one mountain broughtAs jewels for a diadem,Why, have they at this one stone wrought,Will not...
Harriet Annie Wilkins
In Memoriam. - Rev. Dr. F. W. Hatch,
Died at Sacramento, California, January 16th, 1860, aged 70.A pleasant theme it is to think of himThat parted friend, whose noble heart and mindWere ever active to the highest ends.Even sceptics paid him homage 'mid their doubts,Perceiving that his life made evidentA goodness not of earth. His radiant browAnd the warm utterance of his lustrous eyeTold how the good of others triumph'd o'erAll narrowness of self. He deem'd it notA worthy aim of Christ's true ministryTo chaffer for the gold that perishethOr waste its God-given powers on lifeless forms;But love of souls, and love of Him who diedThat they might live, gave impulse to his zeal.--And so, while half a century chronicledThe change of empires, an...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
I Give To You These Verses
I give to you these verses, that if inSome future time my name lands happilyTo bring brief pleasure to humanity,The craft supported by a great north wind,Your memory, like tales from ancient times,Will bore the reader like a dulcimer,And by a strange fraternal chain live hereAs if suspended in my lofty rhymes.From deepest pit into the highest skyDamned being, only I can bear you now.0 shadow, barely present to the eye,You lightly step, with a serene regardOn mortal fools who've judged you mean and hardAngel with eyes of jet, great burnished brow!
Charles Baudelaire
Thick-headed Thoughts
No. IIve something of the bull-dog in my breed,The spaniel is developed somewhat less;While life is in me I can fight and bleed,But never the chastising hand caress.You say the stroke was well intended. True.You mention It was meant to do me good.That may be. You deserve it. Granted, too.Then take it kindly. No, I never could.- - - - - -How many a resolution to amendIs made, and broken, as the years run round!And how can others on your word depend,When faithless to ourselves were often found?Ive often swore, Henceforward Ill reform,And bid my vices, follies, all take wing.To keep my promise, mid temptations storm,Ive always found was quite another thing.- - -...