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The Old Ash Tree.
Thou beautiful Ash! thou art lowly laid, And my eyes shall hail no moreFrom afar thy cool and refreshing shade, When the toilsome journey's o'er.The winged and the wandering tribes of air A home 'mid thy foliage found,But thy graceful boughs, all broken and bare, The wild winds are scattering round.The storm-demon sent up his loudest shout When he levelled his bolt at thee,When thy massy trunk and thy branches stout Were riven by the blast, old tree!It has bowed to the dust thy stately form, Which for many an age defiedThe rush and the roar of the midnight storm, When it swept through thy branches wide.I have gazed on thee with a fond delight In childhood's happier day,And watched the moonbeams...
Susanna Moodie
The Night-Wind
I.I have heard the wind on a winter's night,When the snow-cold moon looked icily throughMy window's flickering firelight,Where the frost his witchery drew:I have heard the wind on a winter's night,Wandering ways that were frozen white,Wail in my chimney-flue:And its voice was the voice, so it seemed to me,The voice of the world's vast misery.II.I have heard the wind on a night of spring,When the leaves unclasped their girdles of gold,And the bird on the bough sang slumbering,In the lilac's fragrant fold:I have heard the wind on a night of spring,Shaking the musk from its dewy wing,Sigh in my garden old:And it seemed that it said, as it sighed above,"I am the voice of the Earth's great love."III.
Madison Julius Cawein
My Peggy's Face.
Tune - "My Peggy's Face."I. My Peggy's face, my Peggy's form, The frost of hermit age might warm; My Peggy's worth, my Peggy's mind, Might charm the first of human kind. I love my Peggy's angel air, Her face so truly, heav'nly fair, Her native grace so void of art, But I adore my Peggy's heart.II. The lily's hue, the rose's dye, The kindling lustre of an eye; Who but owns their magic sway? Who but knows they all decay! The tender thrill, the pitying tear, The gen'rous purpose, nobly dear, The gentle look, that rage disarms These are all immortal charms.
Robert Burns
Night In New York
Haunted by unknown feet -Ways of the midnight hour!Strangely you murmur below me,Strange is your half-silent power.Places of life and of death,Numbered and named as streets,What, through your channels of stone,Is the tide that unweariedly beats?A whisper, a sigh-laden breath,Is all that I hear of its flowing.Footsteps of stranger and foe -Footsteps of friends, could we meet -Alike to me in my sorrow;Alike to a life left alone.Yet swift as my heart they throb,They fall thick as tears on the stone:My spirit perchance may borrowNew strength from their eager tone.Still ever that slip and slideOf the feet that shuffle or glide,And linger or haste through the populous wasteOf the shadowy, dim-lit square!And I...
George Parsons Lathrop
August Moonrise
The sun was gone, and the moon was comingOver the blue Connecticut hills;The west was rosy, the east was flushed,And over my head the swallows rushedThis way and that, with changeful wills.I heard them twitter and watched them dartNow together and now apartLike dark petals blown from a tree;The maples stamped against the westWere black and stately and full of rest,And the hazy orange moon grew upAnd slowly changed to yellow goldWhile the hills were darkened, fold on foldTo a deeper blue than a flower could hold.Down the hill I went, and thenI forgot the ways of men,For night-scents, heady, and damp and coolWakened ecstasy in meOn the brink of a shining pool.O Beauty, out of many a cupYou have made...
Sara Teasdale
Spring Morning - I
Thomalin.Where is every piping ladThat the fields are not yclad With their milk-white sheep?Tell me: is it holiday,Or if in the month of May Use they long to sleep?Piers.Thomalin, 'tis not too late,For the turtle and her mate Sitten yet in nest:And the thrustle hath not beenGath'ring worms yet on the green, But attends her rest.Not a bird hath taught her young,Nor her morning's lesson sung In the shady grove:But the nightingale in darkSinging woke the mounting lark: She records her love.Not the sun hath with his beamsGilded yet our crystal streams; Rising from the sea,Mists do crown the mountains' tops,And each pretty myrtle drops: ...
William Browne
Like Loves His Like.
Like will to like, each creature loves his kind;Chaste words proceed still from a bashful mind.
Robert Herrick
Testimony
When snow falls, there livesthe shrill cries thatleaves are not alone.Each flake, a mute testimonynot a leaf falls beforesurgery prunes the individual tree.Cold November afterbrown and white conspire,the forest leaves a bleeding crust,scar tissue from natural wars.
Paul Cameron Brown
A Poet's Sonnet
If I should quit thee, sacrifice, forswear, To what, my art, shall I give thee in keeping? To the long winds of heaven? Shall these come sweepingMy songs forgone against my face and hair?Or shall the mountain streams my lost joys bear, My past poetic pain in the rain be weeping? No, I shall live a poet waking, sleeping,And I shall die a poet unaware.From me, my art, thou canst not pass away; And I, a singer though I cease to sing, Shall own thee without joy in thee or woe.Through my indifferent words of every day, Scattered and all unlinked the rhymes shall ring And make my poem; and I shall not know.
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
Unsuccess
A modern Poet addresses his Muse, to whom he has devoted the best Years of his LifeI.Not here, O belovéd! not here let us part, in the city, but there!Out there where the storm can enfold us, on the hills, where its breast is made bare:Its breast, that is rainy and cool as the fern that drips by the fallIn the luminous night of' the woodland where winds to the waters call.Not here, O belovéd! not here! but there! out there in the storm!The rush and the reel of the heavens, the tem pest, whose rapturous armShall seize us and sweep us together, resistless as passions seize men,Through the rocking world of the woodland, with its multitude music, and then,With the rain on our lips, belovéd! in the heart of the night's wild hell,One last, long kiss forever, and...
Composed On A May Morning
Life with you Lambs, like day, is just begun,Yet Nature seems to them a heavenly guide.Does joy approach? they meet the coming tide;And sullenness avoid, as now they shunPale twilight's lingering glooms, and in the sunCouch near their dams, with quiet satisfied;Or gambol, each with his shadow at his side,Varying its shape wherever he may run.As they from turf yet hoar with sleepy dewAll turn, and court the shining and the green,Where herbs look up, and opening flowers are seen;Why to God's goodness cannot We be true,And so, His gifts and promises between,Feed to the last on pleasures ever new?
William Wordsworth
Verses
Vitae summa brevis spem nos vetat incohare longamThey are not long, the weeping and the laughter.Love and desire and hate:I think they have no portion in us afterWe pass the gate.They are not long, the days of wine and roses:Out of a misty dreamOur path emerges for a while, then closesWithin a dream.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
He Wonders About Himself
No use hoping, or feeling vext,Tugged by a force above or underLike some fantocine, much I wonderWhat I shall find me doing next!Shall I be rushing where bright eyes be?Shall I be suffering sorrows seven?Shall I be watching the stars of heaven,Thinking one of them looks like thee?Part is mine of the general Will,Cannot my share in the sum of sourcesBend a digit the poise of forces,And a fair desire fulfil?Nov. 1893.
Thomas Hardy
Chiarascuro: Rose
HeFill your bowl with roses: the bowl, too, have of crystal.Sit at the western window. Take the sunBetween your hands like a ball of flaming crystal,Poise it to let it fall, but hold it still,And meditate on the beauty of your existence;The beauty of this, that you exist at all.SheThe sun goes down, but without lamentation.I close my eyes, and the stream of my sensationIn this, at least, grows clear to me:Beauty is a word that has no meaning.Beauty is naught to me.HeThe last blurred raindrops fall from the half-clear sky,Eddying lightly, rose-tinged, in the windless wake of the sun.The swallow ascending against cold waves of cloudSeems winging upward over huge bleak stairs of stone.The raindrop finds...
Conrad Aiken
Sonnet CXIX.
Questa umil fera, un cor di tigre o d' orsa.HE PRAYS HER EITHER TO WELCOME OR DISMISS HIM AT ONCE. Fiercer than tiger, savager than bear,In human guise an angel form appears,Who between fear and hope, from smiles to tearsSo tortures me that doubt becomes despair.Ere long if she nor welcomes me, nor frees,But, as her wont, between the two retains,By the sweet poison circling through my veins,My life, O Love! will soon be on its lees.No longer can my virtue, worn and frailWith such severe vicissitudes, contend,At once which burn and freeze, make red and pale:By flight it hopes at length its grief to end,As one who, hourly failing, feels death nigh:Powerless he is indeed who cannot even die!MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
The Vanities Of Life
Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.-SolomonWhat are life's joys and gains?What pleasures crowd its ways,That man should take such painsTo seek them all his days?Sift this untoward strifeOn which thy mind is bent:See if this chaff of lifeIs worth the trouble spent.Is pride thy heart's desire?Is power thy climbing aim?Is love thy folly's fire?Is wealth thy restless game?Pride, power, love, wealth, and allTime's touchstone shall destroy,And, like base coin, prove allVain substitutes for joy.Dost think that pride exaltsThyself in other's eyes,And hides thy folly's faults,Which reason will despise?Dost strut, and turn, and stride,Like walking weathercocks?The shadow by thy sideBe...
John Clare
Wealth
(For Aline)From what old ballad, or from what rich frame Did you descend to glorify the earth?Was it from Chaucer's singing book you came? Or did Watteau's small brushes give you birth?Nothing so exquisite as that slight hand Could Raphael or Leonardo trace.Nor could the poets know in Fairyland The changing wonder of your lyric face.I would possess a host of lovely things, But I am poor and such joys may not be.So God who lifts the poor and humbles kings Sent loveliness itself to dwell with me.
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
November
Sybil of months, and worshipper of winds,I love thee, rude and boisterous as thou art;And scraps of joy my wandering ever findsMid thy uproarious madness--when the startOf sudden tempests stirs the forest leavesInto hoarse fury, till the shower set freeStills the huge swells. Then ebb the mighty heaves,That sway the forest like a troubled sea.I love thy wizard noise, and rave in turnHalf-vacant thoughts and rhymes of careless form;Then hide me from the shower, a short sojourn,Neath ivied oak; and mutter to the storm,Wishing its melody belonged to me,That I might breathe a living song to thee.