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A Volant Tribe Of Bards On Earth Are Found
A volant Tribe of Bards on earth are found,Who, while the flattering Zephyrs round them play,On "coignes of vantage" hang their nests of clay;How quickly from that aery hold unbound,Dust for oblivion! To the solid groundOf nature trusts the Mind that builds for aye;Convinced that there, there only, she can laySecure foundations. As the year runs round,Apart she toils within the chosen ring;While the stars shine, or while day's purple eyeIs gently closing with the flowers of spring;Where even the motion of an Angel's wingWould interrupt the intense tranquilityOf silent hills, and more than silent sky.
William Wordsworth
Thou Hast Woven the Spell.
Thou hast woven the spell that hath bound me, Through all the sad changes of years;And the smiles that I wore when I found thee, Have faded and melted in tears!Like the poor, wounded fawn from the mountain, That seeks out the clear silver tide,I have lingered in vain at the fountain Of hope--with a shaft in my side!Thou hast taught me that Love's rosy fetters A pang from the thorns may impart;That the coinage of vows and of letters Comes not from the mint of the heart.Like the lone bird that flutters her pinion, And warbles in bondage her strain,I have struggled to fly thy domain, But find that the struggle is vain!
George Pope Morris
The First Hymn Of Callimachus. To Jupiter
While we to Jove select the holy victimWhom apter shall we sing than Jove himself,The god for ever great, for ever king,Who slew the earthborn race, and measures rightTo heaven's great 'habitants? Dictaean hear'st thouMore joyful, or Lycaean, long disputeAnd various thought has traced. On Ida's mount,Or Dictae, studious of his country's praise,The Cretan boasts thy natal place; but oftHe meets reproof deserved; for he, presumptuous,Has built a tomb for thee who never know'stTo die, but liv'st the same to-day and ever.Arcadian therefore be thy birth: great Rhea,Pregnant, to high Parrhasia's cliffs retired,And wild Lycaeus, black with shading pines;Holy retreat! sithence no female hither,Conscious of social love and Nature's rites,Must dare...
Matthew Prior
The Dead
How shall the living be comforted for the deadWhen they are gone, and nothing's left behindBut a vague music of the words they saidAnd a fast-fading image in the mind?Let no forgetting sully that dim grace;Our heart's infirmity is too easily wonTo set a new love in the old love's placeAnd seek fresh vanity under the sun.Time brings to us at last, as night the stars,The starry silence of eternity:For there is no discharge in our long wars,Nor balm for wounds, nor love's security.Be patient to the end, and you shall sleepPillowed on heartsease and forget to weep.
William Kerr
His Praise Of Finn
It is a week from yesterday I last saw Finn; I never saw a braver man. A king of heavy blows; my law, my adviser, my sense and my wisdom, prince and poet, braver than kings, King of the Fenians, brave in all countries; golden salmon of the sea, clean hawk of the air, rightly taught, avoiding lies; strong in his doings, a right judge, ready in courage, a high messenger in bravery and in music.His skin lime-white, his hair golden; ready to work, gentle to women; his great green vessels full of rough sharp wine. It is rich the king was, the head of his people.Seven sides Finn's house had, and seven score shields on every side. Fifty fighting men he had about him having woollen cloaks; ten bright drinking-cups in his hall, ten blue vessels, ten golden horns.It is a good household Finn had, without grudging,...
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
Hymn For The Fair At Chicago
O God! in danger's darkest hour,In battle's deadliest field,Thy name has been our Nation's tower,Thy truth her help and shield.Our lips should fill the air with praise,Nor pay the debt we owe,So high above the songs we raiseThe floods of mercy flow.Yet Thou wilt hear the prayer we speak,The song of praise we sing, -Thy children, who thine altar seekTheir grateful gifts to bring.Thine altar is the sufferer's bed,The home of woe and pain,The soldier's turfy pillow, redWith battle's crimson rain.No smoke of burning stains the air,No incense-clouds arise;Thy peaceful servants, Lord, prepareA bloodless sacrifice.Lo! for our wounded brothers' need,We bear the wine and oil;For us they f...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Nora To David Herbison.
There's a place in the North where the bonnie broom grows,Where winding through green meadows the silver Maine flows,Every lark as it soars and sings that sweet spot knows; For the mate for whom it sings, Till the clear blue heaven rings,Is brooding on its nest mid the daisies in the grass; And that psalmist sweet, the thrush, And the linnet in the bush,Tell the children all their secrets in song as they pass.Oh brightly shines the sun there where wee birdies sing,A glamour's o'er the buds in the green lap of spring,In happy, happy laughter children's voices ring! Like some fair enchanted ground, In memory it is found,Where my childhood's golden hours of happine...
Nora Pembroke
Hymn
I know if I find you I will have to leave the earth and go on outover the sea marshes and the brant in baysand over the hills of tall hickoryand over the crater lakes and canyonsand on up through the spheres of diminishing airpast the blackset noctilucent cloudswhere one wants to stop and lookway past all the light diffusions and bombardmentsup farther than the loss of sightinto the unseasonal undifferentiated empty starkAnd I know if I find you I will have to stay with the earthinspecting with thin tools and ground eyestrusting the microvilli sporangia and simplest coelenteratesand praying for a nerve cellwith all the soul of my chemical reactionsand going right on down where the eye sees only tracesYou are everywhere partial and e...
A. R. Ammons
On The Jubilee Of Queen Victoria
I.Fifty times the rose has flowerd and faded,Fifty times the golden harvest fallen,Since our Queen assumed the globe, the sceptre.II.She beloved for a kindlinessRare in fable or history,Queen, and Empress of India,Crownd so long with a diademNever worn by a worthier,Now with prosperous auguriesComes at last to the bounteousCrowning year of her Jubilee.III.Nothing of the lawless, of the despot,Nothing of the vulgar, or vainglorious,All is gracious, gentle, great and queenly.IV.You then joyfully, all of you,Set the mountain aflame to-night,Shoot your stars to the firmament,Deck your houses, illuminateAll your towns for a festival,An...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Faintheart In A Railway Train
At nine in the morning there passed a church,At ten there passed me by the sea,At twelve a town of smoke and smirch,At two a forest of oak and birch,And then, on a platform, she:A radiant stranger, who saw not me.I queried, "Get out to her do I dare?"But I kept my seat in my search for a plea,And the wheels moved on. O could it but beThat I had alighted there!
Thomas Hardy
To James Smith.
"Friendship! mysterious cement of the soul! Sweet'ner of life and solder of society! I owe thee much!"Blair. Dear Smith, the sleest, paukie thief, That e'er attempted stealth or rief, Ye surely hae some warlock-breef Owre human hearts; For ne'er a bosom yet was prief Against your arts. For me, I swear by sun an' moon, And ev'ry star that blinks aboon, Ye've cost me twenty pair o' shoon Just gaun to see you; And ev'ry ither pair that's done, Mair ta'en I'm wi' you. That auld capricious carlin, Nature, To mak amends for scrimpit stature, She's turn'd you aff, a human creature On her first plan; And in her freaks, on every feature
Robert Burns
Before the Curtain
Behind the footlights hangs the rusty baize,A trifle shabby in the upturned blazeOf flaring gas and curious eyes that gaze.The stage, methinks, perhaps is none too wide,And hardly fit for royal Richards stride,Or Falstaffs bulk, or Denmarks youthful pride.Ah, well! no passion walks its humble boards;Oer it no king nor valiant Hector lords:The simplest skill is all its space affords.The song and jest, the dance and trifling play,The local hit at follies of the day,The trick to pass an idle hour away,For these no trumpets that announce the Moor,No blast that makes the heros welcome sure,A single fiddle in the overture!
Bret Harte
The Victory.
Hark--how the church-bells thundering harmony Stuns the glad ear! tidings of joy have come, Good tidings of great joy! two gallant ships Met on the element,--they met, they fought A desperate fight!--good tidings of great joy! Old England triumphed! yet another day Of glory for the ruler of the waves! For those who fell, 'twas in their country's cause, They have their passing paragraphs of praise And are forgotten. There was one who died In that day's glory, whose obscurer name No proud historian's page will chronicle. Peace to his honest soul! I read his name, 'Twas in the list of slaughter, and blest God The sound was not familiar to mine ear. But it was told me after that this man ...
Robert Southey
The Harpy
There was a woman, and she was wise; woefully wise was she;She was old, so old, yet her years all told were but a score and three;And she knew by heart, from finish to start, the Book of Iniquity.There is no hope for such as I, on earth nor yet in Heaven;Unloved I live, unloved I die, unpitied, unforgiven;A loathèd jade I ply my trade, unhallowed and unshriven.I paint my cheeks, for they are white, and cheeks of chalk men hate;Mine eyes with wine I make to shine, that men may seek and sate;With overhead a lamp of red I sit me down and wait.Until they come, the nightly scum, with drunken eyes aflame;Your sweethearts, sons, ye scornful ones - 'tis I who know their shame;The gods ye see are brutes to me - and so I play my game.For life is n...
Robert William Service
To Cvpid
Maydens, why spare ye?Or whether not dare ye Correct the blind Shooter?Because wanton VENVS,So oft that doth paine vs, Is her Sonnes Tutor.Now in the Spring,He proueth his Wing, The Field is his Bower,And as the small Bee,About flyeth hee, From Flower to Flower.And wantonly roues,Abroad in the Groues, And in the Ayre houers,Which when it him deweth,His Fethers he meweth, In sighes of true Louers.And since doom'd by Fate,(That well knew his Hate) That Hee should be blinde;For very despite,Our Eyes be his White, So wayward his kinde.If his Shafts loosing,(Ill his Mark choosing) Or his Bow broken;The Moane VENVS maketh,And car...
Michael Drayton
Service
I passed a cottage 'twixt the town and wood,And marked its garden, blossoming bright and bold,And breathing many a scent. Awhile I stoodNear pink and marigold.It seemed a place of prayer; of love and peace;Where gray Content with children at his knees,Like blessings manifold,Rested among the trees.An old man came into the garden-plot;And 'mid the tansy and the scarlet sageFound for himseft a dim and quiet spotWherein to turn a page:For in his hand he bore a well-thumbed book,Upon whose pages now and then he'd look;And then, as if with age,His hoary head he shook.I said to him:"You have a lovely place.How rich your garden blooms! How sweet its shade!How good to sit here in the eve and faceThose hills of ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Lessons
Unless I learn to ask no helpFrom any other soul but mine,To seek no strength in waving reedsNor shade beneath a straggling pine;Unless I learn to look at GriefUnshrinking from her tear-blind eyes,And take from Pleasure fearlesslyWhatever gifts will make me wiseUnless I learn these things on earth,Why was I ever given birth?
Sara Teasdale
Woman's Portion.
I.The leaves are shivering on the thorn,Drearily;And sighing wakes the lean-eyed morn,Wearily.I press my thin face to the pane,Drearily;But never will he come again.(Wearily.)The rain hath sicklied day with haze,Drearily;My tears run downward as I gaze,Wearily.The mist and morn spake unto me,Drearily:"What is this thing God gives to thee?"(Wearily.)I said unto the morn and mist,Drearily:"The babe unborn whom sin hath kissed."(Wearily.)The morn and mist spake unto me,Drearily:"What is this thing which thou dost see?"(Wearily.)I said unto the mist and morn,Drearily:"The shame of man and woman's scorn."(Wearily.)"He loved t...