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Senorita.
An agate black thy roguish eyesClaim no proud lineage of skies,No velvet blue, but of sweet Earth,Rude, reckless witchery and mirth.Looped in thy raven hair's repose,A hot aroma, one tame roseDies envious of that beauty where, -By being near which, - it is fair.Thy ears, - two dainty bits of songOf unpretending charm, which wrongWould jewels rich, whose restless fireCourts coarse attention, - such inspire.Slim hands, that crumple listless laceAbout thy white breasts' swelling grace,And falter at thy samite throat,To such harmonious efforts float.Seven stars stop o'er thy balconyCored in taunt heaven's canopy;No moon flows up the satin nightIn pearl-pierced raiment spun of light.From orange o...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Death Of The First Born
Cover him over with daisies whiteAnd eke with the poppies red,Sit with me here by his couch to-night,For the First-Born, Love, is dead.Poor little fellow, he seemed so fairAs he lay in my jealous arms;Silent and cold he is lying thereStripped of his darling charms.Lusty and strong he had grown forsooth,Sweet with an infinite grace,Proud in the force of his conquering youth,Laughter alight in his face.Oh, but the blast, it was cruel and keen,And ah, but the chill it was rare;The look of the winter-kissed flow'r you've seenWhen meadows and fields were bare.Can you not wake from this white, cold sleepAnd speak to me once again?True that your slumber is deep, so deep,But deeper by far is my pain.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Ill-Married.
If worth, were not a thing more rareThan beauty in this planet fair,There would be then less need of careAbout the contracts Hymen closes.But beauty often is the baitTo love that only ends in hate;And many hence repent too lateOf wedding thorns from wooing roses.[1]My tale makes one of these poor fellows,Who sought relief from marriage vows,Send back again his tedious spouse,Contentious, covetous, and jealous,With nothing pleased or satisfied,This restless, comfort-killing brideSome fault in every one descried.Her good man went to bed too soon,Or lay in bed till almost noon.Too cold, too hot, - too black, too white, -Were on her tongue from morn till night.The servants mad and madder grew;The husband knew not ...
Jean de La Fontaine
Companions.
A Tale Of A Grandfather.By The Author Of "Dewy Memories," &C.I know not of what we ponder'dOr made pretty pretence to talk,As, her hand within mine, we wander'dTow'rd the pool by the limetree walk,While the dew fell in showers from the passion flowersAnd the blush-rose bent on her stalk.I cannot recall her figure:Was it regal as Juno's own?Or only a trifle biggerThan the elves who surround the throneOf the Faery Queen, and are seen, I ween,By mortals in dreams alone?What her eyes were like, I know not:Perhaps they were blurr'd with tears;And perhaps in your skies there glow not(On the contrary) clearer spheres.No! as to her eyes I am just as wiseAs you or the cat, my dears.Her teet...
Charles Stuart Calverley
De Lunatico.
The squadrons of the sun still hold The western hills, their armor glances, Their crimson banners wide unfold, Low-levelled lie their golden lances. The shadows lurk along the shore, Where, as our row-boat lightly passes, The ripples startled by our oar, Hide murmuring 'neath the hanging grasses. Your eyes are downcast, for the light Is lingering on your lids forgetting How late it is for one last sight Of you the sun delays his setting. One hand droops idly from the boat, And round the white and swaying fingers, Like half-blown lilies gone afloat, The amorous water, toying, lingers. ...
George Augustus Baker, Jr.
Not Gone.
They are not gone whose lives in beauty so unfolding Have left their own sweet impress everywhere;Like flowers, while we linger in beholding, Diffusing fragrance on the summer air.They are not gone, for grace and goodness can not perish, But must develop in immortal bloom;The viewless soul, the real self we love and cherish, Shall live and flourish still beyond the tomb.They are not gone though lost to observation, And dispossessed of those dear forms of clay,Though dust and ashes speak of desolation; The spirit-presence - this is ours alway.
Hattie Howard
My Soul And I
Stand still, my soul, in the silent darkI would question thee,Alone in the shadow drear and starkWith God and me!What, my soul, was thy errand here?Was it mirth or ease,Or heaping up dust from year to year?"Nay, none of these!"Speak, soul, aright in His holy sightWhose eye looks stillAnd steadily on thee through the night"To do His will!"What hast thou done, O soul of mine,That thou tremblest so?Hast thou wrought His task, and kept the lineHe bade thee go?Aha! thou tremblest! well I seeThou 'rt craven grown.Is it so hard with God and meTo stand alone?Summon thy sunshine bravery back,O wretched sprite!Let me hear thy voice through this deep and blackAbysmal night.
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Convert
The sun was hot on the tamarind trees,Their shadows shrivelled and shrank.No coolness came on the off-shore breezeThat rattled the scrub on the bank.She stretched her appealing arms to me,Uplifting the Flagon of Love to me,Till - great indeed was my unslaked thirst -I paused, I stooped, and I drank!I went with my foe to the edge of the crater, -But no one to return, we knew, -The lava's heat had never been greaterThan the ire between us two.He flung back his head and he mocked at me,He spat unspeakable words at me,Our eyes met, and our knives met,I saw red, and I slew!Such were my deeds when my youth was hot,And force was new to my hand,With many more that I tell thee not,Well known in my native land.These sh...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Old-Fashioned.
Arcturus is his other name, --I'd rather call him star!It's so unkind of scienceTo go and interfere!I pull a flower from the woods, --A monster with a glassComputes the stamens in a breath,And has her in a class.Whereas I took the butterflyAforetime in my hat,He sits erect in cabinets,The clover-bells forgot.What once was heaven, is zenith now.Where I proposed to goWhen time's brief masquerade was done,Is mapped, and charted too!What if the poles should frisk aboutAnd stand upon their heads!I hope I 'm ready for the worst,Whatever prank betides!Perhaps the kingdom of Heaven 's changed!I hope the children thereWon't be new-fashioned when I come,And laugh at me, and stare!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Song In The "Maiden Queen."
I feed a flame within, which so torments me, That it both pains my heart, and yet contents me: 'Tis such a pleasing smart, and I so love it, That I had rather die than once remove it. Yet he for whom I grieve shall never know it: My tongue does not betray, nor my eyes show it. Not a sigh, not a tear, my pain discloses, But they fall silently, like dew on roses. Thus, to prevent my love from being cruel, My heart's the sacrifice, as 'tis the fuel: And while I suffer this to give him quiet, My faith rewards my love, though he deny it. On his eyes will I gaze, and there delight me; Where I conceal my love no frown can fright me: To be more happy, I dare not aspire; Nor can I fall more lo...
John Dryden
Blind
Whatever a man may think or feel He can tell to the world and it hears aright;But it bids the woman conceal, conceal, And woe to the thoughts that at last ignite.She may serve up gossip or dwell on fashion, Or play the critic with speech unkind,But alas for the woman who speaks with passion! For the world is blind -for the world is blind.It is woman who sits with her starved desire, And drinks to sorrow in cups of tears;She reads by the light of her soul on fire The secrets of love through lonely years:But out of all she has felt or heard Or read by the glow of her soul's white flame,If she dare but utter aloud one word - How the world cries shame! -how the world cries shame!It cannot distinguish between the ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Her Eyes And Mouth.
There is no Paradise like that which liesDeep in the heavens of her azure eyes:There is no Eden here on Earth that glowsLike that which smiles rich in her mouth's red rose.
Yarrow Visited. September, 1814
And is this Yarrow? This the streamOf which my fancy cherished,So faithfully, a waking dream?An image that hath perished!O that some Minstrels harp were near,To utter notes of gladness,And chase this silence from the air,That fills my heart with sadness!Yet why? a silvery current flowsWith uncontrolled meanderings;Nor have these eyes by greener hillsBeen soothed, in all my wanderings.And, through her depths, Saint Marys LakeIs visibly delighted;For not a feature of those hillsIs in the mirror slighted.A blue sky bends oer Yarrow vale,Save where that pearly whitenessIs round the rising sun diffused,A tender hazy brightness;Mild dawn of promise! that excludesAll profitless dejection;Though not un...
William Wordsworth
To Mary - .
O Mary dear, that you were hereWith your brown eyes bright and clear.And your sweet voice, like a birdSinging love to its lone mateIn the ivy bower disconsolate;Voice the sweetest ever heard!And your brow more...Than the ... skyOf this azure Italy.Mary dear, come to me soon,I am not well whilst thou art far;As sunset to the sphered moon,As twilight to the western star,Thou, beloved, art to me.O Mary dear, that you were here;The Castle echo whispers 'Here!'
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Patience
I.I saw how the patient Sun Hasted untiringlyThe self-same old race to run; Never aspiringlySeeking some other road Through the blue heavenThan the one path which God Long since had given; - And I said; - "Patient Sun, Teach me my race to run, Even as thine is done, Steadfastly ever; Weakly, impatiently Wandering never!"II.I saw how the patient Earth Sat uncomplainingly,While, in his boisterous mirth, Winter disdaininglyMocked at her steadfast trust, That, from its icy chain,Spring her imprisoned dust Soon would release again; - And I said; - "Patient Earth, Biding thy hour of dear...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Lai Of Gobertz[1]
Of courteous Limozin wight,Gobertz, I will indite:From Poicebot had he his rightOf gentlehood;Made monk in his own despiteIn San Léonart the white,Withal to sing and to writeCoblas he could.Learning had he, and rareMusic, and gai saber:No monk with him to compareIn that monast'ry.Full lusty he was to bearCowl and chaplet of hairGod willeth monks for to wearFor sanctity.There in dortoir as he lay,To this Gobertz, by my fay,Came fair women to playIn his sleep;Then he had old to pray,Fresh and silken came they,With eyen saucy and grayThat set him weep.May was the month, and softThe singing nights; up aloftThe quarter moon swam and scoffedHis unease.
Maurice Henry Hewlett
On Miss Fitzgerald And Lord Kerry Planting Two Cedars In The Churchyard Of Bremhill.
Yes, Pamela, this infant treePlanted in sacred earth by thee,Shall strike its root, and pleasant growWhilst I am mouldering dust below.This churchyard turf shall still be green,When other pastors here are seen,Who, gazing on that dial gray,Shall mourn, like me, life's passing ray.What says its monitory shade?Thyself so blooming, now shalt fade;And even that fair and lightsome boy,Elastic as the step of joy,The future lord of yon domain,And all this wide extended plain,Shall yield to creeping time, when theyWho loved him shall have passed away.Yet, planted by his youthful hand,The fellow-cedar still shall stand,And when it spreads its boughs around,Shading the consecrated ground,He may behold its shade, and say(Hims...
William Lisle Bowles
Odes From Horace. - To Mæcenas. Book The First, Ode The First.
I.Mæcenas, from Etrurian Princes sprung, For whom my golden lyre I strung,Friend, Patron, Guardian of its rising song, O mark the Youth, that towers along, With triumph in his air; Proud of Olympic dust, that soils His burning cheek and tangled hair!Mark how he spreads the palm, that crown'd his toils! Each look the throbbing hope reveals That his fleet steeds and kindling wheels,Swept round the skilfully-avoided goal,Shall with illustrious Chiefs his echo'd name enrol.II. Who the civic crown obtains, Or bears into his granaries largeThe plenteous tribute of the Libyan Plains;Or he, who watches still a rural charge, O'er his own fields directs the plough, Sees his own fr...
Anna Seward