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Momus, God Of Laughter
Though with gods the world is cumbered,Gods unnamed, and gods unnumbered,Never god was known to beWho had not his devotee.So I dedicate to mine,Here in verse, my temple-shrine.'Tis not Ares, - mighty Mars,Who can give success in wars.'Tis not Morpheus, who doth keepGuard above us while we sleep,'Tis not Venus, she whose duty'Tis to give us love and beauty;Hail to these, and others, afterMomus, gleesome god of laughter.Quirinus would guard my health,Plutus would insure me wealth;Mercury looks after trade,Hera smiles on youth and maid.All are kind, I own their worth,After Momus, god of mirth.Though Apollo, out of spite,Hides away his face of light,Though Minerva looks askance,Deigning me...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To An Astrologer
Nay, seer, I do not doubt thy mystic lore,Nor question that the tenor of my life,Past, present and the future, is revealedThere in my horoscope. I do believeThat yon dead moon compels the haughty seasTo ebb and flow, and that my natal starStands like a stern-browed sentinel in spaceAnd challenges events; nor lets one grief,Or joy, or failure, or success, pass onTo mar or bless my earthly lot, untilIt proves its Karmic right to come to me.All this I grant, but more than this I know!Before the solar systems were conceived,When nothing was but the unnamable,My spirit lived, an atom of the Cause.Through countless ages and in many formsIt has existed, ere it entered inThis human frame to serve its little dayUpon the earth. T...
In Narrow Ways
Some lives are set in narrow ways,By Love's wise tenderness.They seem to suffer all their daysLife's direst storm and stress.But God shall raise them up at length,His purposes are sure,He for their weakness shall give strength,For every ill a cure.
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
I Know I Love Thee.
I shall never forget the day, Annie,When I bid thee a fond adieu;With a careless good bye I left thee,For my cares and my fears were few.True that thine eyes seemed brightest; -True that none had so fair a brow, -I thought that I loved thee then, Annie,But I knew that I love thee now.I had neither wealth nor beauty,Whilst thou owned of both a share,I bad only a honest purposeAnd the courage the Fates to dare.To all others my heart preferred thee,And 'twas hard to part I know;For I thought that I loved thee then, Annie,But I know that I love thee now.Oh! what would I give to-night, love,Could I clasp thee once again,To my heart that is aching with loving, -To my heart where my love does r...
John Hartley
Dai Butsu. {70}
He sits. Upon the kingly head doth rest The round-balled wimple, and the heavy rings Touch on the shoulders where the shadow clings.The downward garment shows the ambiguous breast;The face - that face one scarce can look on lest One learn the secret of unspeakable things; But the dread gaze descends with shudderings,To the veiled couched knees, the hands and thumbs close-pressed.O lidded, downcast eyes that bear the weight Of all our woes and terrible wrong's increase: Proud nostrils, lips proud-perfecter than these,With what a soul within you do you wait!Disdain and pity, love late-born of hate, Passion eternal, patience, pain and peace!
Francis William Lauderdale Adams
Joy Supreme
The birds are pirates of her notes,The blossoms steal her face's light;The stars in ambush lie all day,To take her glances for the night.Her voice can shame rain-pelted leaves;Young robin has no notes as sweetIn autumn, when the air is still,And all the other birds are mute.When I set eyes on ripe, red plumsThat seem a sin and shame to bite,Such are her lips, which I would kiss,And still would keep before my sight.When I behold proud gossamerMake silent billows in the air,Then think I of her head's fine stuff,Finer than gossamer's, I swear.The miser has his joy, with goldBeneath his pillow in the night;My head shall lie on soft warm hair,And miser's know not that delight.Captains that own their ships can boas...
William Henry Davies
To Sir Joshua Reynolds.
Dear President, whose art sublimeGives perpetuity to time,And bids transactions of a day,That fleeting hours would waft awayTo dark futurity, survive,And in unfading beauty live,You cannot with a grace declineA special mandate of the NineYourself, whatever task you choose,So much indebted to the Muse.Thus say the sisterhood:We comeFix well your pallet on your thumb,Prepare the pencil and the tintsWe come to furnish you with hints.French disappointment, British glory,Must be the subject of the story.First strike a curve, a graceful bow,Then slope it to a point below;Your outline easy, airy, light,Filld up becomes a paper kite.Let independence, sanguine, horrid,Blaze like a meteor in the forehead:Beneath ...
William Cowper
Limbo
The sole true Something, This! In Limbo DenIt frightens Ghosts as Ghosts here frighten menFor skimming in the wake it mock'd the careOf the old Boat-God for his Farthing Fare ;Tho' Irus' Ghost itself he ne'er frown'd blacker on,The skin and skin-pent Druggist crost the Acheron,Styx, and with Puriphlegethon Cocytus,(The very names, methinks, might thither fright us)Unchang'd it cross'd, & shall some fated HourBe pulveris'd by Demogorgon's powerAnd given as poison to annilate SoulsEven now It shrinks them! they shrink in as Moles(Nature's mute Monks, live Mandrakes of the ground)Creep back from Light, then listen for its Sound;See but to dread, and dread they know not whyThe natural Alien of their negative Eye. 'Tis a strange pla...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The Net of Memory
I cast the Net of Memory,Man's torment and delight,Over the level Sands of YouthThat lay serenely bright,Their tranquil gold at times submergedIn the Spring Tides of Love's Delight.The Net brought up, in silver gleams,Forgotten truth and fancies fair:Like opal shells, small happy factsWithin the Net entangled wereWith the red coral of his lips,The waving seaweed of his hair.We were so young; he was so fair.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Oberon's Palace.
After the feast, my Shapcot, seeThe fairy court I give to thee;Where we'll present our Oberon, ledHalf-tipsy to the fairy bed,Where Mab he finds, who there doth lie,Not without mickle majesty.Which done, and thence remov'd the light,We'll wish both them and thee good-night.Full as a bee with thyme, and redAs cherry harvest, now high fedFor lust and action, on he'll goTo lie with Mab, though all say no.Lust has no ears; he's sharp as thorn,And fretful, carries hay in's horn,And lightning in his eyes; and flingsAmong the elves, if moved, the stingsOf peltish wasps; well know his guard -Kings, though they're hated, will be fear'd.Wine lead[s] him on. Thus to a grove,Sometimes devoted unto love,Tinselled with tw...
Robert Herrick
Iseult Of Brittany
A year had flown, and oer the sea away,In Cornwall, Tristram and Queen Iseult lay;In King Marcs chapel, in Tyntagel oldThere in a ship they bore those lovers cold.The young surviving Iseult, one bright day,Had wanderd forth. Her children were at playIn a green circular hollow in the heathWhich borders the sea-shore a country pathCreeps over it from the tilld fields behind.The hollows grassy banks are soft-inclined,And to one standing on them, far and nearThe lone unbroken view spreads bright and clearOver the waste. This cirque of open groundIs light and green; the heather, which all roundCreeps thickly, grows not here; but the pale grassIs strewn with rocks, and many a shiverd massOf veind white-gleaming quartz, and here and there...
Matthew Arnold
From Monte Pincio
Evening is coming, the sun waxes red,Radiant colors from heaven are beamingLife's lustrous longings in infinite streaming; -Glory in death o'er the mountains is spread.Cupolas burn, but the fog in far massesOver the bluish-black fields softly passes,Rolling as whilom oblivion pale;Hid is yon valley 'neath thousand years' veil. Evening so red and warm Glows as the people swarm, Notes of the cornet flare, Flowers and brown eyes fair.Great men of old stand in marble erected,Waiting, scarce known and neglected.Vespers are ringing, through roseate airNebulous floating of tone-sacrifices,Twilight in churches now broadens and rises,Incense and word fill the evening with prayer.Over the Sabines the flame-belt is knotted,
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Shine Out, Stars!
Shine out, Stars! let Heaven assemble Round us every festal ray,Lights that move not, lights that tremble, All to grace this Eve of May.Let the flower-beds all lie waking, And the odors shut up there,From their downy prisons breaking, Fly abroad thro sea and air.And Would Love, too, bring his sweetness, With our other joys to weave,Oh what glory, what completeness, Then would crown this bright May Eve!Shine out, Stars! let night assemble Round us every festal ray,Lights that move not, lights that tremble, To adorn this Eve of May.
Thomas Moore
Annisquam
Old days, old ways, old homes beside the sea;Old gardens with old-fashioned flowers aflame,Poppy, petunia, and many a nameOf many a flower of fragrant pedigree.Old hills that glow with blue- and barberry,And rocks and pines that stand on guard, the same,Immutable, as when the Pilgrim came,And here laid firm foundations of the Free.The sunlight makes the dim dunes hills of snow,And every vessel's sail a twinkling wingGlancing the violet ocean far away:The world is full of color and of glow;A mighty canvas whereon God doth flingThe flawless picture of a perfect day.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Nameless Graves
Unnamed at times, at times unknown,Our graves lie thick beyond the seas;Unnamed, but not of Him unknown;--He knows!--He sees!And not one soul has fallen in vain.Here was no useless sacrifice.From this red sowing of white seedNew life shall rise.All that for which they fought lives on,And flourishes triumphantly;Watered with blood and hopeful tears,It could not die.The world was sinking in a sloughOf sloth, and ease, and selfish greed;God surely sent this scourge to mouldA nobler creed.Birth comes with travail; all these woesAre birth-pangs of the days to be.Life's noblest things are ever bornIn agony.So--comfort to the stricken heart!Take solace in the thought that heYou mourn wa...
The Gardens Of Adonis
Belovèd, I would tell a ghostly thingThat hides beneath the simple name of Spring;Wild beyond hope the news - the dead return,The shapes that slept, their breath a frozen mist,Ascend from out sarcophagus and urn,Lips that were dust new redden to be kissed,Fires that were quenched re-burn.The gardens of Adonis bloom again,Proserpina may hold the lad no more,That in her arms the winter through hath lain;Up flings he from the hollow-sounding door,Where Love hath bruised her rosy breast in vain:Ah! through their tears - the happy April rain -They, like two stars aflame, together run,Then lift immortal faces in the sun.A faint far music steals from underground,And to the spirit's ear there comes the sound,The whisper vague, and rus...
Richard Le Gallienne
Impromptu,
Written among the ruins of the Sonnenberg.Thou who within thyself dost not beholdRuins as great as these, though not as old,Can'st scarce through life have travelled many a year,Or lack'st the spirit of a pilgrim here.Youth hath its walls of strength, its towers of pride;Love, its warm hearth-stones; Hope, its prospects wide;Life's fortress in thee, held these one, and all,And they have fallen to ruin, or shall fall.
Frances Anne Kemble
Repose.
A mossy footfall in this wood A peal of thunder were, Or autumn tempest-shriek, compared With the unwhispered stir Of massy fluids lift in air, To build these leafy pillars fair. Lavished at wordless wish or mute Command, the chemic wealth Upsprings to meet the builders' hands, All hushed as dusky stealth. Noiseless as love, as silent prayer Mysterious, the builders are. Ah, sure, these silences are works Of God's sabbatic rest, A music perfect as the calm Of wave's unbroken crest! These woven leaves that stilly nod, These violets, ope their eyes on God. The deep serene that worketh here Works, too, 'mid human tears...
Theodore Harding Rand