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Other Stars.
The night is dark, and yet it is not quite:Those stars are hid that other orbs may shine;Twin stars, whose rays illuminate the night,And cheer her gloom, but only deepen mine;For these fair stars are not what they do seem,But vanish'd eyes remember'd in a dream.The night is dark, and yet it brings no rest;Those eager eyes gaze on and banish sleep;Though flaming Mars has lower'd his crimson crest,And weary Venus pales into the deep,These two with tender shining mock my woeFrom out the distant heaven of long ago.The night is dark, and yet how bright they gleam!Oh! empty vision of a vanish'd light!Sweet eyes! must you for ever be a dreamDeep in my heart, and distant from my sight?For could you shine as once you shone before,The s...
Juliana Horatia Ewing
The Lady And The Dame
So thou hast the art, good dame, thou swearest, To keep Time's perishing touch at bayFrom the roseate splendour of the cheek so tender, And the silver threads from the gold away;And the tell-tale years that have hurried by us Shall tiptoe back, and, with kind good-will,They shall take their traces from off our faces, If we will trust to thy magic skill.Thou speakest fairly; but if I listen And buy thy secret and prove its truth,Hast thou the potion and magic lotion To give me also the heart of youth?With the cheek of rose and the eye of beauty, And the lustrous locks of life's lost prime,Wilt thou bring thronging each hope and longing That made the glory of that dead Time?When the sap in the trees sets...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Winds Of May
Winds of May, that dance on the sea,Dancing a ring-around in gleeFrom furrow to furrow, while overheadThe foam flies up to be garlanded,In silvery arches spanning the air,Saw you my true love anywhere?Welladay! Welladay!For the winds of May!Love is unhappy when love is away
James Joyce
Sonnets
Since shunning pain, I ease can never find;Since bashful dread seeks where he knows me harmed;Since will is won, and stopped ears are charmed;Since force doth faint, and sight doth make me blind;Since loosing long, the faster still I bind;Since naked sense can conquer reason armed;Since heart, in chilling fear, with ice is warmed;In fine, since strife of thought but mars the mind,I yield, O Love, unto thy loathed yoke,Yet craving law of arms, whose rule doth teach,That, hardly used, who ever prison broke,In justice quit, of honour made no breach:Whereas, if I a grateful guardian have,Thou art my lord, and I thy vowed slave.When Love puffed up with rage of high disdain,Resolved to make me pattern of his might,Like foe, whose wits inc...
Philip Sidney
Christmas
The birth day of the Christ child dawneth slow Out of the opal east in rosy flame, As if a luminous picture in its frame-- A great cathedral window, toward the sunLifted a form divine, which still below Stretched hands of benediction;--while the air Swayed the bright aureole of the flowing hairWhich lit our upturned faces;--even so Look on us from the heavens, divinest OneAnd let us hear through the slow moving years.Long centuries of wrongs, and crimes, and tears,-- The echo of the angel's song again, Peace and good will, good will and peace to men,A little space make silence,--that our ears, Filled with the din of toil and moil and painMay catch the jubilant rapture of the skies,--The glories of the choi...
Kate Seymour Maclean
We Must Believe
"Lord, I believe: help Thou mine unbelief."We must believe -Being from birth endowed with love and trust -Born unto loving; - and how simply justThat love - that faith! - even in the blossom-faceThe babe drops dreamward in its resting-place,Intuitively conscious of the sureAwakening to rapture ever pureAnd sweet and saintly as the mother's own,Or the awed father's, as his arms are thrownO'er wife and child, to round about them weaveAnd wind and bind them as one harvest-sheafOf love - to cleave to, and forever cleave.... Lord, I believe: Help Thou mine unbelief.We must believe -Impelled since infancy to seek some clearFulfillment, still withheld all seekers here; -For never have we se...
James Whitcomb Riley
To Aurelio Saffi.
To God and man be simply true:Do as thou hast been wont to do:Or, Of the old more in the new:Mean all the same when said to you.I love thee. Thou art calm and strong;Firm in the right, mild to the wrong;Thy heart, in every raging throng,A chamber shut for prayer and song.Defeat thou know'st not, canst not know;Only thy aims so lofty go,They need as long to root and growAs any mountain swathed in snow.Go on and prosper, holy friend.I, weak and ignorant, would lendA voice, thee, strong and wise, to sendProspering onward, without end.
George MacDonald
Red Stockin.
Shoo wor shoeless, an shiverin, an weet, -Her hair flyin tangled an wild:Shoo'd just been browt in aght o'th street,Wi drink an mud splashes defiled.Th' poleece sargent stood waitin to hearWhat charge agean her wod be made,He'd scant pity for them they browt thear,To be surly wor pairt ov his trade."What name?" an he put it i'th' book, -An shoo hardly seemed able to stand;As shoo tottered, he happened to luksaw summat claspt in her hand."What's that? Bring it here right away!You can't take that into your cell;""It's nothing." "Is that what you say?Let me have it and then I can tell.""Nay, nay! yo shall nivver tak this!It's dearer nor life is to me!Lock me up, if aw've done owt amiss,But aw'll stick fast to this wol aw dee!"
John Hartley
Into Space
If the sad old world should jump a cog Sometime, in its dizzy spinning,And go off the track with a sudden jog, What an end would come to the sinning,What a rest from strife and the burdens of life For the millions of people in it,What a way out of care, and worry and wear, All in a beautiful minute.As 'round the sun with a curving sweep It hurries and runs and races,Should it lose its balance, and go with a leap Into the vast sea-spaces,What a blest relief it would bring to the grief, And the trouble and toil about us,To be suddenly hurled from the solar world And let it go on without us.With not a sigh or a sad good-bye For loved ones left behind us,We would go with a lunge and a mighty plunge...
Amour 13
Cleere Ankor, on whose siluer-sanded shoreMy soule-shrinde Saint, my faire Idea, lyes;O blessed Brooke! whose milk-white Swans adoreThe christall streame refined by her eyes:Where sweet Myrh-breathing Zephyre in the springGently distils his Nectar-dropping showers;Where Nightingales in Arden sit and singAmongst those dainty dew-empearled flowers.Say thus, fayre Brooke, when thou shall see thy Queene:Loe! heere thy Shepheard spent his wandring yeeres,And in these shades (deer Nimphe) he oft hath been,And heere to thee he sacrifiz'd his teares. Fayre Arden, thou my Tempe art alone, And thou, sweet Ankor, art my Helicon.
Michael Drayton
In The Forest Of Love
What sighed the Forest to the nest?"So young, so old,Love,Help me to moldThis life I hold."What said the bird,That harked and heard?"Below, above,Love, love is best.Take heed, my Life, and quit thy quest.The meaning of Love is rest."So spake the bird.What cried the Nightwind to the trees?"Thou dream of Earth,Love,Make me of worthIn death and birth!"What said the woodStark-still that stood?"Below, above,Give me increase.Take heed, my Heart! thy sighings cease.The meaning of Love is peace."So spake the Wood.What sobbed the Earth in deep and height?"O Song of Songs,Love,Unloose my thongs,And right my wrongs!"What said the Clod,That dreamed of God?"Below, abov...
Madison Julius Cawein
Khap-Salung
Seeing that I adore you,Scarf of golden flowers,Why do you stay unmarried?As the liana at a tree's footThat quivers to wind it round,So do I wait for you. I pray youDo not detest me....I have come to say farewell.Farewell, scarf;Garden RoyalWhere none may enter,Gaudy moneyI may not spend.Song of the Love Nights of Laos.
Edward Powys Mathers
To The Queen Of My Heart.
1.Shall we roam, my love,To the twilight grove,When the moon is rising bright;Oh, I'll whisper there,In the cool night-air,What I dare not in broad daylight!2.I'll tell thee a partOf the thoughts that startTo being when thou art nigh;And thy beauty, more brightThan the stars' soft light,Shall seem as a weft from the sky.3.When the pale moonbeamOn tower and streamSheds a flood of silver sheen,How I love to gazeAs the cold ray straysO'er thy face, my heart's throned queen!4.Wilt thou roam with meTo the restless sea,And linger upon the steep,And list to the flowOf the waves belowHow they toss and roar and leap?5.Those boiling waves,And the s...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Beauty And Beauty
When Beauty and Beauty meetAll naked, fair to fair,The earth is crying-sweet,And scattering-bright the air,Eddying, dizzying, closing round,With soft and drunken laughter;Veiling all that may befallAfter, after.Where Beauty and Beauty met,Earth's still a-tremble there,And winds are scented yet,And memory-soft the air,Bosoming, folding glints of light,And shreds of shadowy laughter;Not the tears that fill the yearsAfter, after.
Rupert Brooke
Hymn To The Patriarchs. Or Of The Beginnings Of The Human Race.
Illustrious fathers of the human race, Of you, the song of your afflicted sons Will chant the praise; of you, more dear, by far, Unto the Great Disposer of the stars, Who were not born to wretchedness, like ours. Immedicable woes, a life of tears, The silent tomb, eternal night, to find More sweet, by far, than the ethereal light, These things were not by heaven's gracious law Imposed on you. If ancient legends speak Of sins of yours, that brought calamity Upon the human race, and fell disease, Alas, the sins more terrible, by far, Committed by your children, and their souls More restless, and with mad ambition fixed, Against them roused the wrath of angry gods, The hand of all-sustaining Natu...
Giacomo Leopardi
My Lover Asks Me
My lover asks me:"What is the difference between me and the sky?"The difference, my love,Is that when you laugh,I forget about the sky.
Nizar Qabbani
Courtship
Augustus Fitzgibbons Moran Fell in love with Maria McCann. With a yell and a whoop He cleared the front stoop Just ahead of her papa's brogan.
Unknown
The Pet-Lamb - A Pastoral
The dew was falling fast, the stars began to blink;I heard a voice; it said, "Drink, pretty creature, drink!"And, looking o'er the hedge, before me I espiedA snow-white mountain-lamb with a Maiden at its side.Nor sheep nor kine were near; the lamb was all alone,And by a slender cord was tethered to a stone;With one knee on the grass did the little Maiden kneel,While to that mountain-lamb she gave its evening meal.The lamb, while from her hand he thus his supper took,Seemed to feast with head and ears; and his tail with pleasure shook."Drink, pretty creature, drink," she said in such a toneThat I almost received her heart into my own.'Twas little Barbara Lewthwaite, a child of beauty rare!I watched them with delight, they were a lovely pair.
William Wordsworth