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William Marion Reedy
He sits before you silent as Buddha, And then you say This man is Rabelais. And while you wonder what his stock is, English or Irish, you behold his eyes As big and brown as those desirable crockies With which as boys we used to play. And then you see the spherical light that lies Just under the iris coloring, Before which everything, Becomes as plain as day. If you have noticed the rolling jowls And the face that speaks its chief Delight in beer and roast beef Before you have seen his eyes, you see A man of fleshly jollity, Like the friars of old in gowns and cowls To make a show of scowls. And when he speaks from an orotund depth that growls In a humorous way...
Edgar Lee Masters
Perplexed Music
AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED TO E. J.Experience, like a pale musician, holdsA dulcimer of patience in his hand,Whence harmonies, we cannot understand,Of God; will in his worlds, the strain unfoldsIn sad-perplexed minors: deathly coldsFall on us while we hear, and countermandOur sanguine heart back from the fancylandWith nightingales in visionary wolds.We murmur' Where is any certain tuneOr measured music in such notes as these?'But angels, leaning from the golden seat,Are not so minded their fine ear hath wonThe issue of completed cadences,And, smiling down the stars, they whisper sweet.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Grit.
I hate the fellow who sits around And knocks the livelong day--Who tells of the work he might have done; If things had come his way.But I love the fellow who pushes ahead And smiles at his work or play--You can wager when things do come around, They will come his way--and stay.
Edwin C. Ranck
The Way Of The World
When fairer faces turn from me,And gayer friends grow cold,And I have lost through povertyThe friendship bought with gold;When I have served the selfish turnOf some all-worldly few,And Follys lamps have ceased to burn,Then Ill come back to you.When my admirers find Im notThe rising star they thought,And praise or blame is all forgotMy early promise brought;When brighter rivals lead a hostWhere once I led a few,And kinder times reward their boast,Then Ill come back to you.You loved me, not for what I hadOr what I might have been,You saw the good, but not the bad,Was kind, for that between.I know that youll forgive again,That you will judge me true;Ill be too tired to explainWhen I come ...
Henry Lawson
The Thrush
Across the land came a magic wordWhen the earth was bare and lonely,And I sit and sing of the joyous spring,For 'twas I who heard, I only!Then dreams came by, of the gladsome days,Of many a wayside posy;For a crocus peeps where the wild rose sleeps,And the willow wands are rosy!Oh! the time to be! When the paths are green,When the primrose-gold is lying'Neath the hazel spray, where the catkins sway,And the dear south wind comes sighing.My mate and I, we shall build a nest,So snug and warm and cosy,When the kingcups gleam on the meadow stream,Where the willow wands are rosy!
Fay Inchfawn
Gone For Ever
O happy rose-bud blooming Upon thy parent tree,Nay, thou art too presuming;For soon the earth entombing Thy faded charms shall be,And the chill damp consuming.O happy skylark springing Up to the broad blue sky,Too fearless in thy winging,Too gladsome in thy singing, Thou also soon shalt lieWhere no sweet notes are ringing.And through life's shine and shower We shall have joy and pain;But in the summer bower,And at the morning hour, We still shall look in vainFor the same bird and flower.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
On Catullus
Tell me not what too well I knowAbout the bard of Sirmio.Yes, in Thalias sonSuch stains there are, as when a GraceSprinkles anothers laughing faceWith nectar, and runs on.
Walter Savage Landor
Zophiel. (Invocation)
Thou with the dark blue eye upturned to heaven,And cheek now pale, now warm with radiant glow, Daughter of God,--most dear,-- Come with thy quivering tear,And tresses wild, and robes of loosened flow,--To thy lone votaress let one look be given!Come Poesy! nor like some just-formed maid,With heart as yet unswoln by bliss or woe;-- But of such age be seen As Egypt's glowing queen,When her brave Roman learned to love her soThat death and loss of fame, were, by a smile, repaid.Or as thy Sappho, when too fierce assailedBy stern ingratitude her tender breast:-- Her love by scorn repaid Her friendship true betrayed,Sick of the...
Maria Gowen Brooks
To John Nichol - Sonnets
I.Friend of the dead, and friend of all my daysEven since they cast off boyhood, I saluteThe song saluting friends whose songs are muteWith full burnt-offerings of clear-spirited praise.That since our old young years our several waysHave led through fields diverse of flower and fruitYet no cross wind has once relaxed the rootWe set long since beneath the sundawns rays,The root of trust whence towered the trusty tree,Friendship this only and duly might impelMy song to salutation of your own;More even than praise of one unseen of meAnd loved the starry spirit of Dobell,To mine by light and music only known.II.But more than this what moves me most of allTo leave not all unworded and unspedThe whole heart...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Beginning
Some day I shall rise and leave my friendsAnd seek you again through the world's far ends,You whom I found so fair(Touch of your hands and smell of your hair!),My only god in the days that were.My eager feet shall find you again,Though the sullen years and the mark of painHave changed you wholly; for I shall know(How could I forget having loved you so?),In the sad half-light of evening,The face that was all my sunrising.So then at the ends of the earth I'll standAnd hold you fiercely by either hand,And seeing your age and ashen hairI'll curse the thing that once you were,Because it is changed and pale and old(Lips that were scarlet, hair that was gold!),And I loved you before you were old and wise,When the flame of youth was strong ...
Rupert Brooke
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XLI.
L' alto e novo miracol ch' a dì nostri.IT IS IMPOSSIBLE FOR HIM TO DESCRIBE HER EXCELLENCES. The wonder, high and new, that, in our days,Dawn'd on the world, yet would not there remain,Which heaven but show'd to us to snatch againBetter to blazon its own starry ways;That to far times I her should paint and praiseLove wills, who prompted first my passionate strain;But now wit, leisure, pen, page, ink in vainTo the fond task a thousand times he sways.My slow rhymes struggle not to life the while;I feel it, and whoe'er to-day below,Or speak or write of love will prove it so.Who justly deems the truth beyond all style,Here silent let him muse, and sighing say,Blessèd the eyes who saw her living day!MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
A Christmas Fancy
Early on Christmas Day, Love, as awake I lay,And heard the Christmas bells ring sweet and clearly, My heart stole through the gloom Into your silent room,And whispered to your heart, 'I love you dearly.' There, in the dark profound, Your heart was sleeping sound,And dreaming some fair dream of summer weather. At my heart's word it woke, And, ere the morning broke,They sang a Christmas carol both together. Glory to God on high! Stars of the morning sky,Sing as ye sang upon the first creation, When all the Sons of God Shouted for joy abroad,And earth was laid upon a sure foundation. ...
Robert Fuller Murray
Catharina. Addressed To Miss Stapleton (Afterwards Mrs. Courtney).
She cameshe is gonewe have metAnd meet perhaps never again;The sun of that moment is set,And seems to have risen in vain.Catharina has fled like a dream(So vanishes pleasure, alas!)But has left a regret and esteemThat will not so suddenly pass.The last evening ramble we made,Catharina, Maria, and I,Our progress was often delaydBy the nightingale warbling nigh.We paused under many a tree,And much she was charmd with a tone,Less sweet to Maria and me,Who so lately had witnessd her own.My numbers that day she had sung,And gave them a grace so divine,As only her musical tongueCould infuse into numbers of mine.The longer I heard, I esteemdThe work of my fancy the more,And een to my...
William Cowper
The Exile.
The swallow with summerWill wing o'er the seas,The wind that I sigh toWill visit thy trees.The ship that it hastensThy ports will contain,But me! - I must neverSee England again!There's many that weep there,But one weeps alone,For the tears that are fallingSo far from her own;So far from thy own, love,We know not our pain;If death is between us,Or only the main.When the white cloud reclinesOn the verge of the sea,I fancy the white cliffs,And dream upon thee;But the cloud spreads its wingsTo the blue heav'n and flies.We never shall meet, love,Except in the skies!
Thomas Hood
The Road Back
Come, walk with me and Memory;And let us see what we shall see:A wild green lane of stones and weedsThat to a wilder woodland leads.An old board gate, the lichens crust,Whose ancient hinges croak with rust.A vale; a creek; and a bridge of planks,And the wild sunflowers that wall its banks:A path that winds through shine and shadeTo a ferned and wildflowered forest glade;Where, out of a grotto, a voice repliesWith a faint hollo to your voice that cries:And every wind that passes seemsA foot that follows from Lands o' Dreams.A voice, a foot, and a shadow, too,That whispers of things your childhood knew:A girl that waited, a boy that came,And an old beech tree where he carved her name;Where still he sees her, whom still he hearsB...
Madison Julius Cawein
Written With A Slate Pencil On A Stone, On The Side Of The Mountain Of Black Comb
Stay, bold Adventurer; rest awhile thy limbsOn this commodious Seat! for much remainsOf hard ascent before thou reach the topOf this huge Eminence, from blackness named,And, to far-travelled storms of sea and land,A favourite spot of tournament and war!But thee may no such boisterous visitantsMolest; may gentle breezes fan thy brow;And neither cloud conceal, nor misty airBedim, the grand terraqueous spectacle,From centre to circumference, unveiled!Know, if thou grudge not to prolong thy rest,That on the summit whither thou art bound,A geographic Labourer pitched his tent,With books supplied and instruments of art,To measure height and distance; lonely task,Week after week pursued! To him was givenFull many a glimpse (but sparingly bestowe...
William Wordsworth
Evening
When twilight darkens, and one by one,The sweet birds to their nests have gone;When to green banks the glow-worms bringPale lamps to brighten evening;Then stirs in his thick sleep the owlThrough the dewy air to prowl.Hawking the meadows swiftly he flits,While the small mouse atrembling sitsWith tiny eye of fear upcastUntil his brooding shape be past,Hiding her where the moonbeams beat,Casting black shadows in the wheat.Now all is still: the field-man isLapped deep in slumbering silentness.Not a leaf stirs, but clouds on highPass in dim flocks across the sky,Puffed by a breeze too light to moveAught but these wakeful sheep above.O what an arch of light now spansThese fields by night no longer Man's!Their...
Walter De La Mare
Iter Supremum
Oh, what a night for a soul to go!The wind a hawk, and the fields in snow;No screening cover of leaves in the wood,Nor a star abroad the way to show.Do they part in peace, soul with its clay?Tenant and landlord, what do they say?Was it sigh of sorrow or of releaseI heard just now as the face turned gray?What if, aghast on the shoreless mainOf Eternity, it sought againThe shelter and rest of the Isle of Time,And knocked at the door of its house of pain!On the tavern hearth the embers glow,The laugh is deep and the flagons low;But without, the wind and the trackless sky,And night at the gates where a soul would go!
Arthur Sherburne Hardy