Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 386 of 739
Previous
Next
The Lost One
I seek her in the shady grove,And by the silent stream;I seek her where my fancies rove,In many a happy dream;I seek her where I find her not,In Spring and Summer weather:My thoughts paint many a happy spot,But we ne'er meet together.The trees and bushes speak my choice,And in the Summer showerI often hear her pleasant voice,In many a silent hour:I see her in the Summer brook,In blossoms sweet and fair;In every pleasant place I lookMy fancy paints her there.The wind blows through the forest trees,And cheers the pleasant day;There her sweet voice is sure to beTo lull my cares away.The very hedges find a voice,So does the gurgling rill;But still the object of my choiceIs lost and absent still.
John Clare
Oblivion
Green moss will creep Along the shady graves where we shall sleep. Each year will bring Another brood of birds to nest and sing. At dawn will go New ploughmen to the fields we used to know. Night will call home The hunter from the hills we loved to roam. She will not ask, The milkmaid, singing softly at her task, Nor will she care To know if I were brave or you were fair. No one will think What chalice life had offered us to drink, When from our clay The sun comes back to kiss the snow away.
John Charles McNeill
Recovery
Where are you going with eyes so dull,You whose eyes were beautiful,You whose hair with the light was gay,And now is thin and harsh and gray?Is it age alone or age and tearsThat has slowly rubbed your beauty away?Where were you going when your swift eyesWere like merry birds under May skies?--In your cheeks the colours fluttering braveAs you danced with the wind and ran with the wave.From what bright star was your brightness caught?What to your music the music gave?Now is your beauty a thing of old,The fire is sunken, the ashes cold.But if sweet singing on your ear stray,Or the praise is uttered of yesterday,Or of courage and nobleness one word said--Like a cloud Time's ravage is brushed away.
John Frederick Freeman
The Buccaneers.
Oh, not for us the easy mirthOf men that never roam!The crackling of the narrow hearth,The cabined joys of home!Keep your tame, regulated glee,O pale protected State!Our dwelling-place is on the sea,Our joy the joy of Fate!No long caresses give us ease,No lazy languors warm,We seize our mates as the sea-gulls seize,And leave them to the storm.But in the bridal halls of gloomThe couch is stern and strait;For us the marriage rite of Doom,The nuptial joy of Fate.Wine for the weaklings of the town,Their lucky toasts to drain!Our skoal for them whose star goes down,Our drink the drink of men!No Bacchic ivy for our brows!Like vikings, we awaitThe grim, ungarlanded carouseWe keep to-night with Fate...
Bliss Carman
A Prayer For Light.
I. Oh, give me light, to-day, or let me die, - The light of love, the love-light of the sky, - That I, at length, may see my darling's face One minute's space.II. Have I not wept to know myself so weak That I can feel, not see, the dimpled cheek, The lips, the eyes, the sunbeams that enfold Her locks of gold?III. Have I not sworn that I will not be wed, But mate my soul with hers on my death-bed? The soul can see, - for souls are seraphim, - When eyes are dim.IV. Oh, hush! she comes. I know her. She is nigh. She brings me death, true heart, and I will die. Sh...
Eric Mackay
How Long?
How long, and yet how long,Our leaders will we hail from over seas,Master and kings from feudal monarchies, And mock their ancient songWith echoes weak of foreign melodies? That distant isle mist-wreathed,Mantled in unimaginable green,Too long hath been our mistress and our queen. Our fathers have bequeathedToo deep a love for her, our hearts within. She made the whole world ringWith the brave exploits of her children strong,And with the matchless music of her song. Too late, too late we clingTo alien legends, and their strains prolong. This fresh young world I see,With heroes, cities, legends of her own;With a new race of men, and overblown By winds from sea to sea,...
Emma Lazarus
The Noble Lady's Tale
I"We moved with pensive paces,I and he,And bent our faded facesWistfully,For something troubled him, and troubled me."The lanthorn feebly lightenedOur grey hall,Where ancient brands had brightenedHearth and wall,And shapes long vanished whither vanish all."'O why, Love, nightly, daily,'I had said,'Dost sigh, and smile so palely,As if shedWere all Life's blossoms, all its dear things dead?'"'Since silence sets thee grieving,'He replied,'And I abhor deceivingOne so tried,Why, Love, I'll speak, ere time us twain divide.'"He held me, I remember,Just as whenOur life was June - (SeptemberIt was then);And we walked on, until he spoke again."'Susie, an Irish...
Thomas Hardy
A Day Dream.
On a sunny brae alone I layOne summer afternoon;It was the marriage-time of May,With her young lover, June.From her mother's heart seemed loath to partThat queen of bridal charms,But her father smiled on the fairest childHe ever held in his arms.The trees did wave their plumy crests,The glad birds carolled clear;And I, of all the wedding guests,Was only sullen there!There was not one, but wished to shunMy aspect void of cheer;The very gray rocks, looking on,Asked, "What do you here?"And I could utter no reply;In sooth, I did not knowWhy I had brought a clouded eyeTo greet the general glow.So, resting on a heathy bank,I took my heart to me;And we together sadly sankInto a re...
Emily Bronte
The Burier And His Comrade.
A close-fist had his money hoardedBeyond the room his till afforded.His avarice aye growing ranker,(Whereby his mind of course grew blanker,)He was perplex'd to choose a banker;For banker he must have, he thought,Or all his heap would come to nought.'I fear,' said he, 'if kept at home,And other robbers should not come,It might be equal cause of griefThat I had proved myself the thief.'The thief! Is to enjoy one's pelfTo rob or steal it from one's self?My friend, could but my pity reach you,This lesson I would gladly teach you,That wealth is weal no longer thanDiffuse and part with it you can:Without that power, it is a woe.Would you for age keep back its flow?Age buried 'neath its joyless snow?With pains of getting, care...
Jean de La Fontaine
Florian's Song
My soul, it shall not take us, O we will escape This world that strives to break us And cast us to its shape; Its chisel shall not enter, Its fire shall not touch, Hard from rim to centre, We will not crack or smutch. 'Gainst words sweet and flowered We have an amulet, We will not play the coward For any black threat; If we but give endurance To what is now within, The single assurance That it is good to win. Slaves think it better To be weak than strong, Whose hate is a fetter And their love a thong. But we will view those others With eyes like stone, And if we have no brothers We will walk alone.
John Collings Squire, Sir
Meditations - His
I was so proud of you last night, dear girl,While man with man was striving for your smile.You never lost your head, nor once dropped downFrom your high placeAs queen in that gay whirl.(It takes more poise to wear a little crownWith modesty and graceThan to adorn the lordlier thrones of earth.)You seem so free from artifice and wile:And in your eyes I readEncouragement to my unspoken thought.My heart is eloquent with words to pleadIts cause of passion; but my questioning mind,Knowing how love is blind,Dwells on the pros and cons, and God knows what.My heart cries with each beat,'She is so beautiful, so pure, so sweet,So more than dear.'And then I hearThe voice of Reason, asking: 'Would she meetLife's...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
First Love
I"No, no! Leave me not in this dark hour,"She cried. And I,"Thou foolish dear, but call not dark this hour;What night doth lour?"And nought did she reply,But in her eyeThe clamorous trouble spoke, and then was still.O that I heard her once more speak,Or even with troubled eyeTeach me her fear, that I might seekPoppies for misery.The hour was dark, although I knew it not,But when the livid dawn broke then I knew,How while I slept the dense night throughTreachery's worm her fainting fealty slew.O that I heard her once more speakAs then--so weak--"No, no! Leave me not in this dark hour."That I might answer her,"Love, be at rest, for nothing now shall stirThy heart, but my heart beating there."<...
Lines (Two Loves)
Two loves came up a long, wide aisle,And knelt at a low, white gate;One -- tender and true, with the shyest smile,One -- strong, true, and elate.Two lips spoke in a firm, true way,And two lips answered soft and low;In one true hand such a little hand layFluttering, frail as a flake of snow.One stately head bent humbly there,Stilled were the throbbings of human love;One head drooped down like a lily fair,Two prayers went, wing to wing, above.God blest them both in the holy place,A long, brief moment the rite was done;On the human love fell the heavenly grace,Making two hearts forever one.Between two lengthening rows of smiles,One sweetly shy, one proud, elate,Two loves passed down the long, wide aisles,W...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Song At The Feast Of Brougham Castle
High in the breathless Hall the Minstrel sate,And Emont's murmur mingled with the Song.The words of ancient time I thus translate,A festal strain that hath been silent long:"From town to town, from tower to tower,The red rose is a gladsome flower.Her thirty years of winter past,The red rose is revived at last;She lifts her head for endless spring,For everlasting blossoming:Both roses flourish, red and white:In love and sisterly delightThe two that were at strife are blended,And all old troubles now are ended.Joy! joy to both! but most to herWho is the flower of Lancaster!Behold her how She smiles to-dayOn this great throng, this bright array!Fair greeting doth she send to allFrom every corner of the hall;But chiefly from...
William Wordsworth
The Three Enemies
THE FLESH'Sweet, thou art pale.' 'More pale to see,Christ hung upon the cruel treeAnd bore His Father's wrath for me.''Sweet, thou art sad.' 'Beneath a rodMore heavy, Christ for my sake trodThe winepress of the wrath of God.''Sweet, thou art weary.' 'Not so Christ:Whose mighty love of me sufficedFor Strength, Salvation, Eucharist.''Sweet, thou art footsore.' 'If I bleed,His feet have bled; yea in my needHis Heart once bled for mine indeed.'THE WORLD'Sweet, thou art young.' 'So He was youngWho for my sake in silence hungUpon the Cross with Passion wrung.''Look, thou art fair.' 'He was more fairThan men, Who deigned for me to wearA vi...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Sonnet. About Jesus. II.
"There, Buonarotti, stands thy statue. TakePossession of the form; inherit it;Go forth upon the earth in likeness fit;As with a trumpet-cry at morning, wakeThe sleeping nations; with light's terror, shakeThe slumber from their hearts; and, where they sit,Let them leap up aghast, as at a pitAgape beneath." I hear him answer make:"Alas! I dare not; I could not informThat image; I revered as I did trace;I will not dim the glory of its grace,Nor with a feeble spirit mock the enormStrength on its brow." Thou cam'st, God's thought thy form,Living the large significance of thy face.
George MacDonald
The Girdle Of Friendship
She gathered at her slender waistThe beauteous robe she wore;Its folds a golden belt embraced,One rose-hued gem it bore.The girdle shrank; its lessening roundStill kept the shining gem,But now her flowing locks it bound,A lustrous diadem.And narrower still the circlet grew;Behold! a glittering band,Its roseate diamond set anew,Her neck's white column spanned.Suns rise and set; the straining claspThe shortened links resist,Yet flashes in a bracelet's graspThe diamond, on her wrist.At length, the round of changes pastThe thieving years could bring,The jewel, glittering to the last,Still sparkles in a ring.So, link by link, our friendships part,So loosen, break, and fall,A narrowing...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Amore Altiero
Since thou and I have wandered from the highway And found with hearts reborn This swift and unimaginable byway Unto the hills of morn, Shall not our love disdain the unworthy uses Of the old time outworn? I'll not entreat thy half unwilling graces With humbly folded palms, Nor seek to shake thy proud defended places With noise of vague alarms, Nor ask against my fortune's grim pursuing The refuge of thy arms. Thou'lt not withhold for pleasure vain and cruel That which has long been mine, Nor overheap with briefly burning fuel A fire of flame divine, Nor yield the key for life's profaner voices To brawl within the shrine.
Henry John Newbolt