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Now
Out of your whole life give but a moment!All of your life that has gone before,All to come after it, so you ignore,So you make perfect the present, condense,In a rapture of rage, for perfections endowment,Thought and feeling and soul and sense,Merged in a moment which gives me at lastYou around me for once, you beneath me, above me,Me, sure that despite of time future, time past,This tick of our life-times one moment you love me!How long such suspension may linger? Ah, Sweet,The moment eternal, just that and no more,When ecstasys utmost we clutch at the coreWhile cheeks burn, arms open, eyes shut and lips meet!
Robert Browning
Song
Bird of my lady's bower,Sing her a song;Tell her that every hour,All the day long,Thoughts of her come to me,Filling my brainWith the warm ecstasyOf love's refrain.Little bird! happy bird!Being so near,Where e'en her slightest wordThou mayest hear,Seeing her glancing eyes,Sheen of her hair,Thou art in paradise,--Would I were there.I am so far away,Thou art so near;Plead with her, birdling gay,Plead with my dear.Rich be thy recompense,Fine be thy fee,If through thine eloquenceShe hearken me.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
A Double Ballad Of August
All Afric, winged with death and fire,Pants in our pleasant English air.Each blade of grass is tense as wire,And all the woods loose trembling hairStark in the broad and breathless glareOf hours whose touch wastes herb and tree.This bright sharp death shines everywhere;Life yearns for solace toward the sea.Earth seems a corpse upon the pyre;The sun, a scourge for slaves to bear.All power to fear, all keen desire,Lies dead as dreams of days that wereBefore the new-born world lay bareIn heavens wide eye, whereunder weLie breathless till the season spare:Life yearns for solace toward the sea.Fierce hours, with ravening fangs that tireOn spirit and sense, divide and shareThe throbs of thoughts that scarce respire,The throes of d...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
On The Shore.
The punctual tide draws up the bay,With ripple of wave and hiss of spray,And the great red flower of the light-house towerBlooms on the headland far away.Petal by petal its fiery roseOut of the darkness buds and grows;A dazzling shape on the dim, far cape,A beckoning shape as it comes and goes.A moment of bloom, and then it diesOn the windy cliff 'twixt the sea and skies.The fog laughs low to see it go,And the white waves watch it with cruel eyes.Then suddenly out of the mist-cloud dun,As touched and wooed by unseen sun,Again into sight bursts the rose of lightAnd opens its petals one by one.Ah, the storm may be wild and the sea be strong,And man is weak and the darkness long,But while blossoms the flower on ...
Susan Coolidge
To Rosa.
A far conserva, e cumulo d'amanti. "Past. Fid."And are you then a thing of art, Seducing all, and loving none;And have I strove to gain a heart Which every coxcomb thinks his own?Tell me at once if this be true, And I will calm my jealous breast;Will learn to join the dangling crew, And share your simpers with the rest.But if your heart be not so free,-- Oh! if another share that heart,Tell not the hateful tale to me, But mingle mercy with your art.I'd rather think you "false as hell," Than find you to be all divine,--Than know that heart could love so well, Yet know that heart would not be mine!
Thomas Moore
Merrill's Garden
There is a garden where the seeded stems of thin long grass are bowedBeneath July's slow rains and heat and tired children's trailing feet;And the trees' neglected branches droop and make a cloud beneath the cloud,And in that dark the crimson dew of raspberries shines more sweet than sweet.The flower of the tall acacia's gone, the acacia's flower is white no more,The aspen lifts his pithless arms, the aspen leaves are close and still;The wind that tossed the clouds along, gray clouds and white like feathers bore,Lets even a feather faintly fall and smoke spread hugely where it will.But though the acacia's flower is gone and raspberries bear bright fruit untasted,Beauty lives there, oh rich and rare, past the sum of eager June.The lime tree's pyramid of flower and leaf...
John Frederick Freeman
Bryant's Seventieth Birthday
O even-handed Nature! we confessThis life that men so honor, love, and blessHas filled thine olden measure. Not the less.We count the precious seasons that remain;Strike not the level of the golden grain,But heap it high with years, that earth may gain.What heaven can lose, - for heaven is rich in songDo not all poets, dying, still prolongTheir broken chants amid the seraph throng,Where, blind no more, Ionia's bard is seen,And England's heavenly minstrel sits betweenThe Mantuan and the wan-cheeked Florentine?This was the first sweet singer in the cageOf our close-woven life. A new-born ageClaims in his vesper song its heritage.Spare us, oh spare us long our heart's desire!Moloch, who calls our children through the ...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
To A Bower.
Three times, sweet hawthorn! I have met thy bower,And thou hast gain'd my love, and I do feelAn aching pain to leave thee: every flowerAround thee opening doth new charms reveal,And binds my fondness stronger.--Wild wood bower,In memory's calendar thou'rt treasur'd up:And should we meet in some remoter hour,When all thy bloom to winter-winds shall droop;Ah, in life's winter, many a day to come,Should my grey wrinkles pass thy spot of ground,And find it bare--with thee no longer crown'd;Within the woodman's faggot torn from hence,Or chopt by hedgers up for yonder fence;Ah, should I chance by thee as then to come,I'll look upon thy nakedness with pain,And, as I view thy desolated doom,In fancy's eye I'll fetch thy shade again:And of this lo...
John Clare
Diplomacy
Tell your love where the roses blow,And the hearts of the lilies quiver,Not in the city's gleam and glow,But down by a half-sunned river.Not in the crowded ball-room's glare,That would be fatal, Marie, Marie,How can she answer you then and there?So come then and stroll with me, my dear,Down where the birds call, Marie, Marie.
Noons Of Poppy
Noons of poppy, noons of poppy,Scarlet leagues along the sea;Flaxen hair afloat in sunlight,Love, come down the world to me!There's a Captain I must ship with,(Heart, that day be far from now!)Wears his dark command in silenceWith the sea-frost on his brow.Noons of poppy, noons of poppy,Purple shadows by the sea;How should love take thought to wonderWhat the destined port may be?Nay, if love have joy for shipmateFor a night-watch or a year,Dawn will light o'er Lonely Haven,Heart to happy heart, as here.Noons of poppy, noons of poppy,Scarlet acres by the seaBurning to the blue above them;Love, the world is full for me.
Bliss Carman
Joy And Sorrow.
As a fisher-boy I faredTo the black rock in the sea,And, while false gifts I prepared.Listen'd and sang merrily,Down descended the decoy,Soon a fish attack'd the bait;One exultant shout of joy,And the fish was captured straight.Ah! on shore, and to the woodPast the cliffs, o'er stock and stone,One foot's traces I pursued,And the maiden was alone.Lips were silent, eyes downcastAs a clasp-knife snaps the bait,With her snare she seized me fast,And the boy was captured straight.Heav'n knows who's the happy swainThat she rambles with anew!I must dare the sea again,Spite of wind and weather too.When the great and little fishWail and flounder in...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
To Eva.
A beam upon the myrtle fellFrom dewy evening's purest sky,'Twas like the glance I love so well,Dear Eva, from thy moonlight eye.I looked around the summer grove,On every tree its lustre shone;For all had felt that look of loveThe silly myrtle deemed its own.Eva! behold thine image there,As fair, as false thy glances fall;But who the worthless smile would shareThat sheds its light alike on all.
Joseph Rodman Drake
Virtue
Her breast is cold; her hands how faint and wan!And the deep wonder of her starry eyesSeemingly lost in cloudless Paradise,And all earth's sorrow out of memory gone.Yet sings her clear voice unrelenting onOf loveliest impossibilities;Though echo only answer her with sighsOf effort wasted and delights foregone.Spent, baffled, 'wildered, hated and despised,Her straggling warriors hasten to defeat;By wounds distracted, and by night surprised,Fall where death's darkness and oblivion meet:Yet, yet: O breast how cold! O hope how far!Grant my son's ashes lie where these men's are!
Walter De La Mare
Composed on The Eve Of The Marriage Of A Friend In The Vale Of Grasmere
What need of clamorous bells, or ribands gay,These humble nuptials to proclaim or grace?Angels of love, look down upon the place;Shed on the chosen vale a sun-bright day!Yet no proud gladness would the Bride displayEven for such promise: serious is her face,Modest her mien; and she, whose thoughts keep paceWith gentleness, in that becoming wayWill thank you. Faultless does the Maid appear;No disproportion in her soul, no strife:But, when the closer view of wedded lifeHath shown that nothing human can be clearFrom frailty, for that insight may the WifeTo her indulgent Lord become more dear.
William Wordsworth
A Song. Written in an Album.
Pure faced page! waiting so longTo welcome my muse and me;Fold to thy breast, like a mother, the songThat floats from my spirit to thee.And song! sound soft as the streamlet sings,And sweet as the Summer's birds,And pure and bright and white be the wingsThat will waft thee into words.Yea! fly as the sea-birds fly over the seaTo rest on the far-off beach,And breathe forth the message I trust to thee,Tear toned on the shores of speech.But ere you go, dip your snowy wingIn a wave of my spirit's deep --In a wave that is purest -- then haste and bringA song to the hearts that weep.Oh! bring it, and sing it -- its notes are tears;Its octaves, the octaves of grief;Who knows but its tones in the far-off yearsMa...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Dawn
Still as the holy of holies breathes the vastWithin its crystal depths the stars grow dim;Fire on the altar of the hills at last Burns on the shadowy rim.Moments that holds all moments; white uponThe verge it trembles; then like mists of flowersBreak from the fairy fountain of the dawn The hues of many hours.Thrown downward from that high companionshipOf dreaming inmost heart with inmost heart,Into the common daily ways I slip, My fire from theirs apart.
George William Russell
One Bumper At Parting.
One bumper at parting!--tho' many Have circled the board since we met,The fullest, the saddest of any Remains to be crowned by us yet.The sweetness that pleasure hath in it, Is always so slow to come forth,That seldom, alas, till the minute It dies, do we know half its worth.But come,--may our life's happy measure Be all of such moments made up;They're born on the bosom of Pleasure, They die midst the tears of the cup.'Tis onward we journey, how pleasant To pause and inhabit awhileThose few sunny spots, like the present, That mid the dull wilderness smile!But Time, like a pitiless master, Cries "Onward!" and spurs the gay hours--Ah, never doth Time travel faster, Than when his way lies among...
Bonny Mary Ann.
When but a little toddlin thing,I'th' heather sweet shoo'd play,An like a fay on truant wing,Shoo'd rammel far away;An even butterflees wod comeHer lovely face to scan,An th' burds wod sing ther sweetest song,For bonny Mary Ann.Shoo didn't fade as years flew by,But added day bi day,Some little touch ov witchery, -Some little winnin way.Her lovely limbs an angel face,To paint noa mortal can;Shoo seemed possessed ov ivvery grace,Did bonny Mary Ann.To win her wod be heaven indeed,Soa off aw went to woo;Mi tale o' love shoo didn't heed,Altho' mi heart spake too.Aw axt, "what wants ta, onnyway?"Shoo sed, "aw want a man,"Then laffin gay, shoo tript away, -Mi bonny Mary Ann.Thinks aw, w...
John Hartley