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Summer Studies. III.
That solitary cloud grows dark and wide,While distant thunder rumbles in the air,A fitful ripple breaks the river's tide -The lazy cattle are no longer there,But homeward come in long procession slow,With many a bleat and many a plaintive low.Darker and wider-spreading o'er the westAdvancing clouds, each in fantastic form,And mirror'd turrets on the river's breastTell in advance the coming of a storm -Closer and brighter glares the lightning's flashAnd louder, nearer, sounds the thunder's crash.The air of evening is intensely hot,The breeze feels heated as it fans my brows -Now sullen rain-drops patter down like shot -Strike in the grass, or rattle 'mid the boughs.A sultry lull: and then a gust again,And now I see the thick-ad...
James Barron Hope
The Creek-Road
Calling, the heron flies athwart the blueThat sleeps above it; reach on rocky reachOf water sings by sycamore and beech,In whose warm shade bloom lilies not a few.It is a page whereon the sun and dewScrawl sparkling words in dawn's delicious speech;A laboratory where the wood-winds teach,Dissect each scent and analyze each hue.Not otherwise than beautiful, doth itRecord the happ'nings of each summer day;Where we may read, as in a catalogue,When passed a thresher; when a load of hay;Or when a rabbit; or a bird that lit;And now a bare-foot truant and his dog.
Madison Julius Cawein
Let It Be Forgotten
Let it be forgotten, as a flower is forgotten,Forgotten as a fire that once was singing gold.Let it be forgotten forever and ever,Time is a kind friend, he will make us old.If anyone asks, say it was forgottenLong and long ago,As a flower, as a fire, as a hushed footfallIn a long-forgotten snow.
Sara Teasdale
Horace I, 4.
'Tis spring! the boats bound to the sea;The breezes, loitering kindly overThe fields, again bring herds and menThe grateful cheer of honeyed clover.Now Venus hither leads her train,The Nymphs and Graces join in orgies,The moon is bright and by her lightOld Vulcan kindles up his forges.Bind myrtle now about your brow,And weave fair flowers in maiden tresses--Appease God Pan, who, kind to man,Our fleeting life with affluence blesses.But let the changing seasons mind usThat Death's the certain doom of mortals--Grim Death who waits at humble gatAnd likewise stalks through kingly portals.Soon, Sestius, shall Plutonian shadesEnfold you with their hideous seemings--Then love and mirth and joys of earthShall fa...
Eugene Field
Dreams Old And Nascent - Old
I have opened the window to warm my hands on the sillWhere the sunlight soaks in the stone: the afternoonIs full of dreams, my love, the boys are all stillIn a wistful dream of Lorna Doone.The clink of the shunting engines is sharp and fine,Like savage music striking far off, and thereOn the great, uplifted blue palace, lights stir and shineWhere the glass is domed in the blue, soft air.There lies the world, my darling, full of wonder and wistfulness and strangeRecognition and greetings of half-acquaint things, as I greet the cloudOf blue palace aloft there, among misty indefinite dreams that rangeAt the back of my life's horizon, where the dreamings of past lives crowd.Over the nearness of Norwood Hill, through the mellow veilOf the afternoon ...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
On William Smellie.
Shrewd Willie Smellie to Crochallan came, The old cock'd hat, the gray surtout, the same; His bristling beard just rising in its might, 'Twas four long nights and days to shaving night: His uncomb'd grizzly locks wild staring, thatch'd A head for thought profound and clear, unmatch'd: Yet tho' his caustic wit was biting, rude, His heart was warm, benevolent, and good.
Robert Burns
Teignmouth: "Some Doggerel," Sent In A Letter To B. R. Haydon
I.Here all the summer could I stay,For there's Bishop's teignAnd King's teignAnd Coomb at the clear Teign headWhere close by the streamYou may have your creamAll spread upon barley bread.II.There's Arch BrookAnd there's Larch BrookBoth turning many a mill,And cooling the drouthOf the salmon's mouthAnd fattening his silver gill.III.There is Wild wood,A Mild hoodTo the sheep on the lea o' the down,Where the golden furze,With its green, thin spurs,Doth catch at the maiden's gown.IV.There is Newton MarshWith its spear grass harshA pleasant summer levelWhere the maidens sweetOf the Market StreetDo meet in the dusk to revel.V....
John Keats
The Unattained
A vision beauteous as the morn, With heavenly eyes and tresses streaming,Slow glided o'er a field late shorn Where walked a poet idly dreaming.He saw her, and joy lit his face, "Oh, vanish not at human speaking,"He cried, "thou form of magic grace, Thou art the poem I am seeking."I've sought thee long! I claim thee now - My thought embodied, living, real."She shook the tresses from her brow. "Nay, nay!" she said, "I am ideal.I am the phantom of desire - The spirit of all great endeavour,I am the voice that says, 'Come higher,' That calls men up and up for ever."'Tis not alone thy thought supreme That here upon thy path has risen;I am the artist's highest dream, The ray of light he c...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Revenant
O all ye fair ladies with your colours and your graces,And your eyes clear in flame of candle and hearth,Toward the dark of this old window lift not up your smiling faces,Where a Shade stands forlorn from the cold of the earth.God knows I could not rest for one I still was thinking of;Like a rose sheathed in beauty her spirit was to me;Now out of unforgottenness a bitter draught I'm drinking of,'Tis sad of such beauty unremembered to be.Men all all shades, O Woman. - Winds wist not of the way they blow.Apart from your kindness, life's at best but a snare.Though a tongue now past praise this bitter thing doth say, I knowWhat solitude means, and how, homeless, I fare.Strange, strange, are ye all - except in beauty shared with her -Since I seek on...
Walter De La Mare
A Presentiment
It seems a little word to say-- _Farewell_--but may it not, when said, Be like the kiss we give the dead,Before they pass the doors for aye?Who knows if, on some after day, Your lips shall utter in its stead A welcome, and the broken threadBe joined again, the selfsame way?The word is said, I turn to go, But on the threshold seem to hear A sound as of a passing bell,Tolling monotonous and slow, Which strikes despair upon my ear, And says it is a last farewell.
Robert Fuller Murray
The Old Mile-Tree
Old coach-road West by Nor-ward,Old mile-tree by the track:A dead branch pointing forward,And a dead branch pointing back.And still in clear-cut romansOn his hard heart he tellsThe miles that were to fortune,The miles from Bowenfels.Old chief of Western timber!A famous gum youve been.Old mile-tree, I rememberWhen all your boughs were green.There came three boyish loversWhen golden days begun;There rode three boyish roversTowards the setting sun.And Fortune smiled her fairestAnd Fate to these was kind,The truest, best and rarest,The girls theyd left behind.By the camp-fires dying emberThey dreamed of love and gold;Old mile-tree, I rememberWhen all our hearts were bold.And when the w...
Henry Lawson
Pleurs.
The town of Pleurs, situated among the Alps and containing about two thousand five hundred inhabitants, was overwhelmed in 1618 by the falling of Mount Conto. The avalanche occurred in the night, and no trace of the village or any of its inhabitants could ever after be discovered.'T was eve; and Mount ContoReflected in nightThe sunbeams that fledWith the monarch of light;As great souls and nobleReflect evermoreThe sunshine that gleamsFrom Eternity's shore.A slight crimson veilRobed the snow-wreath on high,The shadow an angelIn passing threw by;And city and valley,In mantle of gray,Seemed bowed like a mournerIn silence to pray.And the sweet vesper bell,With a clear, measured chime,Like the falling of min...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
Quiet Work
One lesson, Nature, let me learn of thee,One lesson which in every wind is blown,One lesson of two duties kept at oneThough the loud world proclaim their enmity.Of toil unsever'd from tranquility!Of labor, that in lasting fruit outgrowsFar noisier schemes, accomplish'd in repose,Too great for haste, too high for rivalry.Yes, while on earth a thousand discords ring,Man's fitful uproar mingling with his toil,Still do thy sleepless ministers move on,Their glorious tasks in silence perfecting;Still working, blaming still our vain turmoil,Laborers that shall not fail, when man is gone.
Matthew Arnold
My Foe
A Belgian Priest-Soldier Speaks: -GURR! You 'cochon'! Stand and fight!Show your mettle! Snarl and bite!Spawn of an accursed race,Turn and meet me face to face!Here amid the wreck and routLet us grip and have it out!Here where ruins rock and reelLet us settle, steel to steel!Look! Our houses, how they spitSparks from brands your friends have lit.See! Our gutters running red,Bright with blood your friends have shed.Hark! Amid your drunken brawlHow our maidens shriek and call.Why have YOU come here alone,To this hearth's blood-spattered stone?Come to ravish, come to loot,Come to play the ghoulish brute.Ah, indeed! We well are met,Bayonet to bayonet.God! I never killed a man:Now I'll...
Robert William Service
Congenial Horror
From this bizarre and livid skyTormented by your destiny,Into your vacant spirit flyWhat tho~ghts? respond, you libertine.Voracious in my appetiteFor the uncertain and unknown,I do not whine for paradiseAs Ovid did, expelled from Rome.Skies tom apart like wind-swept sands,You are the mirrors of my pride;Your mourning clouds, so black and wide,Are hearses that my dreams command,And you reflect in flashing lightThe Hell in which my heart delights.
Charles Baudelaire
The Drunken Fisherman
Wallowing in this bloody sty,I cast for fish that pleased my eye(Truly Jehovah's bow suspendsNo pots of gold to weight its ends);Only the blood-mouthed rainbow troutRose to my bait. They flopped aboutMy canvas creel until the mothCorrupted its unstable cloth.A calendar to tell the day;A handkerchief to wave awayThe gnats; a couch unstuffed with stormPouching a bottle in one arm;A whiskey bottle full of worms;And bedroom slacks: are these fit termsTo mete the worm whose molten rageBoils in the belly of old age?Once fishing was a rabbit's foot,O wind blow cold, O wind blow hot,Let suns stay in or suns step out:Life danced a jig on the sperm-whale's spout,The fisher's fluent and obsceneCatches kept his con...
Robert Lowell
Night On The Prairies
Night on the prairies;The supper is over - the fire on the ground burns low;The wearied emigrants sleep, wrapt in their blankets:I walk by myself - I stand and look at the stars, which I think now I never realized before.Now I absorb immortality and peace,I admire death, and test propositions.How plenteous! How spiritual! How resumé!The same Old Man and Soul - the same old aspirations, and the same content.I was thinking the day most splendid, till I saw what the not-day exhibited,I was thinking this globe enough, till there sprang out so noiseless around me myriads of other globes.Now, while the great thoughts of space and eternity fill me, I will measure myself by them;And now, touch'd with the lives of other globes, arrived as far along as those o...
Walt Whitman
The Chimney-sweeper (Songs Of Experience )
A little black thing among the snow:Crying weep, weep, in notes of woe!Where are thy father & mother? say?They are both gone up to the church to pray.Because I was happy upon the heath.And smild among the winters snow:They clothed me in the clothes of death.And taught me to sing the notes of woe.And because I am happy. & dance & sing.They think they have done me no injury:And are gone to praise God & his Priest & King,Who made up a heaven of our misery.
William Blake