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Off Rough Point.
We sat at twilight nigh the sea, The fog hung gray and weird.Through the thick film uncannily The broken moon appeared.We heard the billows crack and plunge, We saw nor waves nor ships.Earth sucked the vapors like a sponge, The salt spray wet our lips.Closer the woof of white mist drew, Before, behind, beside.How could that phantom moon break through, Above that shrouded tide?The roaring waters filled the ear, A white blank foiled the sight.Close-gathering shadows near, more near, Brought the blind, awful night.O friends who passed unseen, unknown! O dashing, troubled sea!Still stand we on a rock alone,Walled round by mystery.
Emma Lazarus
The Delectable Day
The boy on the famous gray pony, Just bidding good-bye at the door,Plucking up maiden heart for the fences Where his brother won honour of yore.The walk to 'the Meet' with fair children, And women as gentle as gay, -Ah! how do we male hogs in armour Deserve such companions as they?The afternoon's wander to windward, To meet the dear boy coming back;And to catch, down the turns of the valley, The last weary chime of the pack.The climb homeward by park and by moorland, And through the fir forests again,While the south-west wind roars in the gloaming, Like an ocean of seething champagne.And at night the septette of Beethoven, And the grandmother by in her chair,And the foot of all feet...
Charles Kingsley
God Bless Our Good And Gracious King
God bless our good and gracious kind,Whose promise none relies on,Who never said a foolish thing,Nor ever did a wise one.
John Wilmot
The Morning Comes Before The Sun.
Slow buds the pink dawn like a roseFrom out night's gray and cloudy sheath;Softly and still it grows and grows,Petal by petal, leaf by leaf;Each sleep-imprisoned creature breaksIts dreamy fetters, one by one,And love awakes, and labor wakes,--The morning comes before the sun.What is this message from the lightSo fairer far than light can be?Youth stands a-tiptoe, eager, bright,In haste the risen sun to see;Ah! check thy lunging, restless heart,Count the charmed moments as they run,It is life's best and fairest part,This morning hour before the sun.When once thy day shall burst to flower,When once the sun shall climb the sky,And busy hour by busy hour,The urgent noontide draws anigh;When the long shadows creep...
Susan Coolidge
A Little Bit Of Blue
When the waves rise high and higher as they toss about together,And the March-winds, loosed and angry, cut your chilly heart in two,Here are eighteen gallant gentlemen who come to face the weatherAll for valour and for honour and a little bit of blue! Chorus. Oh get hold of it and shove it! It is labour, but you love it; Let your stroke be long and mighty; keep your body on the swing; While your pulses dance a measure Full of pride and full of pleasure. And the boat flies free and joyous like a swallow on the wing.Isis blessed her noble youngsters as they left her; Father CamusSped his youths to fame and Putney from his grey and ancient Courts: -"Keep," they said, "the old traditions, and we know you will not shame us
R. C. Lehmann
Auf Wiedersehen. - In Memory Of J.T.F.
Until we meet again! That is the meaningOf the familiar words, that men repeat At parting in the street.Ah yes, till then! but when death interveningRends us asunder, with what ceaseless pain We wait for the Again!The friends who leave us do not feel the sorrowOf parting, as we feel it, who must stay Lamenting day by day,And knowing, when we wake upon the morrow,We shall not find in its accustomed place The one beloved face.It were a double grief, if the departed,Being released from earth, should still retain A sense of earthly pain;It were a double grief, if the true-hearted,Who loved us here, should on the farther shore Remember us no more.Believing, in the midst of our afflictions,That...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Tower-Room
There is a room serene and fair,All palpitant with light and air;Free from the dust, world's noise and fuss -God's Tower-room in each of us.Oh! many a stair our feet must press,And climb from self to selflessness,Before we reach that radiant roomAbove the discord and the gloom.So many, many stairs to climb,But mount them gently - take your time;Rise leisurely, nor strive to run -Not so the mightiest feats are done.Well doing of the little things:Repression of the word that stings;The tempest of the mind made stillBy victory of the God-like will.The hated task performed in love -All these are stairs that wind aboveThe things that trouble and annoy,Up to the Tower-room of joy.Rise leisurely; t...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Songs In "The Conquest Of Granada."
I. Wherever I am, and whatever I do, My Phyllis is still in my mind; When angry, I mean not to Phyllis to go, My feet, of themselves, the way find: Unknown to myself I am just at her door, And when I would rail, I can bring out no more, Than, Phyllis too fair and unkind! When Phyllis I see, my heart bounds in my breast, And the love I would stifle is shown; But asleep or awake I am never at rest, When from my eyes Phyllis is gone. Sometimes a sad dream does delude my sad mind; But, alas! when I wake, and no Phyllis I find, How I sigh to myself all alone! Should a king be my rival in her I adore, He should offer his treasure in vain: Oh, let me alone to be happy and poor,...
John Dryden
Do They Know?
Do they know? At the turn to the straightWhere the favourites fail,And every last atom of weightIs telling its tale;As some grim old stayer hard-pressedRuns true to his breed,And with head in front of the restFights on in the lead;When the jockeys are out with the whips,With a furlong to go,And the backers grow white in the lips,Do you think they don't know?Do they know? As they come back to weighIn a whirlwind of cheers,Though the spurs have left marks of the fray,Though the sweat on the earsGathers cold, and they sob with distressAs they roll up the track,They know just as well their successAs the man on their back.As they walk through a dense human laneThat sways to and fro,And cheers them again and ...
Andrew Barton Paterson
The Young Novice.
The lights yet gleamed on the holy shrine, the incense hung around,But the rites were o'er, the silent church re-echoed to no sound;Yet kneeling there on the altar steps, absorbed in ardent prayer,Is a girl, as seraph meek and pure - as seraph heav'nly fair.The blue eyes, veiled by the lashes long that rest on that bright cheekAre humbly bent, while the snow-white hands are clasped in fervor meek,While in the classic lip and brow, each feature of that face,And graceful high-bred air, is seen she comes of noble race.But, say, what means that dusky robe, that dark and flowing veil,The silver cross - oh! need we ask? they tell at once their tale:They say that, following in the path that fair as she have trod,She hath renounced a fleeting world, to give herself to G...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Invocation.
I.O Life! O Death! O God!Have I not striven?Have I not known thee, God,As thy stars know Heaven?Have I not held thee true,True as thy deepest,Sweet and immaculate blue,Of nights that feel thy dew?Have I not known thee true,O God that keepest? II.O God, my father, God!Didst give me fireTo rise above the clod,And soar, aspire!What tho' I strive and strive,And all my life says live,The sneerful scorn of menBut beats it down again;And, O! sun-centered high,O God! grand poet!Beneath thy tender skyEach day new Keatses die,And thou dost know it! III.They know thee beautiful!They know thee bitter!And all their e...
Madison Julius Cawein
To An Astrologer
Nay, seer, I do not doubt thy mystic lore,Nor question that the tenor of my life,Past, present, and the future, is revealedThere in my horoscope. I do believeThat yon dead moon compels the haughty seasTo ebb and flow, and that my natal starStands like a stern-browed sentinel in spaceAnd challenges events; nor lets one grief,Or joy, or failure, or success, pass onTo mar or bless my earthly lot, untilIt proves its Karmic right to come to me.All this I grant, but more than this I KNOW!Before the solar systems were conceived,When nothing was but the unnamable,My spirit lived, an atom of the Cause.Through countless ages and in many formsIt has existed, ere it entered inThis human frame to serve its little dayUpon the earth. T...
If
Twixt what thou art, and what thou wouldst be, letNo "If" arise on which to lay the blame.Man makes a mountain of that puny word,But, like a blade of grass before the scythe,It falls and withers when a human will,Stirred by creative force, sweeps toward its aim.Thou wilt be what thou couldst be. CircumstanceIs but the toy of genius. When a soulBurns with a god-like purpose to achieve,All obstacles between it and its goalMust vanish as the dew before the sun."If" is the motto of the dilettanteAnd idle dreamer; 'tis the poor excuseOf mediocrity. The truly greatKnow not the word, or know it but to scorn,Else had Joan of Arc a peasant died,Uncrowned by glory and by men unsung.
Mater Tenebrarum
In the endless nights, from my bed, where sleepless in anguish I lie,I startle the stillness and gloom with a bitter and strong cry:0 Love! 0 Beloved long lost! come down from thy Heaven above,For my heart is wasting and dying in uttermost famine for love!Come down for a moment! oh, come! Come serious and mildAnd pale, as thou wert on this earth, thou adorable Child!Or come as thou art, with thy sanctitude, triumph and bliss,For a garment of glory about thee; and give me one kiss,One tender and pitying look of thy tenderest eyes,One word of solemn assurance and truth thatthe soul with its love never dies!In the endless nights, from my bed, where sleepless in frenzy I lie,I cleave through the crushing gloom with a bitter and deadly cry:Oh! where have ...
James Thomson
As the Shifting Sands of the Desert.
As the shifting sands of the desert Are born by the simoon's wrath,And in wanton and fleet confusion, Are strewn on its trackless path;So our lives with resistless fury, Insensibly and unknown,With a restless vacillation By the winds of fate are blown; But an All-Wise Hand May have changed the sand, For a purpose of His own.As the troubled and turbulent waters, As the waves of the angry main,Respond with their undulations To the breath of the hurricane;So our lives on Time's boundless ocean Unwittingly toss and roll,And unconsciously drift with the current Which evades our assumed control; But a Hand of love, From the skies above, May have guided us past a shoal.
Alfred Castner King
The American Flag.
I.When Freedom from her mountain heightUnfurled her standard to the air,She tore the azure robe of night,And set the stars of glory there.She mingled with its gorgeous dyesThe milky baldric of the skies,And striped its pure celestial white,With streakings of the morning light;Then from his mansion in the sunShe called her eagle bearer down,And gave into his mighty hand,The symbol of her chosen land.II.Majestic monarch of the cloud,Who rear'st aloft thy regal form,To hear the tempest trumpings loudAnd see the lightning lances driven,When strive the warriors of the storm,And rolls the thunder-drum of heaven,Child of the sun! to thee 'tis givenTo guard the banner of the free,To hover in the sul...
Joseph Rodman Drake
Temptation.
God tempteth no one, as St. Austin saith,For any ill, but for the proof of faith;Unto temptation God exposeth some,But none of purpose to be overcome.
Robert Herrick
Album Verses
When Eve had led her lord away,And Cain had killed his brother,The stars and flowers, the poets say,Agreed with one another.To cheat the cunning tempter's art,And teach the race its duty,By keeping on its wicked heartTheir eyes of light and beauty.A million sleepless lids, they say,Will be at least a warning;And so the flowers would watch by day,The stars from eve to morning.On hill and prairie, field and lawn,Their dewy eyes upturning,The flowers still watch from reddening dawnTill western skies are burning.Alas! each hour of daylight tellsA tale of shame so crushing,That some turn white as sea-bleached shells,And some are always blushing.But when the patient stars look downOn all the...
Oliver Wendell Holmes