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The Journey
Heart-sick of his journey was the Wanderer; Footsore and parched was he;And a Witch who long had lurked by the wayside, Looked out of sorcery."Lift up your eyes, you lonely Wanderer," She peeped from her casement small;"Here's shelter and quiet to give you rest, young man, And apples for thirst withal."And he looked up out of his sad reverie, And saw all the woods in green,With birds that flitted feathered in the dappling, The jewel-bright leaves between.And he lifted up his face towards her lattice, And there, alluring-wise,Slanting through the silence of the long past, Dwelt the still green Witch's eyes.And vaguely from the hiding-place of memory Voices seemed to cry;"What is the ...
Walter De La Mare
Sympathy
I know what the caged bird feels, alas!When the sun is bright on the upland slopes;When the wind stirs soft through the springing grass,And the river flows like a stream of glass;When the first bird sings and the first bud opes,And the faint perfume from its chalice steals--I know what the caged bird feels!I know why the caged bird beats his wingTill its blood is red on the cruel bars;For he must fly back to his perch and clingWhen he fain would be on the bough a-swing;And a pain still throbs in the old, old scarsAnd they pulse again with a keener sting--I know why he beats his wing!I know why the caged bird sings, ah me,When his wing is bruised and his bosom sore,--When he beats his bars and he would be free;It is not a carol...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
To J. H. And E. W. H.
Nourished by peaceful suns and gracious dew,Your sweet youth budded and your sweet lives grew,And all the world seemed rose-beset for you.The rose of beauty was your mutual dower,The stainless rose of love, an early flower,The stately blooms of ease and wealth and power.And treading thus on pathways flower-bestrewn,It well might be, that, cold and careless grown,You both had lived for your own joys alone.But, holding all these fair things as in trust.Gently you walked, still scattering on the dustOf harder roads, which others tread, and must,--Your heritage of brightness, not a rayOf noontide sought you out, but straight awayYou caught and halved it with some darker day:And as the sweet saint's loaves were turned, it is ...
Susan Coolidge
Heiress And Architect
For A. W. B.She sought the Studios, beckoning to her sideAn arch-designer, for she planned to build.He was of wise contrivance, deeply skilledIn every intervolve of high and wide -Well fit to be her guide."Whatever it be,"Responded he,With cold, clear voice, and cold, clear view,"In true accord with prudent fashioningsFor such vicissitudes as living brings,And thwarting not the law of stable things,That will I do.""Shape me," she said, "high halls with traceryAnd open ogive-work, that scent and hueOf buds, and travelling bees, may come in through,The note of birds, and singings of the sea,For these are much to me.""An idle whim!"Broke forth from himWhom nought could warm to gallantries...
Thomas Hardy
Harvest Home Festival.
In summer time it doth seem good To seek the shade of the green wood, For it doth banish all our care When we gaze on scene so fair. And birds do here in branches sing So merrily in early spring, And lovingly they here do pair Their mutual joys together share. Here nature's charming, never rude, Inspiring all with happy mood, Tables had choice fruits of season, And we too had feast of reason. To dinner table all did march Through evergreen triumphal arch, On top the Union Jack it floats, On each side sheaves of wheat and oats. Great pumpkins and big ears of corn, They do this rural arch ado...
James McIntyre
The Treasure
When they see my songsThey will sigh and say,"Poor soul, wistful soul,Lonely night and day."They will never knowAll your love for meSurer than the spring,Stronger than the sea;Hidden out of sightLike a miser's goldIn forsaken fieldsWhere the wind is cold.
Sara Teasdale
Thankfulness.
I thank Thee, Lord, For every joyous hour That has been mine! For every strengthening and helpful word, For every tender sound that I have heard, I thank Thee, Lord! I thank Thee, Lord, For work and weariness That have been mine! For patience toward one groping toward the light, For mid-day burden and for rest of night, I thank Thee, Lord.
Jean Blewett
The Faery Pipe
Woods of wonder, wonder ways,Where the Faery Piper plays,Bidding all to up and followOver haunted hill and hollow,And behold again the FaysWhirling in a moonlit maze.He whom once our Childhood knew,Piper of the Dream-come-true;Who with music reared us towersOf Adventure, where the HoursWove enchantments; peopled tooWith the deeds of Daring-do.Oh, to hear the pipe he blowsSaying all of Let's-Suppose!Who once bade us brave the dangerOf the Dragon, for the stranger,Princess, who, to tell her woes,Dropped from her high Tower a rose.She, for whom we would have died,To whose Tower the pipe was guide,And from Witchcraft's power delivered.How the dungeon-tower shiveredWhen our trumpet blast defied,<...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Ribbon
Those were the days of doubt. How clearIt all comes back! This ribbon, see?Brings that far past so very nearI lose my own identity,And seem two beings: one that's here,And one back in that centuryOf cowardice and fear,Wherein I met with love and her,When I was but a wanderer.Those were the days of doubt, I said:I doubted all things; even God.Within my heart there was no dreadOf Hell or Heaven. Never a rodWas there to smite; no mercy led:And man's reward was death: a clodHe was, alive or dead.Those were the days of doubt; and soI scoffed at all things, high and low.And then I met her. Fair and frail,A girl whose soul was as a flameThat burns within the Holy Grael;And through her eyes shone clear the sameFanati...
Peru. Canto The First.
ADVERTISEMENT.That no readers of the following work may entertain expectations respecting it which it would ill satisfy, it is necessary to acquaint them, that the author has not had the presumption even to attempt a full, historical narration of the fall of the Peruvian empire. To describe that important event with accuracy, and to display with clearness and force the various causes which combined to produce it, would require all the energy of genius, and the most glowing colours of imagination. Conscious of her utter inability to execute such a design, she has only aimed at a simple detail of some few incidents that make a part of that romantic story; where the unparalleled sufferings of an innocent and amiable people, form the most affecting subjects of true pathos, while their climate, totally unlike our own, furnish...
Helen Maria Williams
Crutches
Thou see'st me, Lucia, this year droop;Three zodiacs fill'd more, I shall stoop;Let crutches then provided beTo shore up my debility:Then, while thou laugh'st, I'll sighing cry,A ruin underpropt am I:Don will I then my beadsman's gown;And when so feeble I am grownAs my weak shoulders cannot bearThe burden of a grasshopper;Yet with the bench of aged sires,When I and they keep termly fires,With my weak voice I'll sing, or saySome odes I made of Lucia;Then will I heave my wither'd handTo Jove the mighty, for to standThy faithful friend, and to pour downUpon thee many a benison.
Robert Herrick
The Heart Healed And Changed By Mercy.
Sin enslaved me many years,And led me bound and blind;Till at length a thousand fearsCame swarming oer my mind.Where, I said, in deep distress,Will these sinful pleasures end?How shall I secure my peace,And make the Lord my friend?Friends and ministers said muchThe gospel to enforce;But my blindness still was such,I chose a legal course:Much I fasted, watchd, and strove,Scarce would show my face abroad,Feard almost to speak or move,A stranger still to God.Thus afraid to trust his grace,Long time did I rebel;Till, despairing of my case,Down at his feet I fell:Then my stubborn heart he broke,And subdued me to his sway;By a simple word he spoke,Thy sins are done ...
William Cowper
November Song.
To the great archer not to himTo meet whom flies the sun,And who is wont his features dimWith clouds to overrunBut to the boy be vow'd these rhymes,Who 'mongst the roses plays,Who hear us, and at proper timesTo pierce fair hearts essays.Through him the gloomy winter night,Of yore so cold and drear,Brings many a loved friend to our sight,And many a woman dear.Henceforward shall his image fairStand in yon starry skies,And, ever mild and gracious there,Alternate set and rise.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Arms And The Man. - The Surrender Of Lord Cornwallis.
Next came the closing scene: but shall I paintThe scarlet column, sullen, slow, and faint,Which marched, with "colors cased" to yonder field,Where Britain threw down corslet, sword and shield?Shall I depict the anguish of the braveWho envied comrades sleeping in the grave?Shall I exult o'er inoffensive dustOf valiant men whose swords have turned to rust?Shall I, like Menelaus by the coast,O'er dead Ajaces make unmanly boast?Shall I, in chains of an ignoble Verse,Degrade dead Hectors, and their pangs rehearse -Nay! such is not the mood this People feels,Their chariots drag no foemen by the heels!Let Ajax slumber by the sounding seaFrom the fell passion of his madness free!Let Hector's ashes unmolested sleep -But not to-day shall any ...
James Barron Hope
At Hansteen's Bier (1873)
(See Note 60)God, we thank Thee for the dowerThou gavest Norway in his power,Whom in the grave we now shall lay!Starlit paths of thoughts that awe usHis spirit found; his deeds now draw usTo deeds, as mighty magnets play. He was the first to stand A light in our free land;Of our present the first fair crown, The first renown,At Norway's feet he laid it down.We his shining honors sharing,And humble now his body bearing,Shall sing with all the world our praise.God, who ever guides our nation,Hath called us to a high vocationAnd shown where He our goal doth raise. People of Norway, glad Go on, as God us bade!God has roused you; He knows whereto, Though we are few.With Him our future...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Amour 22
My hart, imprisoned in a hopeless Ile,Peopled with Armies of pale iealous eyes,The shores beset with thousand secret spyes,Must passe by ayre, or else dye in exile.He framd him wings with feathers of his thought,Which by theyr nature learn'd to mount the skye;And with the same he practised to flye,Till he himself thys Eagles art had taught.Thus soring still, not looking once below,So neere thyne eyes celesteall sunne aspyred,That with the rayes his wafting pyneons fired:Thus was the wanton cause of his owne woe. Downe fell he, in thy Beauties Ocean drenched, Yet there he burnes in fire thats neuer quenched.
Michael Drayton
To My Mother
No foreign tribute from a stranger-hand,Mother, I bring thee, whom not Heaven's songsWould as an alien reach.... Ah, but how farFrom Heaven's least heavenly is the changing noteAnd changing fancy of these fitful cries!Mother, forgive them, as the best of meHas ever pleaded only for thy pardon,Not for thy praise.Mother, there is a loveMen give to wives and children, lovers, friends;There is a love which some men give to God.Ah! between this, I think, and that last love,Last and too-late-discovered love of God,There shines--and nearer to the love of God--The love a man gives only to his mother,Whose travail of dear thought has never endUntil the End. Oh that my mouth had wordsComfortable as thy kisses to the boyWho loved while he forg...
John Frederick Freeman
Giotto's Tower
How many lives, made beautiful and sweet By self-devotion and by self-restraint, Whose pleasure is to run without complaint On unknown errands of the Paraclete,Wanting the reverence of unshodden feet, Fail of the nimbus which the artists paint Around the shining forehead of the saint, And are in their completeness incomplete!In the old Tuscan town stands Giotto's tower, The lily of Florence blossoming in stone,-- A vision, a delight, and a desire,--The builder's perfect and centennial flower, That in the night of ages bloomed alone, But wanting still the glory of the spire.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow