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In Memoriam. - Miss Caroline L. Griffin,
Died at New York, November 17th, 1861.WRITTEN ON HER BIRTH-DAY.The day returns, beloved friend When in thy Mother's armsThou a fair gift from Heaven wert laid In all thine infant charms,That day, with cloudless sky returns, But yet thou art not hereAnd from the smitten Mother's eye Distils the mourner's tear.The wondrous brightness of thy smile, Thy tones of greeting kind,The love of knowledge that inspired Thy strong and ardent mind,Thy pity for the suffering poor, Thy patient zeal to teachTheir children, though in manners rude And ignorant in speech,And all thy many deeds and words Of friendship's earnest part,Are with a never-fading trace Depictured on ...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
Midwinter.
The dew-drop from the rose that slips Hath not the sparkle of her lips, My lady's lips. Than her long braids of yellow hold The dandelion hath not more gold, Her braids like gold. The blue-bell hints not more of skies Than do the flowers in her eyes, My lady's eyes. The sweet-pea blossom doth not wear More dainty pinkness than her ear, My lady's ear. So, heigho! then, tho' skies be gray, My heart's a garden that is gay This sorry day.
Madison Julius Cawein
Kidnaped
I held my heart so far from harm,I let it wander far and freeIn mead and mart, without alarm,Assured it must come back to me.And all went well till on a day,Learned Dr. Cupid wandered byA search along our sylvan wayFor some peculiar butterfly.A flash of wings, a hurried dive,A flutter and a short-lived flit;This Scientist, as I am aliveHad seen my heart and captured it.Right tightly now 'tis held amongThe specimens that he has trapped,And sings (Oh, love is ever young),'Tis passing sweet to be kidnaped.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Pressed Gentian
The time of gifts has come again,And, on my northern window-pane,Outlined against the days brief light,A Christmas token hangs in sight.The wayside travellers, as they pass,Mark the gray disk of clouded glass;And the dull blankness seems, perchance,Folly to their wise ignorance.They cannot from their outlook seeThe perfect grace it hath for me;For there the flower, whose fringes throughThe frosty breath of autumn blew,Turns from without its face of bloomTo the warm tropic of my room,As fair as when beside its brookThe hue of bending skies it took.So from the trodden ways of earth,Seem some sweet souls who veil their worth,And offer to the careless glanceThe clouding gray of circumstance.They blossom be...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Lord Lovel
'It is silly sooth, And dallies with the innocence of love, Like the old age.' --Twelfth Night, II. 4.The Text.--This ballad, concluding a small class of three--Lord Thomas and Fair Annet, and Fair Margaret and Sweet William being the other two--is distinguished by the fact that the lady dies of hope deferred. It is a foolish ballad, at the opposite pole to Lord Thomas and Fair Annet, and is pre-eminently one of the class meant only to be sung, with an effective burden. The text given here, therefore, is that of a broadside of the year 1846.The Story in outline is extremely popular in German and Scandinavian literature. Of the former the commonest is Der Ritter und die Maid, also found north of Germany; twenty-...
Frank Sidgwick
Strength Renewed
Antæus, as the ancient poets sing, Though in his contest with the God of Power Doomed to be conquered, stayed the fatal hour, And the onlookers set to wondering. For overborne, to Earth he'd closely cling, Until he rose again, a mighty tower. Thus could the Earth with strength her lover dower, And very near to victory could bring. So when I feel thy tender hand in mine, I, too, dear love, against the world could stand, Courage divine comes with thy lightest touch. Afar from thee Antæus-like I pine, But strength returns now as I clasp thy hand. Ah! that so slight a thing should mean so much.
Helen Leah Reed
A Summer Morning
Never was sun so bright before, No matin of the lark so sweet, No grass so green beneath my feet,Nor with such dewdrops jewelled o'er.I stand with thee outside the door, The air not yet is close with heat, And far across the yellowing wheatThe waves are breaking on the shore.A lovely day! Yet many such, Each like to each, this month have passed, And none did so supremely shine.One thing they lacked: the perfect touch Of thee--and thou art come at last, And half this loveliness is thine.
Robert Fuller Murray
To E. Fitzgerald: Tiresias
Old Fitz, who from your suburb grange,Where once I tarried for a while,Glance at the wheeling orb of change,And greet it with a kindly smile;Whom yet I see as there you sitBeneath your sheltering garden-tree,And watch your doves about you flit,And plant on shoulder, hand, and knee,Or on your head their rosy feet,As if they knew your diet sparesWhatever moved in that full sheetLet down to Peter at his prayers;Who live on milk and meal and grass;And once for ten long weeks I triedYour table of Pythagoras,- And seem'd at first "a thing enskied,"As Shakespeare has it, airy-lightTo float above the ways of men,Then fell from that half-spiritual heightChill'd, till I tasted flesh againOne night when earth was winter-b]ack,
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Sonnet CXL.
Mirando 'l sol de' begli occhi sereno.THE SWEETS AND BITTERS OF LOVE. Marking of those bright eyes the sun sereneWhere reigneth Love, who mine obscures and grieves,My hopeless heart the weary spirit leavesOnce more to gain its paradise terrene;Then, finding full of bitter-sweet the scene,And in the world how vast the web it weaves.A secret sigh for baffled love it heaves,Whose spurs so sharp, whose curb so hard have been.By these two contrary and mix'd extremes,With frozen or with fiery wishes fraught,To stand 'tween misery and bliss she seems:Seldom in glad and oft in gloomy thought,But mostly contrite for its bold emprize,For of like seed like fruit must ever rise!MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Lovely Polly Stewart.
Tune - "Ye're welcome, Charlie Stewart."I. O lovely Polly Stewart! O charming Polly Stewart! There's not a flower that blooms in May That's half so fair as thou art. The flower it blaws, it fades and fa's, And art can ne'er renew it; But worth and truth eternal youth Will give to Polly Stewart.II. May he whose arms shall fauld thy charms Possess a leal and true heart; To him be given to ken the heaven He grasps in Polly Stewart. O lovely Polly Stewart! O charming Polly Stewart! There's ne'er a flower that blooms in May That's half so sweet as thou art.
Robert Burns
The Complaint
Away! away!Tempt me no more, insidious Love:Thy soothing swayLong did my youthful bosom prove:At length thy treason is discern'd,At length some dear-bought caution earn'd:Away! nor hope my riper age to move.I know, I seeHer merit. Needs it now be shown,Alas! to me?How often, to myself unknown,The graceful, gentle, virtuous maidHave I admired! How often saidWhat joy to call a heart like hers one's own!But, flattering god,O squanderer of content and easeIn thy abodeWill care's rude lesson learn to please?O say, deceiver, hast thou wonProud Fortune to attend thy throne,Or placed thy friends above her stern decrees?
Mark Akenside
In The South. [Serenade.]
The dim verbena drugs the dusk With heavy lemon odors rare; Wan heliotropes Arabian musk Exhale into the dreamy air; A sad wind with long wooing husk Swoons in the roses there. The jasmine at thy casement flings Star-censers oozing rich perfumes; The clematis, long petaled, swings Deep clusters of dark purple blooms; With flowers like moons or sylphide wings Magnolias light the glooms. Awake, awake from sleep! Thy balmy hair, Unbounden deep on deep, Than blossoms fair, Who sweetest fragrance weep, Will fill the night with prayer. Awake, awake from sleep! And dreaming here it seems to me Some dryad's b...
Horace I, 22.
Fuscus, whoso to good inclines--And is a faultless liver--Nor moorish spear nor bow need fear,Nor poison-arrowed quiver.Ay, though through desert wastes he roams,Or scales the rugged mountains,Or rests beside the murmuring tideOf weird Hydaspan fountains!Lo, on a time, I gayly pacedThe Sabine confines shady,And sung in glee of Lalage,My own and dearest lady.And, as I sung, a monster wolfSlunk through the thicket from me---But for that song, as I strolled alongHe would have overcome me!Set me amid those poison mistsWhich no fair gale dispelleth,Or in the plains where silence reignsAnd no thing human dwelleth;Still shall I love my Lalage--Still sing her tender graces;And, while I s...
Eugene Field
Hesperus
Ah whither dost thou float, sweet silent star,In yonder floods of evening's dying light?Before the fanning wings of rising night,Methinks thy silvery bark is driven farTo some lone isle or calmly havened shore,Where the lorn eye of man can follow thee no more.How many a one hath watched thee even as I,And unto thee and thy receding rayPoured forth his thoughts with many a treasured sighToo sweet and strange for the remorseless day;But thou hast gone and left unto their sightToo great a host of stars, and yet too black a night.E'en as I gaze upon thee, thy bright formDoth sail away among the cloudy islesAround whose shores the sea of sunlight smiles.On thee may break no black and boisterous stormTo turn the tenour of thy calm career....
Ronald Ross
Zeal Required In Love.
I'll do my best to win whene'er I woo:That man loves not who is not zealous too.
Robert Herrick
Ballad Of Women I Love
Prudence Mears hath an old blue plateHid away in an oaken chest,And a Franklin platter of ancient dateBeareth Amandy Baker's crest;What times soever I've been their guest,Says I to myself in an undertone:"Of womenfolk, it must be confessed,These do I love, and these alone."Well, again, in the Nutmeg State,Dorothy Pratt is richly blestWith a relic of art and a land effete--A pitcher of glass that's cut, not pressed.And a Washington teapot is possessedDown in Pelham by Marthy Stone--Think ye now that I say in jest"These do I love, and these alone?"Were Hepsy Higgins inclined to mate,Or Dorcas Eastman prone to investIn Cupid's bonds, they could find their fateIn the bootless bard of Crockery Quest.For they've he...
Moly
When by the wall the tiger-flower swingsA head of sultry slumber and aroma;And by the path, whereon the blown rose flingsIts obsolete beauty, the long lilies foam aWhite place of perfume, like a beautiful breast -Between the pansy fire of the west,And poppy mist of moonrise in the east,This heartache will have ceased.The witchcraft of soft music and sweet sleep -Let it beguile the burthen from my spirit,And white dreams reap me as strong reapers reapThe ripened grain and full blown blossom near it;Let me behold how gladness gives the wholeThe transformed countenance of my own soul -Between the sunset and the risen moonLet sorrow vanish soon.And these things then shall keep me company:The elfins of the dew; the spirit of laught...
To A Child
Dear child! how radiant on thy mother's knee,With merry-making eyes and jocund smiles,Thou gazest at the painted tiles,Whose figures grace,With many a grotesque form and face.The ancient chimney of thy nursery!The lady with the gay macaw,The dancing girl, the grave bashawWith bearded lip and chin;And, leaning idly o'er his gate,Beneath the imperial fan of state,The Chinese mandarin.With what a look of proud commandThou shakest in thy little handThe coral rattle with its silver bells,Making a merry tune!Thousands of years in Indian seasThat coral grew, by slow degrees,Until some deadly and wild monsoonDashed it on Coromandel's sand!Those silver bellsReposed of yore,As shapeless ore,Far down in the ...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow