Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 406 of 525
Previous
Next
A Ballad Of Woman
(Gratefully Dedicated to Mrs. Pankhurst)She bore us in her dreaming womb, And laughed into the face of Death;She laughed, in her strange agony, - To give her little baby breath.Then, by some holy mystery, She fed us from her sacred breast,Soothed us with little birdlike words -To rest - to rest - to rest - to rest;Yea, softly fed us with her life - Her bosom like the world in May:Can it be true that men, thus fed, Feed women - as I hear them say?Long ere we grew to girl and boy, She sewed the little things we wore,And smiled unto herself for joy - Mysterious Portress of the Door.Shall she who bore the son of God, And made the rose of Sappho's song,She who saved...
Richard Le Gallienne
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XLIII.
Quel rosignuol che sì soave piagne.THE SONG OF THE NIGHTINGALE REMINDS HIM OF HIS UNHAPPY LOT. Yon nightingale, whose bursts of thrilling tone,Pour'd in soft sorrow from her tuneful throat,Haply her mate or infant brood bemoan,Filling the fields and skies with pity's note;Here lingering till the long long night is gone,Awakes the memory of my cruel lot--But I my wretched self must wail alone:Fool, who secure from death an angel thought!O easy duped, who thus on hope relies!Who would have deem'd the darkness, which appears,From orbs more brilliant than the sun should rise?Now know I, made by sad experience wise,That Fate would teach me by a life of tears,On wings how fleeting fast all earthly rapture flies!WRANG...
Francesco Petrarca
Sonnets on Separation I.
The time shall be, old Wisdom says, when you Shall grow awrinkled and I, indifferent, Shall no more follow the light steps I knew Or trace you, finding out the way you went, By swinging branches and the displaced flowers Among the thickets. I no more shall stand, With careful pencil through the adoring hours Scratching your grace on paper. My still hand No more shall tremble at the touch of yours And I'll write no more songs and you'll not sing. But this is all a lie, for love endures And we shall closer kiss, remembering How budding trees turned barren in the sun Through this long week, whereof one day's now done.
Edward Shanks
Miss Thompson Goes Shopping
Miss Thompson at Home. In her lone cottage on the downs,With winds and blizzards and great crownsOf shining cloud, with wheeling ploverAnd short grass sweet with the small white clover,Miss Thompson lived, correct and meek,A lonely spinster, and every weekOn market-day she used to goInto the little town below,Tucked in the great downs' hollow bowlLike pebbles gathered in a shoal.She goes a-Marketing. So, having washed her plates and cupAnd banked the kitchen-fire up,Miss Thompson slipped upstairs and dressed,Put on her black (her second best),The bonnet trimmed with rusty plush,Peeped in the glass with simpering blush,From camphor-smelling cupboard tookHer thicker jacket off th...
Martin Armstrong
The Tryst
Just when all hope had perished in my soul,And balked desire made havoc with my mind,My cruel Ladye suddenly grew kind,And sent these gracious words upon a scroll:"When knowing Night her dusky scarf has tiedAcross the bold, intrusive eyes of day,Come as a glad, triumphant lover may,No longer fearing that he be denied."I read her letter for the hundredth time,And for the hundredth time my gladdened sightBlurred with the rapture of my vast delight,And swooned upon the page. I caught the chimeOf far off bells, and at each silver noteMy heart on tiptoe pressed its eager earAgainst my breast; it was such joy to hearThe tolling of the hour of which she wrote.The curious day still lingered in the skiesAnd watched me as I hastened to ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
I Love The Naked Ages Long Ago
I love the naked ages long agoWhen statues were gilded by Apollo,When men and women of agilityCould play without lies and anxiety,And the sky lovingly caressed their spines,As it exercised its noble machine.Fertile Cybele, mother of nature, then,Would not place on her daughters a burden,But, she-wolf sharing her heart with the people,Would feed creation from her brown nipples.Men, elegant and strong, would have the rightTo be proud to have beauty named their king;Virgin fruit free of blemish and cracking,Whose flesh smooth and firm would summon a bite!The Poet today, when he would conveyThis native grandeur, would not be swept awayBy man free and woman natural,But would feel darkness envelop his soulBefore this black tableau full of...
Charles Baudelaire
Translations. - Die Heimkehr. (From Heine.)
LX.They have company this evening,And the house is full of light;Up there at the shining windowMoves a shadowy form in white.Thou seest me not--in the darknessI stand here below, apart;Yet less, ah less thou seestInto my gloomy heart!My gloomy heart it loves thee,Loves thee in every spot:It breaks, it bleeds, it shudders--Butinto it thou seest not!LXII.Diamonds hast thou, and pearls,And all by which men lay store;And of eyes thou hast the fairest--Darling, what wouldst thou more?Upon thine eyes so lovelyHave I a whole army-corpsOf undying songs composed--Dearest, what wouldst thou more?And with thine eyes so lovelyThou hast tortured me very sore,And ...
George MacDonald
The Tell-Tale Lyre.
I've heard, there was in ancient days A Lyre of most melodious spell;'Twas heaven to hear its fairy lays, If half be true that legends tell.'Twas played on by the gentlest sighs, And to their breath it breathed againIn such entrancing melodies As ear had never drunk till then!Not harmony's serenest touch So stilly could the notes prolong;They were not heavenly song so much As they were dreams of heavenly song!If sad the heart, whose murmuring air Along the chords in languor stole,The numbers it awakened there Were eloquence from pity's soul.Or if the sigh, serene and light, Was but the breath of fancied woes,The string, that felt its airy flight, Soon whispered it to kind r...
Thomas Moore
The Heathrose.
ONCE a boy a Rosebud spied,Heathrose fair and tender,All array'd in youthful pride,Quickly to the spot he hied,Ravished by her splendour.Rosebud, rosebud, rosebud red,Heathrose fair and tender!Said the boy, "I'll now pick thee,Heathrose fair and tender!"Said the rosebud, "I'll prick thee,So that thou'lt remember me,Ne'er will I surrender!"Rosebud, rosebud, rosebud red,Heathrose fair and tender!Now the cruel boy must pickHeathrose fair and tender;Rosebud did her best to prick,Vain 'twas 'gainst her fate to kickShe must needs surrender.Rosebud, rosebud, rosebud red,Heathrose fair and tender!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Summer Evening At Home
Come, lovely Evening! with thy smile of peaceVisit my humble dwelling; welcomed in,Not with loud shouts, and the thronged city's din,But with such sounds as bid all tumult ceaseOf the sick heart; the grasshopper's faint pipeBeneath the blades of dewy grass unripe,The bleat of the lone lamb, the carol rudeHeard indistinctly from the village green,The bird's last twitter, from the hedge-row seen,Where, just before, the scattered crumbs I strewed,To pay him for his farewell song; all theseTouch soothingly the troubled ear, and pleaseThe stilly-stirring fancies. Though my hours(For I have drooped beneath life's early showers)Pass lonely oft, and oft my heart is sad,Yet I can leave the world, and feel most gladTo meet thee, Evening, here; here my ow...
William Lisle Bowles
The Vale Of Tempe
All night I lay upon the rocks:And now the dawn comes up this way,One great star trembling in her locksOf rosy ray.I can not tell the things I've seen;The things I've heard I dare not speak.The dawn is breaking gold and greenO'er vale and peak.My soul hath kept its tryst againWith her as once in ages past,In that lost life, I know not when,Which was my last.When she was Dryad, I was Faun,And lone we loved in Tempe's Vale,Where once we saw EndymionPass passion-pale:Where once we saw him clasp and meetAmong the pines, with kiss on kiss,Moon-breasted and most heavenly sweet,White Artemis.Where often, Bacchus-borne, we heardThe Mænad shout, wild-revelling;And filled with witchraft, p...
Madison Julius Cawein
Upon Cupid.
Love, like a beggar, came to meWith hose and doublet torn:His shirt bedangling from his knee,With hat and shoes outworn.He ask'd an alms; I gave him bread,And meat too, for his need:Of which, when he had fully fed,He wished me all good speed.Away he went, but as he turn'd(In faith I know not how)He touch'd me so, as that I burn['d],And am tormented now.Love's silent flames and fires obscureThen crept into my heart;And though I saw no bow, I'm sureHis finger was the dart.
Robert Herrick
Song
Ere Reason rose within my breast, To enforce her sacred law,Still would some charm, in every maid, My veering passions draw.But now, to calm those gales of night, The morn her light displays;The twinkling stars no more I view, For only Venus sways:The spotless heaven of genuine love Unveil'd I wondering see,And all that heaven, transported, claim For Julia and for me.
Thomas Oldham
Una
Roving, roving, as it seems,Una lights my clouded dreams;Still for journeys she is dressed;We wander far by east and west.In the homestead, homely thought,At my work I ramble not;If from home chance draw me wide,Half-seen Una sits beside.In my house and garden-plot,Though beloved, I miss her not;But one I seek in foreign places,One face explore in foreign faces.At home a deeper thought may lightThe inward sky with chrysolite,And I greet from far the ray,Aurora of a dearer day.But if upon the seas I sail,Or trundle on the glowing rail,I am but a thought of hers,Loveliest of travellers.So the gentle poet's nameTo foreign parts is blown by fame,Seek him in his native town,
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Sonnet LXXIII.
Quando giugne per gli occhi al cor profondo.HE DESCRIBES THE STATE OF TWO LOVERS, AND RETURNS IN THOUGHT TO HIS OWN SUFFERINGS. When reaches through the eyes the conscious heartIts imaged fate, all other thoughts depart;The powers which from the soul their functions takeA dead weight on the frame its limbs then make.From the first miracle a second springs,At times the banish'd faculty that brings,So fleeing from itself, to some new seat,Which feeds revenge and makes e'en exile sweet.Thus in both faces the pale tints were rife,Because the strength which gave the glow of lifeOn neither side was where it wont to dwell--I on that day these things remember'd well,Of that fond couple when each varying mienTold me in like estate ...
Ending.
That is solemn we have ended, --Be it but a play,Or a glee among the garrets,Or a holiday,Or a leaving home; or later,Parting with a worldWe have understood, for betterStill it be unfurled.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Beauty Making
Methinks there is no greater work in lifeThan making beauty. Can the mind conceiveOne little corner in celestial realmsUnbeautiful, or dull or commonplace?Or picture ugly angels, illy clad?Beauty and splendour, opulence and joy,Are attributes of God and His domain,And so are worth and virtue. But why preachOf virtue only to the sons of men,Ignoring beauty, till they think it sin?Why, if each dweller on this little globeCould know the sacred meaning of that wordAnd understand its deep significance,Men's thoughts would form in beauty, till their dreamsOf heaven would find expression in their lives,However humble; they themselves would growGodlike, befitting such a fair estate.Let us be done with what is only good,Demanding here ...
The Danish Boy, A Fragment
IBetween two sister moorland rillsThere is a spot that seems to lieSacred to flowerets of the hills,And sacred to the sky.And in this smooth and open dellThere is a tempest-stricken tree;A corner-stone by lightning cut,The last stone of a lonely hut;And in this dell you seeA thing no storm can e'er destroy,The shadow of a Danish Boy.IIIn clouds above, the lark is heard,But drops not here to earth for rest;Within this lonesome nook the birdDid never build her nest.No beast, no bird hath here his home;Bees, wafted on the breezy air,Pass high above those fragrant bellsTo other flowers:to other dellsTheir burthens do they bear;The Danish Boy walks here alone:The lovely dell is all his own....
William Wordsworth