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Jan 7thA dreadful darkness closes inOn my bewildered mind;O let me suffer and not sin,Be tortured yet resigned.Through all this world of whelming mistStill let me look to Thee,And give me courage to resistThe Tempter till he flee.Weary I am, O give me strengthAnd leave me not to faint;Say Thou wilt comfort me at lengthAnd pity my complaint.I've begged to serve Thee heart and soul,To sacrifice to TheeNo niggard portion, but the wholeOf my identity.I hoped amid the brave and strongMy portioned task might lie,To toil amid the labouring throngWith purpose pure and high.But Thou hast fixed another part,And Thou hast fixed it well;I said so with my breaking heartWhen ...
Anne Bronte
Hesperian - Proem
The path that winds by wood and streamIs not the path for me to-day;The path I take is one of dream,That leads me down a twilight way.By towns, where myths have only been;By streams, no mortal foot hath crossed;To gardens of hesperian sheen,By halcyon seas for ever lost.By forests, moonlight haunts alone,(Diana with her silvery fawn;)By fields, whereon the stars are sown,(The wildflowers gathered of the Dawn.)To orchards of eternal fruit,That never mortal hand shall take;Around whose central tree and rootIs coiled the never-sleeping Snake.The Dragon, lost in listening, curledAround the trunk whose fruit is gold:The ancient wisdom of the worldGuarding the glory never old.The one desire, that ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Reciprocity
Her mother, Elfie older grown, One evening, for adieu, Said, "You'll not mind being left alone, For God takes care of you!" In child-way her heart's eye did see The correlation's node: "Yes," she said, "God takes care o' me, An' I take care o' God." The child and woman were the same, She changed not, only grew; 'Twixt God and her no shadow came: The true is always true! As daughter, sister, promised wife, Her heart with love did brim: Now, sure, it brims as full of life, Hid fourteen years in him!1892.
George MacDonald
The Lost Soul.
Brothers, look there!What! see ye nothing yet?Knit your eyebrows close, and stare;Send your souls forth in the gaze,As my finger-point is set,Through the thick of the foggy air.Beyond the air, you see the dark;(For the darkness hedges still our ways;)And beyond the dark, oh, lives away!Dim and far down, surely you markA huge world-heap of withered yearsDropt from the boughs of eternity?See ye not something lying there,Shapeless as a dumb despair,Yet a something that spirits can recogniseWith the vision dwelling in their eyes?It hath the form of a man!As a huge moss-rock in a valley green,When the light to freeze began,Thickening with crystals of dark between,Might look like a sleeping man.What think ye it, br...
To A. J. Scott
When, long ago, the daring of my youth Drew nigh thy greatness with a little thing, Thou didst receive me; and thy sky of truth Has domed me since, a heaven of sheltering, Made homely by the tenderness and grace Which round thy absolute friendship ever fling A radiant atmosphere. Turn not thy face From that small part of earnest thanks, I pray, Which, spoken, leaves much more in speechless case. I see thee far before me on thy way Up the great peaks, and striding stronger still; Thy intellect unrivalled in its sway, Upheld and ordered by a regnant will; Thy wisdom, seer and priest of holy fate, Searching all truths its prophecy to fill; But this my joy: throned in thy hear...
Outlook.
Not to be conquered by these headlong days,But to stand free: to keep the mind at broodOn life's deep meaning, nature's altitudeOf loveliness, and time's mysterious ways;At every thought and deed to clear the hazeOut of our eyes, considering only this,What man, what life, what love, what beauty is,This is to live, and win the final praise.Though strife, ill fortune and harsh human needBeat down the soul, at moments blind and dumbWith agony; yet, patience - there shall comeMany great voices from life's outer sea,Hours of strange triumph, and, when few men heed,Murmurs and glimpses of eternity.
Archibald Lampman
The Shadow Of The Almighty
The Rev Mr Young was one stormy day visiting one of his people, an old man, who lived in great poverty in a lonely cottage a few miles from Jedsburg. He found him sitting with his Bible open upon his knees, but in outward circumstances of great discomfort, the snow drifting in through the roof and under the door, and scarcely any fire in the hearth. "What are you about to day, John?" asked Mr Young on entering "Ah, sir," said John, "I am sitting under His shadow with great delight."They only see the snow heaped on the moor, The bare trees shivering in the winter's breath,The icy drift that sifteth through the door, Me, old and poor, waiting the call of death.They think my cot is bare and comfortless, With broken roof and paper-mended pane,They see but poverty and lonelin...
Nora Pembroke
Forward
Let me look always forward. Never back.Was I not formed for progress? OtherwiseWith onward pointing feet and searching eyesWould God have set me squarely on the trackUp which we all must labour with life's pack?Yonder the goal of all this travel lies.What matters it, if yesterday the skiesWith light were golden, or with clouds were black?I would not lose to-morrow's glow of dawnBy peering backward after sun's long set.New hope is fairer than an old regret;Let me pursue my journey and press on -Nor tearful eyed, stand ever in one spot,A briny statue like the wife of Lot.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Inevitable
What has been will be,'Tis the under law of life;'Tis the song of sky and sea,To the key of calm and strife.For guard we as we may,What is to be will be,The dark must fold each day --The shore must gird each sea.All things are ruled by law;'Tis only in man's willYou meet a feeble flaw;But fate is weaving stillThe web and woof of life,With hands that have no hearts,Thro' calmness and thro' strife,Despite all human arts.For fate is master here,He laughs at human wiles;He sceptres every tear,And fetters any smiles.What is to be will be,We cannot help ourselves;The waves ask not the seaWhere lies the shore that shelves.The law is coldest steel,We live beneath ...
Abram Joseph Ryan
To-Morrow.
Where art thou, beloved To-morrow?When young and old, and strong and weak,Rich and poor, through joy and sorrow,Thy sweet smiles we ever seek, -In thy place - ah! well-a-day!We find the thing we fled - To-day.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
And Doth Not A Meeting Like This.
And doth not a meeting like this make amends, For all the long years I've been wandering away--To see thus around me my youth's early friends, As smiling and kind as in that happy day?Tho' haply o'er some of your brows, as o'er mine, The snow-fall of time may be stealing--what then?Like Alps in the sunset, thus lighted by wine, We'll wear the gay tinge of youth's roses again.What softened remembrances come o'er the heart, In gazing on those we've been lost to so long!The sorrows, the joys, of which once they were part, Still round them, like visions of yesterday, throng,As letters some hand hath invisibly traced, When held to the flame will steal out on the sight,So many a feeling, that long seemed effaced, The warmth of...
Thomas Moore
Elegy IV. - Anno Aetates 18. - To My Tutor, Thomas Young,1 Chaplain of the English Merchants Resident at Hamburg.
Hence, my epistle skim the Deep fly o'erYon smooth expanse to the Teutonic shore!Haste lest a friend should grieve for thy delayAnd the Gods grant that nothing thwart thy way!I will myself invoke the King2 who bindsIn his Sicanian ecchoing vault the winds,With Doris3 and her Nymphs, and all the throngOf azure Gods, to speed thee safe along.But rather, to insure thy happier haste,Ascend Medea's chariot,4 if thou may'st,Or that whence young Triptolemus5 of yoreDescended welcome on the Scythian shore.The sands that line the German coast descried,To opulent Hamburg turn aside,So call'd, if legendary fame be true,From Hama,6 whom a club-arm'd Cimbrian slew.There lives, deep-learn'd and primitive...
John Milton
Non-Resistance
Perhaps too far in these considerate daysHas patience carried her submissive ways;Wisdom has taught us to be calm and meek,To take one blow, and turn the other cheek;It is not written what a man shall do,If the rude caitiff smite the other too!Land of our fathers, in thine hour of needGod help thee, guarded by the passive creed!As the lone pilgrim trusts to beads and cowl,When through the forest rings the gray wolf's howl;As the deep galleon trusts her gilded prowWhen the black corsair slants athwart her bow;As the poor pheasant, with his peaceful mien,Trusts to his feathers, shining golden-green,When the dark plumage with the crimson beakHas rustled shadowy from its splintered peak, -So trust thy friends, whose babbling tongues would cha...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Beatific Vision
Through what fierce incarnations, furledIn fire and darkness, did I go,Ere I was worthy in the worldTo see a dandelion grow?Well, if in any woes or warsI bought my naked right to be,Grew worthy of the grass, nor gaveThe wren, my brother, shame for me.But what shall God not ask of himIn the last time when all is told,Who saw her stand beside the hearth,The firelight garbing her in gold?
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
The Seen and The Unseen
Nature is but the outward vestibuleWhich God has placed before an unseen shrine,The Visible is but a fair, bright valeThat winds around the great Invisible;The Finite -- it is nothing but a smileThat flashes from the face of Infinite;A smile with shadows on it -- and 'tis sadMen bask beneath the smile, but oft forgetThe loving Face that very smile conceals.The Changeable is but the broidered robeEnwrapped about the great Unchangeable;The Audible is but an echo, faint,Low whispered from the far Inaudible;This earth is but an humble acolyteA-kneeling on the lowest altar-stepOf this creation's temple, at the MassOf Supernature, just to ring the bellAt Sanctus! Sanctus! Sanctus! while the worldPrepares its heart for consecration's hour....
Caroline Chisholm
A perfect woman, nobly planned,To warn, to comfort, and command.The priests and the Levites went forth, to feast at the courts of the Kings;They were vain of their greatness and worth, and gladdened with glittering things;They were fair in the favour of gold, and they walked on, with delicate feet,Where, famished and faint with the cold, the women fell down in the street.The Priests and the Levites looked round, all vexed and perplexed at the criesOf the maiden who crouched to the ground with the madness of want in her eyes;And they muttered Few praises are earned when good hath been wrought in the dark;While the backs of the people are turned, we choose not to loiter nor hark.Moreover they said It is fair that our deeds in the daylight should shine:...
Henry Kendall
The Cypress-Tree Of Ceylon
They sat in silent watchfulnessThe sacred cypress-tree about,And, from beneath old wrinkled brows,Their failing eyes looked out.Gray Age and Sickness waiting thereThrough weary night and lingering day,Grim as the idols at their side,And motionless as they.Unheeded in the boughs aboveThe song of Ceylon's birds was sweet;Unseen of them the island flowersBloomed brightly at their feet.O'er them the tropic night-storm swept,The thunder crashed on rock and hill;The cloud-fire on their eyeballs blazed,Yet there they waited still!What was the world without to them?The Moslem's sunset-call, the danceOf Ceylon's maids, the passing gleamOf battle-flag and lance?They waited for that falling leafO...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The White Doe Of Rylstone, Or, The Fate Of The Nortons - Canto Fifth
High on a point of rugged groundAmong the wastes of Rylstone FellAbove the loftiest ridge or moundWhere foresters or shepherds dwell,An edifice of warlike frameStands single Norton Tower its nameIt fronts all quarters, and looks roundO'er path and road, and plain and dell,Dark moor, and gleam of pool and stream,Upon a prospect without bound.The summit of this bold ascentThough bleak and bare, and seldom freeAs Pendle-hill or PennygentFrom wind, or frost, or vapours wetHad often heard the sound of gleeWhen there the youthful Nortons met,To practise games and archery:How proud and happy they! the crowdOf Lookers-on how pleased and proud!And from the scorching noon-tide sun,From showers, or when the prize was won,They...
William Wordsworth