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Song Of The Stars.
When the radiant morn of creation broke,And the world in the smile of God awoke,And the empty realms of darkness and deathWere moved through their depths by his mighty breath,And orbs of beauty and spheres of flameFrom the void abyss by myriads came,In the joy of youth as they darted away,Through the widening wastes of space to play,Their silver voices in chorus rang,And this was the song the bright ones sang:"Away, away, through the wide, wide sky,The fair blue fields that before us lie,Each sun with the worlds that round him roll,Each planet, poised on her turning pole;With her isles of green, and her clouds of white,And her waters that lie like fluid light."For the source of glory uncovers his face,And the brightness o'erfl...
William Cullen Bryant
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 breastBetween 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 sleepLet 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 soulBetween 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 laughterWho haunts...
Madison Julius Cawein
Hope.
This world has suns, but they are overcast;This world has sweets, but they're of ling'ring bloom;Life still expects, and empty falls at last;Warm Hope on tiptoe drops into the tomb.Life's journey's rough--Hope seeks a smoother way,And dwells on fancies which to-morrow see,--To-morrow comes, true copy of to-day,And empty shadow of what is to be;Yet cheated Hope on future still depends,And ends but only when our being ends.I long have hoped, and still shall hope the bestTill heedless weeds are scrambling over me,And hopes and ashes both together restAt journey's end, with them that cease to be.
John Clare
When I would muse in boyhood
When I would muse in boyhoodThe wild green woods among,And nurse resolves and fanciesBecause the world was young,It was not foes to conquer,Nor sweethearts to be kind,But it was friends to die forThat I would seek and find.I sought them far and found them,The sure, the straight, the brave,The hearts I lost my own to,The souls I could not save.They braced their belts about them,They crossed in ships the sea,They sought and found six feet of ground,And there they died for me.
Alfred Edward Housman
Alleluia Height
Yea, constant through the changeful year,This queenly Height commands our praise.To stand in meek unflinching hardihoodWhen fortune blows its storm of fright,And work to full effect that goodResolved in open days of clearer sight-O, this is worth!That daily sees the soulTo braver liberties give birth,That heeds not time's annoy,And hears surrounding voices rollPerennial circumstance of joy.Then come not only when the springtime blowsThe old familiar strangeness of its breathAcross the long-lain snows,And chants her resurrected songsAbout the tombs of death;Nor yet when summer glowsIn roseate throngsAnd works her plenitude of deedsBy tangled dells and waving meads,Come here in beauty's pilgrimage:Nor when the ...
Michael Earls
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...
Love's Chastening
Once Love grew bold and arrogant of air,Proud of the youth that made him fresh and fair;So unto Grief he spake, "What right hast thouTo part or parcel of this heart?" Grief's browWas darkened with the storm of inward strife;Thrice smote he Love as only he might dare,And Love, pride purged, was chastened all his life.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Christmas Eve
IFrom church and chapel and dome and tower,Near far and everywhere,The merry bells chime loud and clearUpon the frosty air.All down the marble avenuesThe lamp-lit casements glow,And from an hundred palacesGlad carols float and flow.A thousand lamps from street to streetBlaze on the dusky air,And light the way for happy feetTo carol, praise and prayer.'Tis Christmas eve. In church and hallThe laden fir-trees bend;Glad children throng the festivalAnd grandsires too attend.Fur-wrapped and gemmed with pearls and gold,Proud ladies rich and fairAs Egypt's splendid queen of oldIn all her pomp are there.And many a costly, golden giftHangs on each Christmas-tree,While ro...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Perhaps
Perhaps the sky once was shadows, the moon lisped 'mongst April's song. Now, those warm lips ease departing sorrow like pressed flowers emptied from hallowed ground.
Paul Cameron Brown
A Family Record
WOODSTOCK, CONN., JULY 4, 1877Not to myself this breath of vesper song,Not to these patient friends, this kindly throng,Not to this hallowed morning, though it beOur summer Christmas, Freedom's jubilee,When every summit, topmast, steeple, tower,That owns her empire spreads her starry flower,Its blood-streaked leaves in heaven's benignant dewWashed clean from every crimson stain they knew, -No, not to these the passing thrills belongThat steal my breath to hush themselves with song.These moments all are memory's; I have comeTo speak with lips that rather should be dumb;For what are words? At every step I treadThe dust that wore the footprints of the deadBut for whose life my life had never knownThis faded vesture which it calls its own.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
June
O queenly month of indolent repose!I drink thy breath in sips of rare perfume,As in thy downy lap of clover-bloomI nestle like a drowsy child and dozeThe lazy hours away. The zephyr throwsThe shifting shuttle of the Summer's loomAnd weaves a damask-work of gleam and gloomBefore thy listless feet. The lily blowsA bugle-call of fragrance o'er the glade;And wheeling into ranks, with plume and spear,Thy harvest-armies gather on parade;While faint and far away, yet pure and clear,A voice calls out of alien lands of shade:All hail the Peerless Goddess of the Year!
James Whitcomb Riley
Khristna and His Flute
(Translation by Moolchand)Be still, my heart, and listen,For sweet and yet acuteI hear the wistful musicOf Khristna and his flute.Across the cool, blue evenings,Throughout the burning days,Persuasive and beguiling,He plays and plays and plays.Ah, none may hear such musicResistant to its charms,The household work grows weary,And cold the husband's arms.I must arise and follow,To seek, in vain pursuit,The blueness and the distance,The sweetness of that flute!In linked and liquid sequence,The plaintive notes dissolveDivinely tender secretsThat none but he can solve.Oh, Khristna, I am coming,I can no more delay."My heart has flown to join thee,"How can my footsteps stay?<...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Sonnet VII
To me, a pilgrim on that journey boundWhose stations Beauty's bright examples are,As of a silken city famed afarOver the sands for wealth and holy ground,Came the report of one - a woman crownedWith all perfection, blemishless and high,As the full moon amid the moonlit sky,With the world's praise and wonder clad around.And I who held this notion of success:To leave no form of Nature's lovelinessUnworshipped, if glad eyes have access there, -Beyond all earthly bounds have made my goalTo find where that sweet shrine is and extolThe hand that triumphed in a work so fair.
Alan Seeger
My Room. To G.E.M.
'Tis a little room, my friend;A baby-walk from end to end;All the things look sadly real,This hot noontide's Unideal.Seek not refuge at the casement,There's no pasture for amazementBut a house most dim and rusty,And a street most dry and dusty;Seldom here more happy visionThan water-cart's blest apparition,We'll shut out the staring space,Draw the curtains in its face.Close the eyelids of the room,Fill it with a scarlet gloom:Lo! the walls on every sideAre transformed and glorified;Ceiled as with a rosy cloudFurthest eastward of the crowd,Blushing faintly at the blissOf the Titan's good-night kiss,Which her westward sisters share,--Crimson they from breast to hair.'Tis the faintest lends its dyeTo...
George MacDonald
Sweet Fairies From The Isles Of Song.
Sweet fairies from the isles of song, Bewitching choirs from music land, The pleasures of your wondrous band Once wooed me from the ways of wrong; Once won my heart with fond caress To sacred vales of summer glees, Till carols fraught with lullabies Filled all my soul with blessedness! My yearnings miss those gentle sprites, Whose laughing lips and angel eyes And voices ever winsome-wise, Bedewed my dreams with new delights; For in the sad hours of my pain I hold them as I hold the dead, And trust that in the vales they tread, My hands shall clasp their hands again. From those glad meadows where they play 'Neath lovely sun and gentle sta...
Freeman Edwin Miller
Eheu Fugaces!
The air is charged with amatory numbersSoft madrigals, and dreamy lovers' lays.Peace, peace, old heart! Why waken from its slumbersThe aching memory of the old, old days?Time was when Love and I were well acquainted.Time was when we walked ever hand in hand;A saintly youth, with worldly thought untainted,None better-loved than I in all the land!Time was, when maidens of the noblest station,Forsaking even military men,Would gaze upon me, rapt in adorationAh, me, I was a fair young curate then!Had I a headache? sighed the maids assembled;Had I a cold? welled forth the silent tear;Did I look pale? then half a parish trembled;And when I coughed all thought the end was near!I, had no care no jealous doubts hung o'er meFor I was lov...
William Schwenck Gilbert
Moesta Et Errabunda - (Twelve Translations From Charles Baudelaire)
Agatha, tell me, does thy heart not ache, Plunged in this squalid city's filthy sea, For another ocean where the splendours break Blue, clear, and deep as is virginity. Agatha, tell me, does thy heart not ache? The sea, the sea unending, comforts us! What demon gave the hoarse old sea who sings To her mumbling hurricanes' organ thunderous The god-like power to cradle sorrowful things? The sea, the sea unending, comforts us. Carry me, wagon, bear me, barque, away! Far! Far! For here the mud is made of tears! Does Agatha's sad heart not sometimes say: "O far from shudderings and crimes and fears, Carry me, wagon; bear me barque, away?" How far thou art, O scented...
John Collings Squire, Sir
Mary Gulliver To Captain Lemuel Gulliver. An Epistle.
The captain, some time after his return, being retired to Mr Sympson's in the country, Mrs Gulliver, apprehending from his late behaviour some estrangement of his affections, writes him the following expostulatory, soothing, and tenderly complaining epistle:--Welcome, thrice welcome, to thy native place!--What, touch me not? what, shun a wife's embrace?Have I for this thy tedious absence borne,And waked, and wish'd whole nights for thy return?In five long years I took no second spouse;What Redriff wife so long hath kept her vows?Your eyes, your nose, inconstancy betray;Your nose you stop, your eyes you turn away.'Tis said, that thou shouldst 'cleave unto thy wife;'Once thou didst cleave, and I could cleave for life.Hear, and relent! hark how thy children moan!Be...
Alexander Pope