Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 414 of 525
Previous
Next
The Summer Shower.
The eve is still and silent and above the tinted plainThe passing clouds are driving gentle showers of summer rain,And the scent of hay-strewn meadows and the fresh-besprinkled groundIs mingling with the perfume of the flowers that bloom around.Off I wander and I stroke the gleeful spaniel at my side,And, delighted with each other, do we ramble far and wide,While a ditty is the tribute to the joy that gives it birth,And the leaves, refreshed, are pouring their cool nectar to the earth.Oh let me gaze again upon the moisture-laden sky,Let me see the rolling masses, let me hear the plover's cry,While enveloping the distant mountain-summits like a shroud,Like a head bent down and hoary, hangs a heavy wreath of cloud.Let me gaze upon the sunshine as it br...
Lennox Amott
Kiss In The Rain, A
One stormy morn I chanced to meet A lassie in the town;Her locks were like the ripened wheat, Her laughing eyes were brown.I watched her as she tripped along Till madness filled my brain,And then, and then, I know 'twas wrong, I kissed her in the rain!With rain-drops shining on her cheek, Like dew-drops on a rose,The little lassie strove to speak My boldness to oppose;She strove in vain, and quivering Her fingers stole in mine;And then the birds began to sing, The sun began to shine.Oh, let the clouds grow dark above, My heart is light below;'Tis always summer when we love, However winds may blow;And I'm as proud as any prince, All honors I disdain:She says I am he...
Samuel Minturn Peck
At Length.
Her final summer was it,And yet we guessed it not;If tenderer industriousnessPervaded her, we thoughtA further force of lifeDeveloped from within, --When Death lit all the shortness up,And made the hurry plain.We wondered at our blindness, --When nothing was to seeBut her Carrara guide-post, --At our stupidity,When, duller than our dulness,The busy darling lay,So busy was she, finishing,So leisurely were we!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Mazelli - Canto II.
I.He stood where the mountain moss outspread Its smoothness beneath his dusky foot;The chestnut boughs above his head, Hung motionless and mute.There came not a voice from the wooded hill, Nor a sound from the shadowy glen,Save the plaintive song of the whip-poor-will,[2] And the waterfall's dash, and now and then, The night-bird's mournful cry.Deep silence hung round him; the misty lightOf the young moon silvered the brow of Night, Whose quiet spirit had flung her spellO'er the valley's depth, and the mountain's height, And breathed on the air, till its gentle swellArose on the ear like some loved one's call;And the wide blue sky spread over all Its starry canopy.And he seemed as the spirit of ...
George W. Sands
Dainty Dora
TO D. M. M.Greeks once sang a lovely song To their maiden Cora;But my lay floats soft along To my Dainty Dora.Frenchmen sing of Anne Belle, Romans sang of Flora;But I sing my song to tell Of my Dainty Dora.Scotchmen sing their songs to move Mary or Debora;But I sing my song of love - Love for Dainty Dora.Poets now a song may give Psyche or Lenora;But I'll sing long as I live Just for Dainty Dora!
Edward Smyth Jones
To Neobule
A sorry life, forsooth, these wretched girls are undergoing,Restrained from draughts of pleasant wine, from loving favors showing,For fear an uncle's tongue a reprimand will be bestowing!Sweet Cytherea's winged boy deprives you of your spinning,And Hebrus, Neobule, his sad havoc is beginning,Just as Minerva thriftily gets ready for an inning.Who could resist this gallant youth, as Tiber's waves he breasted,Or when the palm of riding from Bellerophon he wrested,Or when with fists and feet the sluggers easily he bested?He shot the fleeing stags with regularity surprising;The way he intercepted boars was quite beyond surmising,--No wonder that your thoughts this youth has been monopolizing!So I repeat that with these maids fate is unkindly dealing...
Eugene Field
Hope.
Hope is the shadowy essence of a wish, A fond desire which floats before our eyes;With lurid aberration, feverish,-- We clutch the shadow which elusive, flies;Though at our grasp the mocking fancy flees,Hope still pursues and soothes realities.Hope, as a mirage on the desert waste, Lures the lost traveler, by a vision fairOf gushing fountains which he may not taste, Of streamlets cool depicted on the air;With tongue outstretched and parched he onward speeds,But as he moves the phantom scene recedes.In the foul dungeon or the narrow cell, The prisoner doth pace his lonely beat,And as he treads, his shackles clank a knell Responsive to each movement of his feet;Yet through his grated window, he discernsThe star...
Alfred Castner King
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet VIII
Loue, borne in Greece, of late fled from his natiue place,Forc't, by a tedious proof, that Turkish hardned heartIs not fit mark to pierce with his fine-pointed dart,And pleas'd with our soft peace, staide here his flying race:But, finding these north clymes too coldly him embrace,Not vsde to frozen clips, he straue to find some partWhere with most ease and warmth he might employ his art;At length he perch'd himself in Stellaes ioyful face,Whose faire skin, beamy eyes, like morning sun on snow,Deceiu'd the quaking boy, who thought, from so pure light,Effects of liuely heat must needs in nature grow:But she, most faire, most cold, made him thence take his flightTo my close heart, where, while some firebrands he did lay,He burnt vn'wares his wings, and cannot flie ...
Philip Sidney
Lines Written In A Mental Album.
Where each one expressed some sentiment. In this album you may trace, If not the lineaments of face, There at least you will find Photographs of the mind. Some in earnest some in fun, Some do lecture some do pun, Here the maiden and the youth, Each proclaim some precious truth. And there is here some fine pages, Written by maturer ages, Where they show that time is brief, That soon comes sere and yellow leaf.
James McIntyre
Moderation.
Let moderation on thy passions wait;Who loves too much, too much the lov'd will hate.
Robert Herrick
Only A Word.
Till our world, so sad and weary, Finds the balmy rest of peace -Peace to silence all her discords - Peace till war and crime shall cease.Peace to fall like gentle showers, Or on parchéd flowers dew,Till our hearts proclaim with gladness: Lo, He maketh all things new.
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Contentment
"Man wants but little here below"Little I ask; my wants are few;I only wish a hut of stone,(A very plain brown stone will do,)That I may call my own; -And close at hand is such a one,In yonder street that fronts the sun.Plain food is quite enough for me;Three courses are as good as ten; -If Nature can subsist on three,Thank Heaven for three. AmenI always thought cold victual nice; -My choice would be vanilla-ice.I care not much for gold or land; -Give me a mortgage here and there, -Some good bank-stock, some note of hand,Or trifling railroad share, -I only ask that Fortune sendA little more than I shall spend.Honors are silly toys, I know,And titles are but empty names;I...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
On Hearing The Nightingale
Thanks for thy song, sweet Bird! thanks for thy song!O! 'twas delightful; how have I been lostAs in a blissful dream! how has my soulBeen wafted in a sea of melody!Scarce yet am I awake, yet scarce myself:Still with the enchanting music's dying breathThe air is kept in motion, and conveysSweet whispers to the finely-listening ear;Or is it but an echo from the cellOf memory that deludes my doating sense?Ah! now 'tis gone; Silence resumes her sway,And o'er my hearing spreads her subtile web;But she resumes it, changed, methinks, in nature,More soft, more amiable, as if inform'dWith the departed soul of harmony.Thanks for thy song, sweet Bird! it well deservesAll my heart's gratitude; for it has still'dIts anxious throbbings, and remov...
Thomas Oldham
April
The spring comes slowly up this way.- Christabel.T is the noon of the spring-time, yet never a birdIn the wind-shaken elm or the maple is heard;For green meadow-grasses wide levels of snow,And blowing of drifts where the crocus should blow;Where wind-flower and violet, amber and white,On south-sloping brooksides should smile in the light,Oer the cold winter-beds of their late-waking rootsThe frosty flake eddies, the ice-crystal shoots;And, longing for light, under wind-driven heaps,Round the boles of the pine-wood the ground-laurel creeps,Unkissed of the sunshine, unbaptized of showers,With buds scarcely swelled, which should burst into flowersWe wait for thy coming, sweet wind of the south!For the touch of thy light wings, the...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Up The Nepigon.
How beautiful, how beautiful, Beneath the morning sky,In bridal veil of snowy mist, These dreamy headlands lie!How beautiful, in soft repose, Upon the water's breast,Steeped in the sunlight's golden calm, These fairy islets rest!A Sabbath hush enfolds the hills, And broods upon the deepWhose music every hollow fills, And climbs each rocky steep,Now low and soft like love's own sigh, Now faint and far away,Now plaining to the answering pines, With melancholy lay.Like white-winged birds, through azure depths, Above the restless tide,With snowy plume and golden crest, The fleecy cloudlets glide;Their dancing shadows fleck the deep, Or flit above the greenOf emerald is...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
If Thou Sayest, Behold, We Knew It Not.
- Proverbs xxiv. 11, 12.1.I have done I know not what, - what have I done?My brother's blood, my brother's soul, doth cry:And I find no defence, find no reply,No courage more to run this race I runNot knowing what I have done, have left undone;Ah me, these awful unknown hours that flyFruitless it may be, fleeting fruitless byRank with death-savor underneath the sun.For what avails it that I did not knowThe deed I did? what profits me the pleaThat had I known I had not wronged him so?Lord Jesus Christ, my God, him pity Thou;Lord, if it may be, pity also me:In judgment pity, and in death, and now.2.Thou Who hast borne all burdens, bear our load,Bear Thou our load whatever load it be;Our guilt, our s...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Sonnet.
Whene'er I recollect the happy timeWhen you and I held converse dear together,There come a thousand thoughts of sunny weather,Of early blossoms, and the fresh year's prime;Your memory lives for ever in my mindWith all the fragrant beauties of the spring,With od'rous lime and silver hawthorn twined,And many a noonday woodland wandering.There's not a thought of you, but brings alongSome sunny dream of river, field, and sky;'Tis wafted on the blackbird's sunset song,Or some wild snatch of ancient melody.And as I date it still, our love arose'Twixt the last violet and the earliest rose.
Frances Anne Kemble
Odes Of Anacreon - Ode XLIX.
When Bacchus, Jove's immortal boy,The rosy harbinger of joy,Who, with the sunshine of the bowl,Thaws the winter of our soul--When to my inmost core he glides,And bathes it with his ruby tides,A flow of joy, a lively heat,Fires my brain, and wings my feet,Calling up round me visions knownTo lovers of the bowl alone. Sing, sing of love, let music's soundIn melting cadence float around,While, my young Venus, thou and IResponsive to its murmurs sigh.Then, waking from our blissful trance,Again we'll sport, again we'll dance.
Thomas Moore