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Amour 10
Oft taking pen in hand, with words to cast my woes,Beginning to account the sum of all my cares,I well perceiue my griefe innumerable growes,And still in reckonings rise more millions of dispayres.And thus, deuiding of my fatall howres,The payments of my loue I read, and reading crosse,And in substracting set my sweets vnto my sowres;Th' average of my ioyes directs me to my losse.And thus mine eyes, a debtor to thine eye,Who by extortion gaineth all theyr lookes,My hart hath payd such grieuous vsury,That all her wealth lyes in thy Beauties bookes; And all is thine which hath been due to mee, And I a Banckrupt, quite vndone by thee.
Michael Drayton
Dreams
Dream on, for dreams are sweet:Do not awaken!Dream on, and at thy feetPomegranates shall be shaken.Who likeneth the youthOf life to morning?'Tis like the night in truth,Rose-coloured dreams adorning.The wind is soft above,The shadows umber.(There is a dream called Love.)Take thou the fullest slumber!In Lethe's soothing stream,Thy thirst thou slakest.Sleep, sleep; 't is sweet to dream.Oh, weep when thou awakest!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Brandon
(ACROSTIC)Born on the breast of the prairie, she smiles to her sire - the sun,Robed in the wealth of her wheat-lands, gift of her mothering soil,Affluence knocks at her gateways, opulence waits to be won.Nuggets of gold are her acres, yielding and yellow with spoil,Dream of the hungry millions, dawn of the food-filled age,Over the starving tale of want her fingers have turned the page;Nations will nurse at her storehouse, and God gives her grain for wage.
Emily Pauline Johnson
A Double Standard.
Do you blame me that I loved him? If when standing all aloneI cried for bread a careless world Pressed to my lips a stone.Do you blame me that I loved him, That my heart beat glad and free,When he told me in the sweetest tones He loved but only me?Can you blame me that I did not see Beneath his burning kissThe serpent's wiles, nor even hear The deadly adder hiss?Can you blame me that my heart grew cold The tempted, tempter turned;When he was feted and caressed And I was coldly spurned?Would you blame him, when you draw from me Your dainty robes aside,If he with gilded baits should claim Your fairest as his bride?Would you blame the world if it should press...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Mary Morison.
Tune - "Bide ye yet."I. O Mary, at thy window be, It is the wish'd, the trysted hour! Those smiles and glances let me see That make the miser's treasure poor: How blithely wad I bide the stoure, A weary slave frae sun to sun; Could I the rich reward secure, The lovely Mary Morison!II. Yestreen, when to the trembling string The dance gaed thro' the lighted ha', To thee my fancy took its wing, I sat, but neither heard or saw: Tho' this was fair, and that was braw, And yon the toast of a' the town, I sigh'd, and said amang them a', "Ye are na Mary Morison."III. O Mary, canst thou wreck hi...
Robert Burns
A Lament.
1.O world! O life! O time!On whose last steps I climb,Trembling at that where I had stood before;When will return the glory of your prime?No more - Oh, never more!2.Out of the day and nightA joy has taken flight;Fresh spring, and summer, and winter hoar,Move my faint heart with grief, but with delightNo more - Oh, never more!
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Idleness.
The rain is playing its soft pleasant tuneFitfully on the skylight, and the shadeOf the fast flying clouds across my bookPasses with delicate change. My merry fireSings cheerfully to itself; my musing catPurrs as she wakes from her unquiet sleep,And looks into my face as if she feltLike me the gentle influence of the rain.Here have I sat since morn, reading sometimes,And sometimes listening to the faster fallOf the large drops, or rising with the stirOf an unbidden thought, have walked awhileWith the slow steps of indolence, my room,And then sat down composedly againTo my quaint book of olden poetry.It is a kind of idleness, I know;And I am said to be an idle man -And it is very true. I love to goOut in the pleasant sun, and let my ...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Luvly Miss (Prose)
Nobody thought of consequences. There was a lighted paraffin lamp on the table and nothing else handy. Mrs Brown's head presented a tempting mark, and of course Mr Brown's lengthy stay at 'The Three Fingers' had something to do with it; but nobody thought of Miss Brown, aged four, who was playing happily on the floor, unruffled by the storm to which she was so well accustomed.Mrs Brown ducked; there was a smash, a scream, and poor little Miss Brown was in a blaze. The shock sobered the father and silenced the mother. Miss Brown was extinguished with the aid of a table- cover, much water, and many neighbours; but she was horribly burnt all over, except her face.* * * * *I made Miss Brown's acquaintance a few days later. She was lying on a bed made up on two chairs, and was covered with cotton wool. She h...
Michael Fairless
To-Morrows
God knows all things -- but weIn darkness walk our ways;We wonder what will be,We ask the nights and days.Their lips are sealed; at timesThe bards, like prophets, see,And rays rush o'er their rhymesFrom suns of "days to be".They see To-morrow's heart,They read To-morrow's face,They grasp -- is it by art --The far To-morrow's trace?They see what is unseen,And hear what is unheard,And To-morrow's shade or sheenRests on the poet's word.As seers see a starBeyond the brow of night,So poets scan the farProphetic when they write.They read a human face,As readers read their page,The while their thought will traceA life from youth to age.They have a mournful gift,T...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Transition
A little while to walk with thee, dear child;To lean on thee my weak and weary head;Then evening comes: the winter sky is wild,The leafless trees are black, the leaves long dead.A little while to hold thee and to stand,By harvest-fields of bending golden corn;Then the predestined silence, and thine hand,Lost in the night, long and weary and forlorn.A little while to love thee, scarcely timeTo love thee well enough; then time to part,To fare through wintry fields alone and climbThe frozen hills, not knowing where thou art.Short summer-time and then, my heart's desire,The winter and the darkness: one by oneThe roses fall, the pale roses expireBeneath the slow decadence of the sun.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Preface To Diarmid's Story
Best beloved of ancient storiesAre our Diarmid's woes to me.Like a mist, by breezes broken,So this tale of olden gloriesFloats in fragments, as a tokenOf the song of Ireland's sea.Through long centuries repeatedLived the legend told in Erse,But a change comes swift or slowlyFades the language, and defeatedFlies the faith, once counted holy,Old-world ways, and oral verse.Not from men of note or learningMay we gather now these tales,Heard beneath the cotter's rafter,Or where smithy sparks are burning,Or at sea, when hushed the laughterOf the breeze on hull and sails.Then with Ossian's rhythmic MeasureComes upon the fancy's sight,One with golden locks; resplendent,Great and strong with eyes of azure,...
John Campbell
Did You Never Know
Did you never know, long ago, how much you loved me,That your love would never lessen and never go?You were young then, proud and fresh-hearted,You were too young to know.Fate is a wind, and red leaves fly before itFar apart, far away in the gusty time of year,Seldom we meet now, but when I hear you speaking,I know your secret, my dear, my dear.
Sara Teasdale
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet LXXVIII
O how the pleasant ayres of true loue beInfected by those vapours which ariseFrom out that noysome gulfe, which gaping liesBetweene the iawes of hellish Ielousie!A monster, others harme, selfe-miserie,Beauties plague, Vertues scourge, succour of lies;Who his owne ioy to his owne hurt applies,And onely cherish doth with iniurie:Who since he hath, by Natures speciall grace,So piercing pawes as spoyle when they embrace;So nimble feet as stirre still, though on thornes;So many eyes, ay seeking their owne woe;So ample eares as neuer good newes know:Is it not euill that such a deuil wants hornes?
Philip Sidney
The Hermit
WHEN Venus and Hypocrisy combine,Oft pranks are played that show a deep design;Men are but men, and friars full as weak:I'm not by Envy moved these truths to speak.Have you a sister, daughter, pretty wife?Beware the monks as you would guard your life;If in their snares a simple belle be caught:The trap succeeds: to ruin she is brought.To show that monks are knaves in Virtue's mask;Pray read my tale: - no other proof I ask.A HERMIT, full of youth, was thought around,A saint, and worthy of the legend found.The holy man a knotted cincture wore;But, 'neath his garb: - heart-rotten to the core.A chaplet from his twisted girdle hung,Of size extreme, and regularly strung,On t'other side was worn a little bell;The hypocrite in ALL, he acted...
Jean de La Fontaine
An Episode
Along the narrow Moorish street A blue-eyed soldier strode. (Ah, well-a-day)Veiled from her lashes to her feet She stepped from her abode, (Ah, lack-a-day).Now love may guard a favoured wife Who leaves the harem door; (Ah, well-a-day)But hungry hearted is her life When she is one of four. (Ah, lack-a-day.)If black eyes glow with sudden fire And meet warm eyes of blue - (Ah, well-a-day).The old, old story of desire Repeats itself anew. (Ah, lack-a-day.)When bugles blow the soldier flies - Though bitter tears may fall (Ah, lack-a-day).A MOORISH CHILD WITH BLUE, BLUE EYES PLAYS IN THE HAREM HALL. (Ah, well-a-day.)
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Lament XVIII
We are thy thankless children, gracious Lord.The good thou dost affordLightly do we employ,All careless of the one who giveth joy.We heed not him from whom delights do flow.Until they fade and goWe take no thought to renderThat gratitude we owe the bounteous sender.Yet keep us in thy care. Let not our prideCause thee, dear God, to hideThe glory of thy beauty:Chasten us till we shall recall our duty.Yet punish us as with a father's hand.We mites, cannot withstandThine anger; we are snow,Thy wrath, the sun that melts us in its glow.Make us not perish thus, eternal God,From thy too heavy rod.Recall that thy disdainAlone doth give thy children bitter pain.Yet I do know thy mercy doth abound
Jan Kochanowski
Meditation At Perugia
The sunset colours mingle in the sky,And over all the Umbrian valleys flow;Trevi is touched with wonder, and the glowFinds high Perugia crimson with renown;Spello is bright;And, ah! St. Francis, thy deep-treasured town,Enshrined Assisi, fully fronts the light.This valley knew thee many a year ago;Thy shrine was built by simpleness of heart;And from the wound called life thou drew'st the smart:Unquiet kings came to thee and the sad poor -Thou gavest them peace;Far as the Sultan and the Iberian shoreThy faith and abnegation gave release.Deeper our faith, but not so sweet as thine;Wider our view, but not so sanely sure;For we are troubled by the witching lureOf Science, with her lightning on the mist;Science that clears,
Duncan Campbell Scott
Lying In Me
Lying in me, as though it were a whiteStone in the depths of a well, is oneMemory that I cannot, will not, fight:It is happiness, and it is pain.Anyone looking straight into my eyesCould not help seeing it, and could not failTo become thoughtful, more sad and quietThan if he were listening to some tragic tale.I know the gods changed people into things,Leaving their consciousness alive and free.To keep alive the wonder of suffering,You have been metamorphosed into me.
Anna Akhmatova