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The Tomb.
Once musing o'er an old effaced stone,Longing to know whose dust it did conceal,I anxious ponder'd o'er what might reveal,And sought the seeming date with weeds o'ergrown;But that prov'd fruitless--both the date and nameHad been for ages in oblivion thrown.The dim remains of sculptur'd ornamentGave proof sufficient 'twas reward for fame:This did my searching view so much torment,That Time I question'd to expose the same;But soon a check--"And what is it to theeWhose dust lies here?--since thou wilt quickly beForgot like him:--then Time shall bid thee goTo heaven's pure bliss, or hell's tormenting woe."
John Clare
What Of The Night?
The doom is imminent of unholy hate.Hail to the light that glimmers where the leavesAre shaken by winds of dawning, and the sheavesOf hemlock swirl and scatter in the spate!Love, that has learned in faith to sorrow and wait,Sings loud his glorious charm and subtly weavesThe spell subduing madness that receivesThe madman at his own mad estimate.Ah, but the ponderous horror! Nay, not yetThe cloud of sorrow leeward growls and rolls;The eyes that meet the morn are heavy and wet.The loss the military mind enscrolls,Spilt blood and battered bones, we may forget,But not the wastage of beloved souls
John Le Gay Brereton
The Dream.
Methought last night I saw thee lowly laid, Thy pallid cheek yet paler, on the bier;And scattered round thee many a lovely braid Of flowers, the brightest of the closing year;Whilst on thy lips the placid smile that played, Proved thy soul's exit to a happier sphere,In silent eloquence reproaching thoseWho watched in agony thy last repose.A pensive, wandering, melancholy light The moon's pale radiance on thy features cast,Which, through the awful stillness of the night, Gleamed like some lovely vision of the past,Recalling hopes once beautiful and bright, Now, like that struggling beam, receding fast,Which o'er the scene a softening glory shed,And kissed the brow of the unconscious dead.Yes--it was thou!--and we we...
Susanna Moodie
Last Words To Miriam
Yours is the shame and sorrowBut the disgrace is mine;Your love was dark and thorough,Mine was the love of the sun for a flowerHe creates with his shine.I was diligent to explore you,Blossom you stalk by stalk,Till my fire of creation bore youShrivelling down in the final dourAnguish - then I suffered a balk.I knew your pain, and it brokeMy fine, craftsman's nerve;Your body quailed at my stroke,And my courage failed to give you the lastFine torture you did deserve.You are shapely, you are adorned,But opaque and dull in the flesh,Who, had I but pierced with the thornedFire-threshing anguish, were fused and castIn a lovely illumined mesh.Like a painted window: the bestSuffering burnt through y...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Cromwell
SYNOPSISIntroduction - The mountains and the sea the cradles of Freedom contrasted with the birth-place of Cromwell His childhood and youth The germs of his future character probably formed during his life of inaction Cromwell at the moment of his intended embarkation Retrospect of his past life and profligate youth Temptations held out by the prospect of a life of rest in America How far such rest was allowable Vision of his future life Different persons represented in it Charles the First Cromwell himself His victories and maritime glory Pym Strafford Laud Hampden Falkland Milton Charles the First Cromwell on his death-bed His character Dispersion of the vision Conclusion.Schrecklich ist es, deiner WahrheitSterbliches Gefäss zu seyn.- V Schiller,High fate is theirs, ye sleeple...
Matthew Arnold
The Song Of Los
AfricaI will sing you a song of Los. the Eternal Prophet:He sung it to four harps at the tables of Eternity.In heart-formed Africa.Urizen faded! Ariston shudderd!And thus the Song beganAdam stood in the garden of Eden:And Noah on the mountains of Ararat;They saw Urizen give his Laws to the NationsBy the hands of the children of Los.Adam shudderd! Noah faded! black grew the sunny AfricanWhen Rintrah gave Abstract Philosophy to Brama in the East:(Night spoke to the Cloud!Lo these Human form'd spirits in smiling hipocrisy. WarAgainst one another; so let them War on; slaves to the eternal Elements)Noah shrunk, beneath the waters;Abram fled in fires from Chaldea;Moses beheld upon Mount Sinai forms of dark delusion:
William Blake
For Ever
Out of the body for ever,Wearily sobbing, Oh, whither?A Soul that hath wasted its chancesFloats on the limitless ether.Lost in dim, horrible blankness;Drifting like wind on a sea,Untraversed and vacant and moaning,Nor shallow nor shore on the lee!Helpless, unfriended, forsaken;Haunted and tracked by the Past,With fragments of pitiless voices,And desolate faces aghast!One saith It is well that he goethNaked and fainting with cold,Who worshipped his sweet-smelling garments,Arrayed with the cunning of old!Hark! how he crieth, my brothers,With pain for the glittering thingsHe saw on the shoulders of Rulers,And the might in the mouths of the Kings!This Soul hath been one of the idlersW...
Henry Kendall
The Intruder
There is a smell of roses in the roomTea-roses, dead of bloom;An invalid, she sits there in the gloom,And contemplates her doom.The pattern of the paper, and the grainOf carpet, with its stain,Have stamped themselves, like fever, on her brain,And grown a part of pain.It has been long, so long, since that one died,Or sat there by her side;She felt so lonely, lost, she would have cried,But all her tears were dried.A knock came on the door: she hardly heard;And then a whispered word,And someone entered; at which, like a bird,Her caged heart cried and stirred.And then she heard a voice; she was not wrong:His voice, alive and strong:She listened, while the silence filled with songOh, she had waited long!
Madison Julius Cawein
A Wish.
When my time comes to quit this pleasing scene,And drop from out the busy life of men;When I shall cease to be where I have beenSo willingly, and ne'er may be again;When my abandoned tabernacle's dustWith dust is laid, and I am counted dead;Ere I am quite forgotten, as I mustBe in a little while, let this be said:He loved this good God's world, the night and day,Men, women, children (these he loved the best);Pictures and books he loved, and work and play,Music and silence, soberness and jest;His mind was open, and his heart was gay;Green be his grave, and peaceful be his rest!
W. M. MacKeracher
A Sickness Of This World It Most Occasions
A sickness of this world it most occasionsWhen best men die;A wishfulness their far conditionTo occupy.A chief indifference, as foreignA world must beThemselves forsake contented,For Deity.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Tamate
Great-Heart is dead, they say,--Great-Heart the Teacher,Great-Heart the Joyous,Great-Heart the Fearless,Great-Heart the Martyr,Great-Heart of Sweet White Fire.Great-Heart is dead, they say,--Fighting the fight,Holding the Light,Into the night.Great-Heart is dead, they say.--But the Light shall burn the brighter.And the night shall be the lighter,For his going;And a rich, rich harvest for his sowing.Great-Heart is dead, they say!--What is death to such an one as Great-Heart?One sigh, perchance, for work unfinished here;--Then a swift passing to a mightier sphere,New joys, perfected powers, the vision clear,And all the amplitude of heaven to workThe work he held so dear.<...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Prologue to Arden of Feversham
Love dark as death and fierce as fire on wingSustains in sin the soul that feels it clingLike flame whose tongues are serpents: hope and fearDie when a love more dire than hate draws near,And stings to death the heart it cleaves in twain,And leaves in ashes all but fear and pain.Our lustrous England rose to life and lightFrom Rome's and hell's immitigable night,And music laughed and quickened from her breath,When first her sons acclaimed Elizabeth.Her soul became a lyre that all men heardWho felt their souls give back her lyric word.Yet now not all at once her perfect powerSpake: man's deep heart abode awhile its hour,Abode its hour of utterance; not to wakeTill Marlowe's thought in thunderous music spake.But yet not yet was passion's tragic br...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
I See Around Me Tombstones Grey
I see around me tombstones greyStretching their shadows far away.Beneath the turf my footsteps treadLie low and lone the silent dead,Beneath the turf, beneath the mould,Forever dark, forever cold,And my eyes cannot hold the tearsThat memory hoards from vanished yearsFor Time and Death and Mortal painGive wounds that will not heal again,Let me remember half the woeI've seen and heard and felt below,And Heaven itself, so pure and blest,Could never give my spirit rest,Sweet land of light! thy children fairKnow nought akin to our despair,Nor have they felt, nor can they tellWhat tenants haunt each mortal cell,What gloomy guests we hold within,Torments and madness, tears and sin!Well, may they live in ectasyTheir long e...
Emily Bronte
Lament XIX. The Dream
Long through the night hours sorrow was my guestAnd would not let my fainting body rest,Till just ere dawn from out its slow dominionsFlew sleep to wrap me in its dear dusk pinions.And then it was my mother did appearBefore mine eyes in vision doubly dear;For in her arms she held my darling one,My Ursula, just as she used to runTo me at dawn to say her morning prayer,In her white nightgown, with her curling hairFraming her rosy face, her eyes aboutTo laugh, like flowers only halfway out. "Art thou still sorrowing, my son?" Thus spokeMy mother. Sighing bitterly, I woke,Or seemed to wake, and heard her say once more: "It is thy weeping brings me to this shore:Thy lamentations, long uncomforted,Have reached the hidden chambers ...
Jan Kochanowski
Invasion
Decline already -But that was quick...Hardly a trace of rising -I have grown above the whole world.I have become the complete GodAnd horribly awake.And now I must cast away death.My death is muteAnd without images...Without redemption -
Alfred Lichtenstein
In Death Divided
I I shall rot here, with those whom in their day You never knew, And alien ones who, ere they chilled to clay, Met not my view,Will in your distant grave-place ever neighbour you.II No shade of pinnacle or tree or tower, While earth endures, Will fall on my mound and within the hour Steal on to yours;One robin never haunt our two green covertures.III Some organ may resound on Sunday noons By where you lie, Some other thrill the panes with other tunes Where moulder I;No selfsame chords compose our common lullaby.IV The simply-cut memorial at my head Perhaps may take A Gothic form, and that above your bed Be Greek in make;...
Thomas Hardy
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto XXV
It was an hour, when he who climbs, had needTo walk uncrippled: for the sun had nowTo Taurus the meridian circle left,And to the Scorpion left the night. As oneThat makes no pause, but presses on his road,Whate'er betide him, if some urgent needImpel: so enter'd we upon our way,One before other; for, but singly, noneThat steep and narrow scale admits to climb.E'en as the young stork lifteth up his wingThrough wish to fly, yet ventures not to quitThe nest, and drops it; so in me desireOf questioning my guide arose, and fell,Arriving even to the act, that marksA man prepar'd for speech. Him all our hasteRestrain'd not, but thus spake the sire belov'd:Fear not to speed the shaft, that on thy lipStands trembling for its flight. Encourag...
Dante Alighieri
An Autumn Vision
IIs it Midsummer here in the heavens that illumine October on earth?Can the year, when his heart is fulfilled with desire of the days of his mirth,Redeem them, recall, or remember?For a memory recalling the rapture of earth, and redeeming the sky,Shines down from the heights to the depths: will the watchword of dawn be JulyWhen to-morrow acclaims November?The stern salutation of sorrow to death or repentance to shameWas all that the season was wont to accord her of grace or acclaim;No lightnings of love and of laughter.But here, in the laugh of the loud west wind from around and above,In the flash of the waters beneath him, what sound or what light but of loveRings round him or leaps forth after?IIWind beloved of earth and sky and sea beyond all wind...