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Spring Song
A blue-bell springs upon the ledge,A lark sits singing in the hedge;Sweet perfumes scent the balmy air,And life is brimming everywhere.What lark and breeze and bluebird sing,Is Spring, Spring, Spring!No more the air is sharp and cold;The planter wends across the wold,And, glad, beneath the shining skyWe wander forth, my love and I.And ever in our hearts doth ringThis song of Spring, Spring!For life is life and love is love,'Twixt maid and man or dove and dove.Life may be short, life may be long,But love will come, and to its songShall this refrain for ever clingOf Spring, Spring, Spring!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Unsainting Of Kavin.
Saint Kavin was a gentleman,He came from Tipperary;And woman was the only thingThat ever made him scary.For Kavin was a tender youth,And he was very simple;He feared the wiles of maiden smiles,And fainted at a dimple.But when Kathleen at seventeenCame down the street one morning,The luck of man came over himAnd took him without warning.Afraid to meet a foolish fateBy green sea or by dry land,He fled away without delayAnd sought a desert island.But even there he felt despair;For happiness is onlyThe hope of doing something else;And he was very lonely.He vowed to lead a life of prayerBecause that he had lost her;And every time he thought of herHe said a Pater noster.
Bliss Carman
The Universe
I heard a little child beneath the starsTalk as he ran alongTo some sweet riddle in his mind that seemedA-tiptoe into song.In his dark eyes lay a wild universe, -Wild forests, peaks, and crests;Angels and fairies, giants, wolves and heWere that world's only guests.Elsewhere was home and mother, his warm bed: -Now, only God aloneCould, armed with all His power and wisdom, makeEarths richer than his own.O Man! - thy dreams, thy passions, hopes, desires! -He in his pity keepA homely bed where love may lull a child'sFond Universe asleep!
Walter De La Mare
Fragment: Music And Sweet Poetry.
How sweet it is to sit and read the talesOf mighty poets and to hear the whileSweet music, which when the attention failsFills the dim pause -
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Vpon The Death Of His Incomparable Friend Sir Henry Raynsford Of Clifford
Could there be words found to expresse my losse,There were some hope, that this my heauy crosseMight be sustained, and that wretched IMight once finde comfort: but to haue him diePast all degrees that was so deare to me;As but comparing him with others, heeWas such a thing, as if some Power should sayI'le take Man on me, to shew men the wayWhat a friend should be. But words come so shortOf him, that when I thus would him report,I am vndone, and hauing nought to say,Mad at my selfe, I throwe my penne away,And beate my breast, that there should be a woeSo high, that words cannot attaine thereto.T'is strange that I from my abundant breast,Who others sorrowes haue so well exprest:Yet I by this in little time am growneSo poore, that I want...
Michael Drayton
Till I Wake
When I am dying, lean over me tenderly, softly, Stoop, as the yellow roses droop in the wind from the South.So I may, when I wake, if there be an Awakening, Keep, what lulled me to sleep, the touch of your lips on my mouth.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
The Fancy Fair.
Come, maids and youths, for here we sell All wondrous things of earth and air;Whatever wild romancers tell, Or poets sing, or lovers swear, You'll find at this our Fancy Fair.Here eyes are made like stars to shine, And kept for years in such repair,That even when turned of thirty-nine, They'll hardly look the worse for wear, If bought at this our Fancy Fair.We've lots of tears for bards to shower, And hearts that such ill usage bear,That, tho' they're broken every hour, They'll still in rhyme fresh breaking bear, If purchased at our Fancy Fair.As fashions change in every thing, We've goods to suit each season's air,Eternal friendships for the spring, And endless loves for summer wea...
Thomas Moore
Fairy Song.
The moonlight fades from flower and tree,And the stars dim one by one;The tale is told, the song is sung,And the Fairy feast is done.The night-wind rocks the sleeping flowers,And sings to them, soft and low.The early birds erelong will wake:'T is time for the Elves to go.O'er the sleeping earth we silently pass,Unseen by mortal eye,And send sweet dreams, as we lightly floatThrough the quiet moonlit sky;--For the stars' soft eyes alone may see,And the flowers alone may know,The feasts we hold, the tales we tell:So 't is time for the Elves to go.From bird, and blossom, and bee,We learn the lessons they teach;And seek, by kindly deeds, to winA loving friend in each.And though unseen on earth we dwell,Sweet...
Louisa May Alcott
PAIN.
You eat the heart of life like some great beast,You blacken the sweet sky, that God made blue!You are the death's-head set amid the feast,The desert breath, that drinks up every dew!And no man lives that doth not fear you, Pain!And no man lives that learns to love your rod;The white lip smiles, but ever and againGod's image cries your horror unto God!And yet, 0, Terrible! men grant you this:You work a mystery; when you are done,Lo! common living changes into bliss,Lo! the mere light is as the noonday sun!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Autumn Leaves.
The Spring's bright tints no more are seen,And Summer's ample robe of greenIs russet-gold and brown;When flowers fall to every breezeAnd, shed reluctant from the trees,The leaves drop down.A sadness steals about the heart,--And is it thus from youth we part,And life's redundant prime?Must friends like flowers fade away,And life like Nature know decay,And bow to time?And yet such sadness meets rebuke,From every copse in every nookWhere Autumn's colours glow;How bright the sky! How full the sheaves!What mellow glories gild the leavesBefore they go.Then let us sing the jocund praise,In this bright air, of these bright days,When years our friendships crown;The love that's loveliest when 'tis old--
Juliana Horatia Ewing
From Omar Khayyam
Each spot where tulips prank their stateHas drunk the life-blood of the great;The violets yon field which stainAre moles of beauties Time hath slain.Unbar the door, since thou the Opener art,Show me the forward way, since thou art guide,I put no faith in pilot or in chart,Since they are transient, and thou dost abide.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Plead For Me.
Oh, thy bright eyes must answer now,When Reason, with a scornful brow,Is mocking at my overthrow!Oh, thy sweet tongue must plead for meAnd tell why I have chosen thee!Stern Reason is to judgment come,Arrayed in all her forms of gloom:Wilt thou, my advocate, be dumb?No, radiant angel, speak and say,Why I did cast the world away.Why I have persevered to shunThe common paths that others run;And on a strange road journeyed on,Heedless, alike of wealth and power,Of glory's wreath and pleasure's flower.These, once, indeed, seemed Beings Divine;And they, perchance, heard vows of mine,And saw my offerings on their shrine;But careless gifts are seldom prized,And MINE were worthily despised.So, with a ready...
Emily Bronte
An Autograph
I write my name as one,On sands by waves oerrunOr winters frosted pane,Traces a record vain.Oblivions blankness claimsWiser and better names,And well my own may passAs from the strand or glass.Wash on, O waves of time!Melt, noons, the frosty rime!Welcome the shadow vast,The silence that shall last.When I and all who knowAnd love me vanish so,What harm to them or meWill the lost memory be?If any words of mine,Through right of life divine,Remain, what matters itWhose hand the message writ?Why should the crowners questSit on my worst or best?Why should the showman claimThe poor ghost of my name?Yet, as when dies a soundIts spectre lingers round,Ha...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Devil In Hell
HE surely must be wrong who loving fears;And does not flee when beauty first appears.Ye FAIR, with charms divine, I know your fame;No more I'll burn my fingers in the flame.From you a soft sensation seems to rise,And, to the heart, advances through the eyes;What there it causes I've no need to tell:Some die of love, or languish in the spell.Far better surely mortals here might do;There's no occasion dangers to pursue.By way of proof a charmer I will bring,Whose beauty to a hermit gave the sting:Thence, save the sin, which fully I except;A very pleasant intercourse was kept;Except the sin, again I must repeat,My sentiments on this will never meetThe taste of him at Rome, who wine had swilled,Till, to the throat, he thoroughly was filled,
Jean de La Fontaine
The Suicide
"Curse thee, Life, I will live with thee no more! Thou hast mocked me, starved me, beat my body sore! And all for a pledge that was not pledged by me, I have kissed thy crust and eaten sparingly That I might eat again, and met thy sneers With deprecations, and thy blows with tears,-- Aye, from thy glutted lash, glad, crawled away, As if spent passion were a holiday! And now I go. Nor threat, nor easy vow Of tardy kindness can avail thee now With me, whence fear and faith alike are flown; Lonely I came, and I depart alone, And know not where nor unto whom I go; But that thou canst not follow me I know." Thus I to Life, and ceased; but through my brain My thought ran still, until I spake again:<...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Deep In The Night
Deep in the night the cry of a swallow,Under the stars he flew,Keen as pain was his call to followOver the world to you.Love in my heart is a cry foreverLost as the swallow's flight,Seeking for you and never, neverStilled by the stars at night.
Sara Teasdale
Davids Lament for Jonathan
Thou wast hard pressed, yet God concealed this thingFrom me; and thou wast wounded very sore,And beaten down, O son of Israels king,Like wheat on threshing-flour.Thou, that from courtly and from wise for friendDidst choose me, and in spite of ban and sneer,Rebuke and ridicule, until the endDidst ever hold me dear!All night thy body on the mountain lay:At morn the heathen nailed thee to their wall.Surely their deaf gods hear the songs to-dayOer the slain House of Saul!Oh! if that witch were here thy father sought,Methinks I een could call thee from thy place,To shift thy mangled image from my thought,Seeing thy souls calm face.I sorrowed for the words the prophet spoke,That set me rival to thy fathers line;
Mary Hannay Foott
A June Night.
Ten o'clock: the broken moon Hangs not yet a half hour high, Yellow as a shield of brass,In the dewy air of June, Poised between the vaulted sky And the ocean's liquid glass.Earth lies in the shadow still; Low black bushes, trees, and lawn Night's ambrosial dews absorb;Through the foliage creeps a thrill, Whispering of yon spectral dawn And the hidden climbing orb.Higher, higher, gathering light, Veiling with a golden gauze All the trembling atmosphere,See, the rayless disk grows white! Hark, the glittering billows pause! Faint, far sounds possess the ear.Elves on such a night as this Spin their rings upon the grass; On the beach the wate...
Emma Lazarus