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Our Country (1859)
(See Note)A land there is, lying near far-northern snow,Where only the fissures life's springtime may know.But surging, the sea tells of great deeds done,And loved is the land as a mother by son.What time we were little and sat on her knee,She gave us her saga with pictures to see.We read till our eyes opened wide and moist,While nodding and smiling she mute rejoiced.We went to the fjord and in wonder beheldThe ashen-gray bauta, that record of eld;Still older she stood and her silence kept,While stone-studded hows all around us slept.Our hands she then took and away o'er the hillShe led to the church ever lowly and still,Where humbly our forefathers knelt to pray,And mildly she taught us: "Do ye as they!"She ...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
A Panegyric To Sir Lewis Pemberton
Till I shall come again, let this suffice,I send my salt, my sacrificeTo thee, thy lady, younglings, and as farAs to thy Genius and thy Lar;To the worn threshold, porch, hall, parlour, kitchen,The fat-fed smoking temple, which inThe wholesome savour of thy mighty chines,Invites to supper him who dines:Where laden spits, warp'd with large ribs of beef,Not represent, but give reliefTo the lank stranger and the sour swain,Where both may feed and come again;For no black-bearded Vigil from thy doorBeats with a button'd-staff the poor;But from thy warm love-hatching gates, each mayTake friendly morsels, and there stayTo sun his thin-clad members, if he likes;For thou no porter keep'st who strikes.No comer to thy roof his guest-rite wants;...
Robert Herrick
Aeroplanes
A genius who once did aspireTo invent an aerial flyer, When asked, "Does it go?" Replied, "I don't know;I'm awaiting some damphule to try 'er."
Unknown
Lamentin' An Repentin'.
Awst be better when spring comes, aw think,But aw feel varry sickly an waik,Awve noa relish for mait nor for drink,An awm ommost too weary to laik.What's to come on us all aw can't tell,For we havn't a shillin put by;Ther's nowt left to pop nor to sell,An aw cannot get trust if aw try.My wife has to turn aght to wark,An th' little uns all do a share;An they're tewin throo dayleet to dark,To keep me sittin here i' mi chair.It doesn't luk long sin that dayWhen Bessy wor stood bi mi side;An shoo promised to love an obey,An me to protect an provide.Shoo wor th' bonniest lass i' all th' taan,An fowk sed as they saw us that day,When we coom aght o' th' church, arm i' arm,Shoo wor throwin' hersen reight away.<...
John Hartley
A Woman's Shortcomings
She has laughed as softly as if she sighed,She has counted six, and over,Of a purse well filled, and a heart well tried,Oh, each a worthy lover!They "give her time"; for her soul must slipWhere the world has set the grooving;She will lie to none with her fair red lip:But love seeks truer loving.She trembles her fan in a sweetness dumb,As her thoughts were beyond recalling;With a glance for one, and a glance for some,From her eyelids rising and falling;Speaks common words with a blushful air,Hears bold words, unreproving;But her silence says, what she never will swear,And love seeks better loving.Go, lady! lean to the night-guitar,And drop a smile to the bringer;Then smile as sweetly, when he is far,At the voice of ...
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Janus
Image of beauty, when I gaze on thee,Trembling I waken to a mystery,How through one door we go to life or deathBy spirit kindled or the sensual breath.Image of beauty, when my way I go;No single joy or sorrow do I know:Elate for freedom leaps the starry power,The life which passes mourns its wasted hour.And, ah, to think how thin the veil that liesBetween the pain of hell and paradise!Where the cool grass my aching head embowersGod sings the lovely carol of the flowers.
George William Russell
Promenade
Undulant rustlings, Of oncoming silk, Rhythmic, incessant, Like the motion of leaves... Fragments of color In glowing surprises... Pink inuendoes Hooded in gray Like buds in a cobweb Pearled at dawn... Glimpses of green And blurs of gold And delicate mauves That snatch at youth... And bodies all rosily Fleshed for the airing, In warm velvety surges Passing imperious, slow...Women drift into the limousinesThat shut like silken casketsOn gems half weary of their glittering...Lamps open like pale moon flowers...Arcs are radiant opalsStrewn along the dusk...No common lig...
Lola Ridge
Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms.
Believe me, if all those endearing young charms, Which I gaze on so fondly today,Were to change by to-morrow, and fleet in my arms, Like fairy-gifts fading away,Thou wouldst still be adored, as this moment thou art. Let thy loveliness fade as it will.And around the dear ruin each wish of my heart Would entwine itself verdantly still.It is not while beauty and youth are thine own, And thy cheeks unprofaned by a tear,That the fervor and faith of a soul can be known, To which time will but make thee more dear;No, the heart that has truly loved never forgets, But as truly loves on to the close,As the sun-flower turns on her god, when he sets, The same look which she turned when he rose.
Thomas Moore
When Baby Strayed
When Baby strayed, it seemed to me,Sun, moon and stars waned suddenly.At once, with frenzied haste, my feetRan up and down the busy street.If ever in my life I prayed,It was the evening Baby strayed.And yet my great concern was this(Not dread of losing Baby's kiss,And Baby's soft small hand in mine,And Baby's comradeship divine),'Twas BABY'S terror, BABY'S fears!Whose hand but mine could dry her tears?I without Baby? In my needI were a piteous soul indeed.But piteous far, beyond all other,A little child without a mother.And God, in mercy, graciouslyGave my lost darling back to me.O high and lofty One!THOU couldst have lived to all eternityApart from ME!In majest...
Fay Inchfawn
To A Friend Who Sent Me A Box Of Violets
Nay, more than violetsThese thoughts of thine, friend!Rather thy reedy brook--Taw's tributary--At midnight murmuring,Descried them, the delicateDark-eyed goddesses,There by his cressy bedDissolved and dreamingDreams that distilled into dewAll the purple of night,All the shine of a planet.Whereat he whispered;And they arising--Of day's forget-me-notsThe duskier sisters--Descended, relinquishedThe orchard, the trout-pool,Torridge and Tamar,The Druid circles,Sheepfolds of Dartmoor,Granite and sandstone;By Roughtor, Dozmare,Down the vale of the FoweyMoving in silence,Brushing the nightshadeBy bridges cyclopean,By Trevenna, Treverbyn,Lawharne and Largin,By Glyn...
Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
The Great Oak Tree
There grew a little flower'Neath a great oak tree:When the tempest 'gan to lowerLittle heeded she:No need had she to cower,For she dreaded not its power -She was happy in the bowerOf her great oak tree!Sing hey,Lackaday!Let the tears fall freeFor the pretty little flower and the great oak tree!When she found that he was fickle,Was that great oak tree,She was in a pretty pickle,As she well might be -But his gallantries were mickle,For Death followed with his sickle,And her tears began to trickleFor her great oak tree!Sing hey,Lackaday!Let the tears fall freeFor the pretty little flower and the great oak tree!Said she, "He loved me never,Did that great oak tree,But I'm neithe...
William Schwenck Gilbert
To The Book Of Follies.
WRITTEN IN A COMMONPLACE BOOK, CALLED "THE BOOK OF FOLLIES;" IN WHICH EVERY ONE THAT OPENED IT WAS TO CONTRIBUTE SOMETHING.This tribute's from a wretched elf,Who hails thee, emblem of himself.The book of life, which I have traced,Has been, like thee, a motley wasteOf follies scribbled o'er and o'er,One folly bringing hundreds more.Some have indeed been writ so neat,In characters so fair, so sweet,That those who judge not too severely,Have said they loved such follies dearly!Yet still, O book! the allusion stands;For these were penned by female hands:The rest--alas! I own the truth--Have all been scribbled so uncouthThat Prudence, with a withering look,Disdainful, flings away the book.Like thine, its pages here and there...
At Dover, 1786
Thou, whose stern spirit loves the storm,That, borne on Terror's desolating wings,Shakes the high forest, or remorseless flingsThe shivered surge; when rising griefs deformThy peaceful breast, hie to yon steep, and think,When thou dost mark the melancholy tideBeneath thee, and the storm careering wide,Tossed on the surge of life how many sink!And if thy cheek with one kind tear be wet,And if thy heart be smitten, when the cryOf danger and of death is heard more nigh,Oh, learn thy private sorrows to forget;Intent, when hardest beats the storm, to saveOne who, like thee, has suffered from the wave.
William Lisle Bowles
How We Kept The Day.
I.The great procession came up the street,With clatter of hoofs and tramp of feet;There was General Jones to guide the van,And Corporal Jinks, his right-hand man;And each was riding his high horse,And each had epaulettes, of course;And each had a sash of the bloodiest red,And each had a shako on his head;And each had a sword by his left side,And each had his mustache newly dyed;And that was the wayWe kept the day,The great, the grand, the glorious day,That gave us -Hurray! Hurray! Hurray!(With a battle or two, the histories say,)Our National Independence!II.The great procession came up the street,With loud da capo, and brazen repeat;There was Hans, the leader, a Teuton born,A sharp who worried th...
William McKendree Carleton
The Happy Encounter
I saw sweet Poetry turn troubled eyesOn shaggy Science nosing in the grass,For by that way poor Poetry must passOn her long pilgrimage to Paradise.He snuffled, grunted, squealed; perplexed by flies,Parched, weatherworn, and near of sight, alas,From peering close where very little wasIn dens secluded from the open skies.But Poetry in bravery went down,And called his name, soft, clear, and fearlessly;Stooped low, and stroked his muzzle overgrown;Refreshed his drought with dew; wiped pure and freeHis eyes: and lo! laughed loud for joy to seeIn those grey deeps the azure of her own.
Walter De La Mare
To Doctor Alabaster.
Nor art thou less esteem'd that I have plac'd,Amongst mine honour'd, thee almost the last:In great processions many lead the wayTo him who is the triumph of the day,As these have done to thee who art the one,One only glory of a million:In whom the spirit of the gods does dwell,Firing thy soul, by which thou dost foretellWhen this or that vast dynasty must fallDown to a fillet more imperial;When this or that horn shall be broke, and whenOthers shall spring up in their place again;When times and seasons and all years must lieDrowned in the sea of wild eternity;When the black doomsday books, as yet unseal'd,Shall by the mighty angel be reveal'd;And when the trumpet which thou late hast foundShall call to judgment. Tell us when the sound
New Year's Eve: A Waking Dream
I have not any fearful tale to tellOf fabled giant or of dragon-claw,Or bloody deed to pilfer and to sellTo those who feed, with such, a gaping maw;But what in yonder hamlet there befell,Or rather what in it my fancy saw,I will declare, albeit it may seemToo simple and too common for a dream.Two brothers were they, and they sat aloneWithout a word, beside the winter's glow;For it was many years since they had knownThe love that bindeth brothers, till the snowOf age had frozen it, and it had grownAn icy-withered stream that would not flow;And so they sat with warmth about their feetAnd ice about their hearts that would not beat.And yet it was a night for quiet hope:--A night the very last of all the yearTo many a youthful...
George MacDonald
King Goodheart.
There lived a King, as I've been told,In the wonder-working days of old,When hearts were twice as good as gold,And twenty times as mellow.Good temper triumphed in his face,And in his heart he found a placeFor all the erring human raceAnd every wretched fellow.When he had Rhenish wine to drinkIt made him very sad to thinkThat some, at junket or at jink,Must be content with toddy.He wished all men as rich as he(And he was rich as rich could be),So to the top of every treePromoted everybody.Ambassadors cropped up like hay,Prime Ministers and such as theyGrew like asparagus in May,And Dukes were three a penny.Lord Chancellors were cheap as sprats.And Bishops in their shovel hatsWere plentiful as tabby cats<...