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Dusk
Sweet evening comes, friend of the criminal,Like an accomplice with a light footfall;The sky shuts on itself as though a tomb,And man turns beast within his restless room.o evening, night, so wished for by the oneWhose honest, weary arms can say: We've doneOur work today! The night will bring reliefTo spirits who consume themselves with grief,The scholar who is bowed with heavy head,The broken worker falling into bed.Meanwhile, corrupting demons of the airSlowly wake up like men of great affairs,And, flying, bump our shutters and our eaves.Against the glimmerings teased by the breezeOld Prostitution blazes in the streets;She opens out her nest-of-ants retreat;Everywhere she clears the secret routes,A stealthy force preparing for a c...
Charles Baudelaire
Fragment.
Posthumous Fragments Of Margaret Mcholson.Being Poems found amongst the Papers of that noted Female who attempted the life of the King in 1786. Edited by John Fitzvictor.[The "Posthumous Fragments", published at Oxford by Shelley, appeared in November, 1810.]Fragment.Yes! all is past - swift time has fled away,Yet its swell pauses on my sickening mind;How long will horror nerve this frame of clay?I'm dead, and lingers yet my soul behind.Oh! powerful Fate, revoke thy deadly spell,And yet that may not ever, ever be,Heaven will not smile upon the work of Hell;Ah! no, for Heaven cannot smile on me;Fate, envious Fate, has sealed my wayward destiny.I sought the cold brink of the midnight surge,I sighed beneath its wave t...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Night
The night is old, and all the worldIs wearied out with strife;A long gray mist lies heavy and wanAbove the house of life.Four stars burn up and are unquelledBy the low, shrunken moon;Her spirit draws her down and down -She shall be buried soon.There is a sound that is no sound,Yet fine it falls and clear,The whisper of the spinning earthTo the tranced atmosphere.An odour lives where once was air,A strange, unearthly scent,From the burning of the four great starsWithin the firmament.The universe, deathless and old,Breathes, yet is void of breath:As still as death that seems to moveAnd yet is still as death.
Duncan Campbell Scott
On Elizabeth L. H.
Epitaphs IWouldst thou hear what Man can sayIn a little? Reader, stay.Underneath this stone doth lieAs much Beauty as could die:Which in life did harbour giveTo more Virtue than doth live.If at all she had a fault,Leave it buried in this vault.One name was Elizabeth,The other, let it sleep with death:Fitter, where it died, to tellThan that it lived at all. Farewell.
Ben Jonson
The Parting Soul And Her Guardian Angel.
(Written during sickness).Soul - Oh! say must I leave this world of light With its sparkling streams and sunshine bright, Its budding flowers, its glorious sky? Vain 'tis to ask me - I cannot die!Angel - But, sister, list! in the realms above, That happy home of eternal love, Are flowers more fair, and skies more clear Than those thou dost cling to so fondly here.Soul - Ah! yes, but to reach that home of light I must pass through the fearful vale of night; And my soul with alarm doth shuddering cry - O angel, I tell thee, I dare not die!Angel - Ah! mortal beloved, in that path untried Will I be, as ever, still at thy side, T...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Hail!--And Farewell!
They died that we might live,--Hail!--And Farewell!--All honour giveTo those who, nobly striving, nobly fell,That we might live!That we might live they died,--Hail!--And Farewell!--Their courage tried,By every mean device of treacherous hate,Like Kings they died.Eternal honour give,--Hail!--And Farewell!----To those who died,In that full splendour of heroic pride,That we might live!
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Dream Anguish
My thought of thee is tortured in my sleep--Sometimes thou art near beside me, but a cloudDoth grudge me thy pale face, and rise to creepSlowly about thee, to lap thee in a shroud;And I, as standing by my dead, to weepDesirous, cannot weep, nor cry aloud.Or we must face the clamouring of a crowdHissing our shame; and I who ought to keepThine honour safe and my betrayed heart proud,Knowing thee true, must watch a chill doubt leapThe tired faith of thee, and thy head bow'd,Nor budge while the gross world holdeth thee cheap!Or there are frost-bound meetings, and reproachAt parting, furtive snatches full of fear;Love grown a pain; we bleed to kiss, and kissBecause we bleed for love; the time doth broachShame, and shame teareth at us till we t...
Maurice Henry Hewlett
The Forsaken.
The dead are in their silent graves,And the dew is cold above,And the living weep and sigh,Over dust that once was love.Once I only wept the dead,But now the living cause my pain:How couldst thou steal me from my tears,To leave me to my tears again?My Mother rests beneath the sod, -Her rest is calm and very deep:I wish'd that she could see our loves, -But now I gladden in her sleep.Last night unbound my raven locks,The morning saw them turned to gray,Once they were black and well beloved,But thou art changed, - and so are they!The useless lock I gave thee once,To gaze upon and think of me,Was ta'en with smiles, - but this was tornIn sorrow that I send to thee!
Thomas Hood
The Meeting Of Spirits.
From out the dark of death, before the gatesFlung wide, that open into paradise--More radiant than the white gates of the morn--A human soul, new-born,Stood with glad wonder in its luminous eyes,For all the glory of that blessed placeFlowed thence, and made a halo round the face--gentle, and strong with the rapt faith that waitsAnd faints not: sweet with hallowing painThe face was, as a sunset after rain,with a grave tender brightness. Now it turnedFrom the white splendours where God's glory burned,And the long ranks of quiring cherubim--Each with wing-shaded eyelids, near the throne,Who sang--and ceased not--the adoring hymnOf Holy, Holy! And the cloud of smokeWent up from the waved censers, with the prayersOf saints, that wafted outward...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Gows Watch : Act II. Scene 2.
ACT II. SCENE 2.The pavilion in the Gardens. Enter FERDINAND and the KINGFERDINAND. Your tiercels too long at hack, Sir. Hes no eyassBut a passage-hawk that footed ere we caught him,Dangerously free o the air. Faith were he mine(As mines the glove he binds to for his tirings)Id fly him with a make-hawk. Hes in yarakPlumed to the very point. So manned so, weathered!Give him the firmament God made him forAnd what shall take the air of him?THE KING. A young wing yetBold, overbold on the perch but, think you, Ferdinand,He can endure the raw skies yonder? CozenAdvantage out of the teeth of the hurricane?Choose his own mate against the lammer-geier?Ride out a night-long tempest, hold his pitchBetween the lightning and t...
Rudyard
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXI.
L' alma mia fiamma oltra le belle bella.HE ACKNOWLEDGES THE WISDOM OF HER PAST COLDNESS TO HIM. My noble flame--more fair than fairest areWhom kind Heaven here has e'er in favour shown--Before her time, alas for me! has flownTo her celestial home and parent star.I seem but now to wake; wherein a barShe placed on passion 'twas for good alone,As, with a gentle coldness all her own,She waged with my hot wishes virtuous war.My thanks on her for such wise care I press,That with her lovely face and sweet disdainShe check'd my love and taught me peace to gain.O graceful artifice! deserved success!I with my fond verse, with her bright eyes she,Glory in her, she virtue got in me.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Mors Janua
Pilgrim, no shrine is here, no prison, no inn: Thy fear and thy belief alike are fond: Death is a gate, and holds no room within: Pass--to the road beyond.
Henry John Newbolt
Dirge For The Year.
1.Orphan Hours, the Year is dead,Come and sigh, come and weep!Merry Hours, smile instead,For the Year is but asleep.See, it smiles as it is sleeping,Mocking your untimely weeping.2.As an earthquake rocks a corseIn its coffin in the clay,So White Winter, that rough nurse,Rocks the death-cold Year to-day;Solemn Hours! wail aloudFor your mother in her shroud.3.As the wild air stirs and swaysThe tree-swung cradle of a child,So the breath of these rude daysRocks the Year: - be calm and mild,Trembling Hours, she will ariseWith new love within her eyes.4.January gray is here,Like a sexton by her grave;February bears the bier,March with grief doth howl and rave,And April weep...
We Too Shall Sleep
Not, not for thee,Beloved child, the burning grasp of lifeShall bruise the tender soul. The noise, and strife,And clamour of midday thou shall not see;But wrapt for ever in thy quiet grave,Too little to have known the earthly lot,Time's clashing hosts above thine innocent head,Wave upon wave,Shall break, or pass as with an army's tread,And harm thee not.A few short yearsWe of the living flesh and restless brainShall plumb the deeps of life and know the strain,The fleeting gleams of joy, the fruitless tears;And then at last when all is touched and tried,Our own immutable night shall fall, and deepIn the same silent plot, O little friend,Side by thy side,In peace that changeth not, nor knoweth end,We too shall sleep.
Archibald Lampman
Stay, Mother, Stay!
"Stay, mother, stay, for the storm is abroad,And the tempest is very wild;It's a fearful night with no ray of light,Oh stay with your little child!" "Hush darling!" the mother, with white lips said -"Lie still till I come again,God's angels blest will watch o'er thy restWhile I am abroad in the rain! Thy father, child? - oh, I quake with fearWhen I think where he may be,And I dare not stay till the dawn of day -I must hasten forth to see!" Then the young child buried her tangled curlsIn the ragged counterpane,While the half-clad mother went forth aloneIn the blinding wind and rain. Down many a narrow, slippery lane,Down many a long, dark street,Went that shivering form thro' the pelting stormO...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
For My Friend Mrs. R.
When writing to you, friend, a subject I'd findIn which there's both pleasure and profit combined,And though what I've chosen may pain in review,Yet still there's strange mingling of pleasure there too.Then let us go back many years that are past,And glance at those days much too happy to last.I have seen thee, my friend, when around thy bright hearthNot a seat was found vacant, but gladness and mirthKept high holiday there, and many a timeWere mingled in pastime my children with thine.I've looked in again, the destroyer had come,And changed the whole aspect of that happy home.He entered that dwelling, and rudely he toreFrom the arms of his mother, her most cherished flower.Thy heart seemed then broken, oh! how couldst thou bearTo live in this...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
Venite Descendamus
Let be at last; give over words and sighing,Vainly were all things said:Better at last to find a place for lying,Only dead.Silence were best, with songs and sighing over;Now be the music mute;Now let the dead, red leaves of autumn coverA vain lute.Silence is best: for ever and for ever,We will go down and sleep,Somewhere beyond her ken, where she need neverCome to weep.Let be at last: colder she grows and colder;Sleep and the night were best;Lying at last where we cannot behold her,We may rest.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Cleopatra
"Her beauty might outface the jealous hours,Turn shame to love and pain to a tender sleep,And the strong nerve of hate to sloth and tears;Make spring rebellious in the sides of frost,Thrust out lank winter with hot August growths,Compel sweet blood into the husks of death,And from strange beasts enforce harsh courtesy."T. Hayman, Fall of Antony, 1655.IHer mouth is fragrant as a vine,A vine with birds in all its boughs;Serpent and scarab for a signBetween the beauty of her browsAnd the amorous deep lids divine.IIHer great curled hair makes luminousHer cheeks, her lifted throat and chinShall she not have the hearts of usTo shatter, and the loves thereinTo shred between her fingers thus?...
Algernon Charles Swinburne