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In Exile.
"Since that day till now our life is one unbroken paradise. We live a true brotherly life. Every evening after supper we take a seat under the mighty oak and sing our songs." - Extract from a letter of a Russian refugee in Texas.Twilight is here, soft breezes bow the grass,Day's sounds of various toil break slowly off,The yoke-freed oxen low, the patient assDips his dry nostril in the cool, deep trough.Up from the prairie the tanned herdsmen passWith frothy pails, guiding with voices roughTheir udder-lightened kine. Fresh smells of earth,The rich, black furrows of the glebe send forth.After the Southern day of heavy toil,How good to lie, with limbs relaxed, brows bareTo evening's fan, and watch the smoke-wreaths coilUp from one's pipe-stem thro...
Emma Lazarus
Another Imitation Of Anacreon
PRONE, on my couch I calmly sleptAgainst my wont. A little childAwoke me as he gently creptAnd beat my door. A tempest wildWas raging-dark and cold the night."Have pity on my naked plight,"He begged, "and ope thy door." - "Thy name?"I asked admitting him. - "The same"Anon I'll tell, but first must dry"My weary limbs, then let me try"My mois'ened bow." - Despite my fearThe hearth I lit, then drew me nearMy guest, and chafed his fingers cold."Why fear?" I thought. "Let me be bold"No Polyphemus he; what harm"In such a child? - Then I'll be calm!"The playful boy drew out a dart,Shook his fair locks, and to my heartHis shaft he launch'd. - "Love is my name,"He thankless cried, "I hither came"To tame thee. In t...
Jean de La Fontaine
Griefs.
I measure every grief I meetWith analytic eyes;I wonder if it weighs like mine,Or has an easier size.I wonder if they bore it long,Or did it just begin?I could not tell the date of mine,It feels so old a pain.I wonder if it hurts to live,And if they have to try,And whether, could they choose between,They would not rather die.I wonder if when years have piled --Some thousands -- on the causeOf early hurt, if such a lapseCould give them any pause;Or would they go on aching stillThrough centuries above,Enlightened to a larger painBy contrast with the love.The grieved are many, I am told;The reason deeper lies, --Death is but one and comes but once,And only nails the eyes.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Interlude: Songs Out Of Sorrow
I. Spirit's HouseFrom naked stones of agonyI will build a house for me;As a mason all aloneI will raise it, stone by stone,And every stone where I have bledWill show a sign of dusky red.I have not gone the way in vain,For I have good of all my pain;My spirit's quiet house will beBuilt of naked stones I trodOn roads where I lost sight of God.II. MasteryI would not have a god come inTo shield me suddenly from sin,And set my house of life to rights;Nor angels with bright burning wingsOrdering my earthly thoughts and things;Rather my own frail guttering lightsWind blown and nearly beaten out;Rather the terror of the nightsAnd long, sick groping after doubt;Rather be lost than let my soulSl...
Sara Teasdale
More Ways Than One.
[From Arthur Selwyn's Note-book.][More Ways Than One.] I was present, one day Where both layman and priest Worshipped God in a way That was startling, at least: Over thirty in place On the stage, in a row, As is often the case At a minstrelsy show; In a uniform clad Was each one of them seen, And a banjo they had, And a loud tambourine. And they sung and they shouted Their spasmodic joys, Just as if they ne'er doubted That God loved a noise. And their phrases, though all Not deficient in points, A grammarian would call ...
William McKendree Carleton
Sonnet XI
* A paraphrase of Petrarca, 'Quando fra l'altre donne . . .'When among creatures fair of countenanceLove comes enformed in such proud character,So far as other beauty yields to her,So far the breast with fiercer longing pants;I bless the spot, and hour, and circumstance,That wed desire to a thing so high,And say, Glad soul, rejoice, for thou and IOf bliss unpaired are made participants;Hence have come ardent thoughts and waking dreamsThat, feeding Fancy from so sweet a cup,Leave it no lust for gross imaginings.Through her the woman's perfect beauty gleamsThat while it gazes lifts the spirit upTo that high source from which all beauty springs.
Alan Seeger
He And She.
HE.I know a youth who loves a little maid(Hey, but his face is a sight for to see!)Silent is he, for he's modest and afraid(Hey, but he's timid as a youth can be!)SHE.I know a maid who loves a gallant youth,(Hey, but she sickens as the days go by!)She cannot tell him all the sad, sad truth(Hey, but I think that little maid will die!)BOTH.Now tell me pray, and tell me true,What in the world should the poor soul do?HE.He cannot eat and he cannot sleep(Hey, but his face is a sight for to see!)Daily he goes for to wail for to weep(Hey, but he's wretched as a youth can be!)SHE.She's very thin and she's very pale(Hey, but she sickens as the days go by!)Daily she goes for to weep for to wail(...
William Schwenck Gilbert
A Life's Parallels.
Never on this side of the grave again,On this side of the river,On this side of the garner of the grain,Never, -Ever while time flows on and on and on,That narrow noiseless river,Ever while corn bows heavy-headed, wan,Ever, -Never despairing, often fainting, ruing,But looking back, ah never!Faint yet pursuing, faint yet still pursuingEver.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The World's Age
Who will say the world is dying? Who will say our prime is past?Sparks from Heaven, within us lying, Flash, and will flash till the last.Fools! who fancy Christ mistaken; Man a tool to buy and sell;Earth a failure, God-forsaken, Anteroom of Hell.Still the race of Hero-spirits Pass the lamp from hand to hand;Age from age the Words inherits - 'Wife, and Child, and Fatherland.'Still the youthful hunter gathers Fiery joy from wold and wood;He will dare as dared his fathers Give him cause as good.While a slave bewails his fetters; While an orphan pleads in vain;While an infant lisps his letters, Heir of all the age's gain;While a lip grows ripe for kissing; While a moan from ...
Charles Kingsley
Art.
A Phantasy.I know not how I found youWith your wild hair a-blow,Nor why the world around youWould never let me know:Perhaps 't was Heaven relented,Perhaps 't was Hell resentedMy dream, and grimly ventedIts hate upon me so.In Shadowland I met youWhere all dim shadows meet;Within my heart I set you,A phantom bitter-sweet:No hope for me to win you,Though I with soul and sinewStrive on and on, when in youThere is no heart or heat!Yet ever, aye, and ever,Although I knew you lied,I followed on, but neverWould your white form abide:With loving arms stretched meward,As Sirens beckon seawardTo some fair vessel leeward,Before me you would glide.But like an evil fairy,
Madison Julius Cawein
To Her Grace The Duchess Of Ormond,[1]
WITH THE FOLLOWING POEM OF PALAMON AND ARCITE. MADAM, The bard who first adorn'd our native tongue, Tuned to his British lyre this ancient song: Which Homer might without a blush rehearse, And leaves a doubtful palm in Virgil's verse: He match'd their beauties, where they most excel; Of love sung better, and of arms as well. Vouchsafe, illustrious Ormond! to behold What power the charms of beauty had of old; Nor wonder if such deeds of arms were done, Inspired by two fair eyes that sparkled like your own. If Chaucer by the best idea wrought, And poets can divine each other's thought, The fairest nymph before his eyes he set; And then the fairest was Plantagenet; ...
John Dryden
Song
A bee that was searching for sweets one dayThrough the gate of a rose garden happened to stray.In the heart of a rose he hid away,And forgot in his bliss the light of day,As sipping his honey he buzzed in song;Though day was waning, he lingered long,For the rose was sweet, so sweet.A robin sits pluming his ruddy breast,And a madrigal sings to his love in her nest:"Oh, the skies they are blue, the fields are green,And the birds in your nest will soon be seen!"She hangs on his words with a thrill of love,And chirps to him as he sits aboveFor the song is sweet, so sweet.A maiden was out on a summer's dayWith the winds and the waves and the flowers at play;And she met with a youth of gentle air,With the light of the sunshine on hi...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Promise
In countless upward-striving wavesThe moon-drawn tide-wave strives;In thousand far-transplanted graftsThe parent fruit survives;So, in the new-born millions,The perfect Adam lives.Not less are summer mornings dearTo every child they wake,And each with novel life his sphereFills for his proper sake.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
In Memoriam. - Mrs. Mary Mildenstein Robertson,
Wife of Rev. WILLIAM H. C. ROBERTSON, died at Magnolia, East Florida, January 13th, aged 34.Our buds have faded,--winter's frigid breath Sigh'd o'er their bosoms, and they fell away,So in these household bowers the ice of death Bids rose and lily ere their prime decay,And see a Passion-Flower from tropic skiesBeneath our drifted snows, not without requiem lies.A brilliant daughter of the Cuban vales Of generous mind, impulsive, strong and highTwined the home-tendril where our northern gales Sweep grove and forest with their minstrelsy,Labor'd for classic lore with studious part,And planted friendship's germ in many an answering heart.Her filial piety intensely warm Whose gushing tenderness no limit knew,Clasp'd ...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
Life-Weary
O Thou that walkest with nigh hopeless feetPast the one harbour, built for thee and thine.Doth no stray odour from its table greet,No truant beam from fire or candle shine?At his wide door the host doth stand and call;At every lattice gracious forms invite;Thou seest but a dull-gray, solid wallIn forest sullen with the things of night!Thou cravest rest, and Rest for thee doth crave,The white sheet folded down, white robe apart.--Shame, Faithless! No, I do not mean the grave!I mean Love's very house and hearth and heart.
George MacDonald
O Dear Me!
Here are crocuses, white, gold, grey! 'O dear me!' says Marjorie May;Flat as a platter the blackberry blows: 'O dear me!' says Madeleine Rose;The leaves are fallen, the swallows flown: 'O dear me!' says Humphrey John;Snow lies thick where all night it fell: 'O dear me!' says Emmanuel.
Walter De La Mare
Sonnet CXXXIX.
O Invidia, nemica di virtute.ENVY MAY DISTURB, BUT CANNOT DESTROY HIS HOPE. O deadly Envy, virtue's constant foe,With good and lovely eager to contest!Stealthily, by what way, in that fair breastHast entrance found? by what arts changed it so?Thence by the roots my weal hast thou uptorn,Too blest in love hast shown me to that fairWho welcomed once my chaste and humble prayer,But seems to treat me now with hate and scorn.But though you may by acts severe and illSigh at my good and smile at my distress,You cannot change for me a single thought.Not though a thousand times each day she killCan I or hope in her or love her less.For though she scare, Love confidence has taught.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Heaven-Born Beauty. Second Reading.
Venne, non so ben donde.It came, I know not whence, from far above, That clear immortal flame that still doth rise Within thy sacred breast, and fills the skies, And heals all hearts, and adds to heaven new love.This burns me, this, and the pure light thereof; Not thy fair face, thy sweet untroubled eyes: For love that is not love for aught that dies, Dwells in the soul where no base passions move.If then such loveliness upon its own Should graft new beauties in a mortal birth, The sheath bespeaks the shining blade within.To gain our love God hath not clearer shown Himself elsewhere: thus heaven doth vie with earth To make thee worthy worship without sin.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni