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Maiden Wishes.
WHAT pleasure to meA bridegroom would be!When married we are,They call us mamma.No need then to sew,To school we ne'er go;Command uncontroll'd,Have maids, whom to scold;Choose clothes at our ease,Of what tradesmen we please;Walk freely about,And go to each rout,And unrestrained areBy papa or mamma.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
When The Sad Word. By Paul, The Silentiary.
When the sad word, "Adieu," from my lip is nigh falling, And with it, Hope passes away,Ere the tongue hath half breathed it, my fond heart recalling That fatal farewell, bids me stay,For oh! 'tis a penance so weary One hour from thy presence to be,That death to this soul were less dreary, Less dark than long absence from thee.Thy beauty, like Day, o'er the dull world breaking. Brings life to the heart it shines o'er,And, in mine, a new feeling of happiness waking, Made light what was darkness before.But mute is the Day's sunny glory,While thine hath a voice, on whose breath, More sweet than the Syren's sweet story,My hopes hang, through life and through death!
Thomas Moore
I Know An Old Man Constrained To Dwell
I know an aged Man constrained to dwellIn a large house of public charity,Where he abides, as in a Prisoner's cell,With numbers near, alas! no company.When he could creep about, at will, though poorAnd forced to live on alms, this old Man fedA Redbreast, one that to his cottage doorCame not, but in a lane partook his bread.There, at the root of one particular tree,An easy seat this worn-out Labourer foundWhile Robin pecked the crumbs upon his kneeLaid one by one, or scattered on the ground.Dear intercourse was theirs, day after day;What signs of mutual gladness when they met!Think of their common peace, their simple play,The parting moment and its fond regret.Months passed in love that failed not to fulfil,In spite...
William Wordsworth
Birthday Ode
ILove and praise, and a length of days whose shadow cast upon time is light,Days whose sound was a spell shed round from wheeling wings as of doves in flight,Meet in one, that the mounting sun to-day may triumph, and cast out night.Two years more than the full fourscore lay hallowing hands on a sacred head,Scarce one score of the perfect four uncrowned of fame as they smiled and fled:Still and soft and alive aloft their sunlight stays though the suns be dead.Ere we were or were thought on, ere the love that gave us to life began,Fame grew strong with his crescent song, to greet the goal of the race they ran,Song with fame, and the lustrous name with years whose changes acclaimed the man.IISoon, ere time in the rounding rhyme of choral seasons had hailed us men,W...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Lovers' Wine
This morning how grand is the space!Without bridle or spurs, in our hasteLet us set out by horseback on wine,For the heavens-enchanted, divine!Like two angels gone insaneWith delirium of the brain,In the crystal blue of the skyTo the distant mirage we will fly!Gently swinging within the wingOf the whirlwind who gives us a ride,My sister who swims by my side,In a parallel ecstasy,Without truce or repose we are boundFor the heaven my dreaming has found!
Charles Baudelaire
Sonnet CLXXVI.
Voglia mi sprona; Amor mi guida e scorge.HE DESCRIBES HIS STATE, SPECIFYING THE DATE OF HIS ATTACHMENT. Passion impels me, Love escorts and leads,Pleasure attracts me, habits old enchain,Hope with its flatteries comforts me again,And, at my harass'd heart, with fond touch pleads.Poor wretch! it trusts her still, and little heedsThe blind and faithless leader of our train;Reason is dead, the senses only reign:One fond desire another still succeeds.Virtue and honour, beauty, courtesy,With winning words and many a graceful way,My heart entangled in that laurel sweet.In thirteen hundred seven and twenty, I--'Twas April, the first hour, on its sixth day--Enter'd Love's labyrinth, whence is no retreat.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
The Desk's Dry Wood
(TO JAMES WELCH)Dear Desk, Farewell! I spoke you oftIn phrases neither sweet nor soft,But at the end I come to seeThat thou a friend hast been to me,No flatterer but very friend.For who shall teach so well againThe blessed lesson-book of pain,The truth that souls that would aspireMust bravely face the scourge and fire,If they would conquer in the end?Two days!Shall I not hug thee very close?Two days,And then we part upon our ways.Ah me!Who shall possess thee after me?O pray he be no enemy to poesy,To gentle maid or gentle dream.How have we dreamed together, I and thou,Sweet dreams that like some incense wrapt us roundThe last new book, the last new love,The last new trysting-ground.How many ...
Richard Le Gallienne
Margaret.
Her eyes - upon a summer's day God's skies are not more blue than they. Her hair - you've seen a sunbeam bold Made up of just such threads of gold. Her cheek - the leaf which nearest grows The dewy heart of June's red rose. Her mouth - full lipped, and subtly sweet As briar drowned in summer heat. Her heart - December's chill and snow - Heaven pity me, who love her so!
Jean Blewett
Palestine
Blest land of Judea! thrice hallowed of song,Where the holiest of memories pilgrim-like throng;In the shade of thy palms, by the shores of thy sea,On the hills of thy beauty, my heart is with thee.With the eye of a spirit I look on that shore,Where pilgrim and prophet have lingered before;With the glide of a spirit, I traverse the sodMade bright by the steps of the angels of God.Blue sea of the hills! in my spirit I hearThy waters, Genasseret, chime on my ear;Where the Lowly and Just with the people sat down,And thy spray on the dust of His sandals was thrown.Beyond are Bethulia's mountains of green,And the desolate hills of the wild Godarene;And I pause on the goat-crags of Tabor to seeThe gleam of thy waters, oh dark Gallilee!
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Landscape
You and your landscape! There it liesStripped, resuming its disguise,Clothed in dreams, made bare again,Symbol infinite of pain,Rapture, magic, mysteryOf vanished days and days to be.There's its sea of tidal grassOver which the south winds pass,And the sun-set's Tuscan goldWhich the distant windows holdFor an instant like a sphereBursting ere it disappear.There's the dark green woods which throveIn the spell of Leese's Grove.And the winding of the road;And the hill o'er which the skyStretched its pallied vacancyEre the dawn or evening glowed.And the wonder of the townSomewhere from the hill-top downNestling under hills and woodsAnd the meadow's solitudes. * * * * *
Edgar Lee Masters
To The Heroic Soul
INurture thyself, O Soul, from the clear springThat wells beneath the secret inner shrine;Commune with its deep murmur, - 'tis divine;Be faithful to the ebb and flow that bringThe outer tide of Spirit to trouble and swingThe inlet of thy being. Learn to knowThese powers, and life with all its venom and showShall have no force to dazzle thee or sting:And when Grief comes thou shalt have suffered moreThan all the deepest woes of all the world;Joy, dancing in, shall find thee nourished with mirth;Wisdom shall find her Master at thy door;And Love shall find thee crowned with love empearled;And death shall touch thee not but a new birth.IIBe strong, O warring soul! For very soothKings are but wraiths, republics fa...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Humiliation
I have been so innerly proud, and so long alone,Do not leave me, or I shall break.Do not leave me.What should I do if you were gone againSo soon?What should I look for?Where should I go?What should I be, I myself,"I"?What would it mean, thisI?Do not leave me.What should I think of death?If I died, it would not be you:It would be simply the sameLack of you.The same want, life or death,Unfulfilment,The same insanity of spaceYou not there for me.Think, I daren't dieFor fear of the lack in death.And I daren't live.Unless there were a morphine or a drug.I would bear the pain.But always, strong, unremittingIt would make me not me.The thing with my bo...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Oh, Teach Me To Love Thee. (Air.--Haydn.)
Oh, teach me to love Thee, to feel what thou art,Till, filled with the one sacred image, my heart Shall all other passions disown;Like some pure temple that shines apart, Reserved for Thy worship alone.In joy and in sorrow, thro' praise and thro' blame,Thus still let me, living and dying the same, In Thy service bloom and decay--Like some lone altar whose votive flame In holiness wasteth away.Tho' born in this desert, and doomed by my birthTo pain and affliction, to darkness and dearth, On Thee let my spirit rely--Like some rude dial, that, fixt on earth, Still looks for its light from the sky.
A Prayer For The Past.
All sights and sounds of every year,All groups and forms, each leaf and gem,Are thine, O God, nor need I fearTo speak to Thee of them. Too great thy heart is to despise;Thy day girds centuries about;From things which we count small, thine eyesSee great things looking out. Therefore this prayerful song I singMay come to Thee in ordered words;Therefore its sweet sounds need not clingIn terror to their chords. * * * * * I know that nothing made is lost;That not a moon hath ever shone,That not a cloud my eyes hath crost,But to my soul hath gone. That all the dead years garnered lieIn this gem-casket, my dim soul;And that thy hand m...
George MacDonald
Anticipation
I hold her letter as I stand, Nor break the seal; no need to guessWhat dainty little female hand Penned this most delicate address.The scented seal, I break it not, But stand in stormy revery;I tremble as I wonder what She who penned this will say to me.I wonder what my wife will say If so it be she eer shall knowI only mailed her note today It should have gone two weeks ago!
Ellis Parker Butler
Song To Celia (2)
Come, my Celia, let us proveWhile we may the sports of love;Time will not be ours forever,He at length our good will sever.Spend not then his gifts in vain;Suns that set may rise again,But if once we lose this light,'Tis with us perpetual night.Why should we defer our joys?Fame and rumour are but toys.Cannot we delude the eyesOf a few poor household spies?Or his easier ears beguile,So removed by our wile?'Tis no sin love's fruits to steal;But the sweet theft to reveal,To be taken, to be seen,These have crimes accounted been.
Ben Jonson
Be Happy.
Some fowk ivverlastinly grummel,At th' world an at th' fowk ther is in it;If across owt 'at's pleasant they stummel,They try to pick faults in a minnit.We all have a strinklin o' care,An they're lucky 'at ne'er meet a trubble,But aw think its unkind, an unfair,To mak ivvery misfortun seem double.Some grummel if th' sun doesn't shine, -If it does they find cause for complainin;Discontented when th' weather wor fine,They start findin fault if its rainin.Aw hate sich dissatisfied men,An fowk 'at's detarmined to do soa,Aw'd mak 'em goa live bi thersen,Aght o'th' world, - like a Robinson Crusoe.To mak th' pleasures surraandin us less,Ivvery reight-minded man must think sinful;When ther's soa mich to cheer us an bl...
John Hartley
St. Agnes' Eve
Deep on the convent-roof the snowsAre sparkling to the moon:My breath to heaven like vapour goes;May my soul follow soon!The shadows of the convent-towersSlant down the snowy sward,Still creeping with the creeping hoursThat lead me to my Lord:Make Thou my spirit pure and clearAs are the frosty skies,Or this first snowdrop of the yearThat in my bosom lies.As these white robes are soil'd and dark,To yonder shining ground;As this pale taper's earthly spark,To yonder argent round;So shows my soul before the Lamb,My spirit before Thee;So in mine earthly house I am,To that I hope to be.Break up the heavens, O Lord! and far,Thro' all yon starlight keen,Draw me, thy bride, a glittering star,In raiment whi...
Alfred Lord Tennyson