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Gone Before.
Smooth the hair;Silken waves of sunny brownLay upon the white brow down,Crowned with the blossoms rare;Lilies on a golden stream,Ne'er to float in summer airWreathed with meadow daisies fair.Lay away the broken crownAnd your broken dream,With one shining tress of hair,Nevermore to need your care.
Marietta Holley
The Visions Of Petrarch:
FORMERLY TRANSLATED.[Footnote: The first six of these sonnets are translated (not directly, but through the French of Clement Marot) from Petrarch's third Canzone in Morte di Laura. The seventh is by the translator. The circumstance that the version is made from Marot renders it probable that these sonnets are really by Spenser. C.]I.Being one day at my window all alone,So manie strange things happened me to see,As much it grieveth me to thinke thereon.At my right hand a hynde appear'd to mee.So faire as mote the greatest god delite;Two eager dogs did her pursue in chace,Of which the one was blacke, the other white.With deadly force so in their cruell raceThey pincht the haunches of that gentle beast,That at the last, and in short time, I spide,
Edmund Spenser
The Last Oracle
eipate toi basilei, xamai pese daidalos aula.ouketi PHoibos exei kaluban, ou mantida daphnen,ou pagan laleousan . apesbeto kai lalon udor.Years have risen and fallen in darkness or in twilight,Ages waxed and waned that knew not thee nor thine,While the world sought light by night and sought not thy light,Since the sad last pilgrim left thy dark mid shrine.Dark the shrine and dumb the fount of song thence welling,Save for words more sad than tears of blood, that said:Tell the king, on earth has fallen the glorious dwelling,And the watersprings that spake are quenched and dead.Not a cell is left the God, no roof, no coverIn his hand the prophet laurel flowers no more.And the great king's high sad heart, thy true last lover,Felt thine answer pierce and ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
On - - - - Asleep.
Sleep on, and dream of Heav'n awhile.Tho' shut so close thy laughing eyes,Thy rosy lips still seem to smile,And move, and breathe delicious sighs!--Ah, now soft blushes tinge her cheeks,And mantle o'er her neck of snow.Ah, now she murmurs, now she speaksWhat most I wish--and fear to know.She starts, she trembles, and she weeps!Her fair hands folded on her breast.--And now, how like a saint she sleeps!A seraph in the realms of rest!Sleep on secure! Above controul,Thy thoughts belong to Heav'n and thee!And may the secret of thy soulRepose within its sanctuary!
Samuel Rogers
Cor Cordium
O heart of hearts, the chalice of loves fire,Hid round with flowers and all the bounty of bloom;O wonderful and perfect heart, for whomThe lyrist liberty made life a lyre;O heavenly heart, at whose most dear desireDead love, living and singing, cleft his tomb,And with him risen and regent in deaths roomAll day thy choral pulses rang full choir;O heart whose beating blood was running song,O sole thing sweeter than thine own songs were,Help us for thy free loves sake to be free,True for thy truths sake, for thy strengths sake strong,Till very liberty make clean and fairThe nursing earth as the sepulchral sea.
The Thief Of Beauty.
The mind is Beauty's thief, the poet takes The golden spendthrift's trail among the blooms Where she stands tossing silver in the lakes, And twisting bright swift threads on airy looms. Her ring the poppy snatches, and the rose With laughter plunders all her gusty plumes. He steals behind her, gathering, as she goes Heedless of summer's end certain and soon, - Of winter rattling at the door of June. When Beauty lies hand-folded, pale and still, Forsaken of her lovers and her lords, And winter keeps cold watch upon the hill Then he lets fall his bale of coloured words. At frosty midnight June shall rise in flame, Move at his magic with her bells and birds; The rose will redden as he speaks her nam...
Muriel Stuart
Longing
Come to me in my dreams, and thenBy day I shall be well again!For so the night will more than payThe hopeless longing of the day.Come, as thou cam'st a thousand times,A messenger from radiant climes,And smile on thy new world, and beAs kind to others as to me!Or, as thou never cam'st in sooth,Come now, and let me dream it truth,And part my hair, and kiss my brow,And say, My love why sufferest thou?Come to me in my dreams, and thenBy day I shall be well again!For so the night will more than payThe hopeless longing of the day.
Matthew Arnold
Mistress Quiet-Eyes
While I sit beside the windowI can hear the pigeons coo,That the air is warm and blue,And how well the young bird flew -Then I fold my arms and scold the heartThat thought the pigeons knew.While I sit beside the windowI can watch the flowers growTill the seeds are ripe and blowTo the fruitful earth below -Then I shut my eyes and tell my heartThe flowers cannot know.While I sit beside the windowI am growing old and drear;Does it matter what I hear,What I see, or what I fear?I can fold my hands and hush my heartThat is straining to a tear.The earth is gay with leaf and flower,The fruit is ripe upon the tree,The pigeons coo in the swinging bower,But I sit wearilyWatching a beggar-woman nurse
James Stephens
At Night
Love said, "Wake still and think of me,"Sleep, "Close your eyes till break of day,"But Dreams came by and smilinglyGave both to Love and Sleep their way.
Sara Teasdale
One Day And Another A Lyrical Eclogue Part V Winter
Part VWinterWe, whom God sets a task, Striving, who ne'er attain,We are the curst! - who ask Death, and still ask in vain.We, whom God sets a task.1In the silence of his room. After many days.All, all are shadows. All must passAs writing in the sand or sea;Reflections in a looking-glassAre not less permanent than we.The days that mould us - what are they?That break us on their whirling wheel?What but the potters! we the clayThey fashion and yet leave unreal.Linked through the ages, one and all,In long anthropomorphous chain,The human and the animalInseparably must remain.Within us still the monster shapeThat shrieked in air and howled i...
Madison Julius Cawein
E'en The Fair Orb.
to -----. E'en the fair orb on which I gaze Suggests thy radiance by its rays: That silvery, soft, and dreamy light, So soft, and yet so beauteous bright, Falling in glowing tints so faint, - The hues which artists love to paint; Around whose sphere the fancies claim That angels float, and fan the flame: The lover's choice, it doth belong To lover's lute and poet's song. That light, though native to the skies, Is all reflected in thine eyes.
W. M. MacKeracher
The Rival.
I so loved once, when Death came by I hid Away my face, And all my sweetheart's tresses she undid To make my hiding-place. The dread shade passed me thus unheeding; and I turned me then To calm my love - kiss down her shielding hand And comfort her again. And lo! she answered not: And she did sit All fixedly, With her fair face and the sweet smile of it, In love with Death, not me.
James Whitcomb Riley
The Shepherdess
She walks - the lady of my delight - A shepherdess of sheep.Her flocks are thoughts. She keeps them white; She guards them from the steep.She feeds them on the fragrant height, And folds them in for sleep.She roams maternal hills and bright, Dark valleys safe and deep.Into that tender breast at night The chastest stars may peep.She walks - the lady of my delight - A shepherdess of sheep.She holds her little thoughts in sight, Though gay they run and leap.She is so circumspect and right; She has her soul to keep.She walks - the lady of my delight - A shepherdess of sheep.
Alice Meynell
Vanitas
Beyond the need of weeping,Beyond the reach of hands,May she be quietly sleeping,In what dim nebulous lands?Ah, she who understands!The long, long winter weather,These many years and days,Since she, and Death, together,Left me the wearier ways:And now, these tardy bays!The crown and victor's token:How are they worth to-day?The one word left unspoken,It were late now to say:But cast the palm away!For once, ah once, to meet her,Drop laurel from tired hands:Her cypress were the sweeter,In her oblivious lands:Haply she understands!Yet, crossed that weary river,In some ulterior land,Or anywhere, or ever,Will she stretch out a hand?And will she understand?
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Fortune
Fortune may pass us by:Follow her flying feet.Love, all we ask, deny:Never admit defeat.Take heart again and try.Never say die.
The Visit
Askest, 'How long thou shalt stay?'Devastator of the day!Know, each substance and relation,Thorough nature's operation,Hath its unit, bound and metre;And every new compoundIs some product and repeater,--Product of the earlier found.But the unit of the visit,The encounter of the wise,--Say, what other metre is itThan the meeting of the eyes?Nature poureth into natureThrough the channels of that feature,Riding on the ray of sight,Fleeter far than whirlwinds go,Or for service, or delight,Hearts to hearts their meaning show,Sum their long experience,And import intelligence.Single look has drained the breast;Single moment years confessed.The duration of a glanceIs the term of convenance,And, though thy...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
To My Mother.
WRITTEN IN A POCKET BOOK, 1822.They tell us of an Indian tree, Which, howsoe'er the sun and skyMay tempt its boughs to wander free, And shoot and blossom wide and high,Far better loves to bend its arms Downward again to that dear earth,From which the life that, fills and warms Its grateful being, first had birth.'Tis thus, tho' wooed by flattering friends, And fed with fame (if fame it be)This heart, my own dear mother, bends, With love's true instinct, back to thee!
Thomas Moore
Winter-Store
Subtly conscious, all awake,Let us clear our eyes, and breakThrough the cloudy chrysalis,See the wonder as it is.Down a narrow alley, blind,Touch and vision, heart and mind;Turned sharply inward, still we plod,Till the calmly smiling godLeaves us, and our spirits growMore thin, more acrid, as we go.Creeping by the sullen wall,We forego the power to see,The threads that bind us to the All,God or the Immensity;Whereof on the eternal roadMan is but a passing mode.Too blind we are, too little seeOf the magic pageantry,Every minute, every hour,From the cloudflake to the flower,Forever old, forever strange,Issuing in perpetual changeFrom the rainbow gates of Time.But he who through this common air...
Archibald Lampman