Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 442 of 739
Previous
Next
Hans Carvel
Hans Carvel, impotent and old,Married a lass of London mould.Handsome? Enough; extremely gay;Loved music, company, and play:High flights she had, and wit at will,And so her tongue lay seldom still;For in all visits who but sheTo argue or to repartee?She made it plain that human passionWas order'd by predestination;That if weak women went astray,Their stars were more in fault than they.Whole tragedies she had by heart;Enter'd into Roxana's part;To triumph in her rival's bloodThe action certainly was good.How like a vine young Ammon curl'd!Oh that dear conqueror of the world!She pity'd Betterton in ageThat ridiculed the godlike rage.She, first of all the town, was toldWhere newest India things were sold;<...
Matthew Prior
Comfort Of The Fields
What would'st thou have for easement after grief,When the rude world hath used thee with despite,And care sits at thine elbow day and night,Filching thy pleasures like a subtle thief?To me, when life besets me in such wise,'Tis sweetest to break forth, to drop the chain,And grasp the freedom of this pleasant earth,To roam in idleness and sober mirth,Through summer airs and summer lands, and drainThe comfort of wide fields unto tired eyes.By hills and waters, farms and solitudes,To wander by the day with wilful feet;Through fielded valleys wide with yellowing wheat;Along gray roads that run between deep woods,Murmurous and cool; through hallowed slopes of pine,Where the long daylight dreams, unpierced, unstirred,And only the rich-throated ...
Archibald Lampman
For A Grotto
To me, whom in their lays the shepherds callActaea, daughter of the neighbouring stream,This cave belongs. The fig-tree and the vine,Which o'er the rocky entrance downward shoot,Were plac'd by Glycon. He with cowslips pale,Primrose, and purple lychnis, deck'd the greenBefore my threshold, and my shelving wallsWith honeysuckle cover'd. Here at noon,Lull'd by the murmur of my rising fount,I slumber: here my clustering fruits I tend;Or from the humid flowers, at break of day,Fresh garlands weave, and chace from all my boundsEach thing impure or noxious. Enter-in,O stranger, undismay'd. nor bat, nor toadHere lurks: and if thy breast of blameless thoughtsApprove thee, not unwelcome shalt thou treadMy quiet mansion: chiefly, if thy nameWise Pal...
Mark Akenside
Great Serenity: Questions And Answers
People in a hall thats lit so brightlyIt hurtsSpoke of religionIn the lives of contemporary peopleAnd on the place of GodPeople spoke in excited voicesLike in an airportI left themI opened an iron door that had written on itEmergency and I entered within.Great serenity: Questions and answers
Yehuda Amichai
Guy
Mortal mixed of middle clay,Attempered to the night and day,Interchangeable with things,Needs no amulets nor rings.Guy possessed the talismanThat all things from him began;And as, of old, PolycratesChained the sunshine and the breeze,So did Guy betimes discoverFortune was his guard and lover;In strange junctures, felt, with awe,His own symmetry with law;That no mixture could withstandThe virtue of his lucky hand.He gold or jewel could not lose,Nor not receive his ample dues.Fearless Guy had never foes,He did their weapons decompose.Aimed at him, the blushing bladeHealed as fast the wounds it made.If on the foeman fell his gaze,Him it would straightway blind or craze,In the street, if he turned round,His...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Song II
Like some rare queen of old romanceWho loved the gleam of helm and lanceIs she.A harper of King Arthur's daysShould praise her in a hundred lays:The queen of Love and Chivalry,O Dieu te garde, mon coeur, ma vie.And crown-wise plaited is her hair,No crown of woven gold more fairCould be.And very queen-like, too, the smileThat lightens every little whileA face too fair for men to see,O Dieu te garde, mon coeur, ma vie.She is not over kind, I know;The queens were gracious long ago,Ah me!Queen Guenevere would give a kissOfttimes to Launcelot, I wis,I would that I were loved as he!O Dieu te garde, mon coeur, ma vie,
Sara Teasdale
Love Is Blind
And can you tell me Love is blindBecause your faults he will not find,Because the image that he seesIs one of splendid mysteries?And if he lack the power to lookOn what he will, as on a book,And read therein the heart of it,Why are his ways with wonder lit?Why think you he should bind his eyesAnd hide the many-tinted skies,But that he sees too well to trustThe shadows on an orb of dust?For he hath vision keener farThan poring Thoughts and Fancys areAn inward vision, full and clearWhen night has flung her mantle sheerAcross the world we stumble throughIn search of Truths evasive clue.He looks, and straight there fall awayThe fluttring rags of your array,The far-fet gem, th indecent drape,The pads that mar the p...
John Le Gay Brereton
A Man Dreams That He Is The Creator
I sat in heaven like the sunAbove a storm when winter was:I took the snowflakes one by oneAnd turned their fragile shapes to glass:I washed the rivers blue with rainAnd made the meadows green again.I took the birds and touched their springs,Until they sang unearthly joys:They flew about on golden wingsAnd glittered like an angel's toys:I filled the fields with flowers' eyes,As white as stars in Paradise.And then I looked on man and knewHim still intent on death - still proud;Whereat into a rage I flewAnd turned my body to a cloud:In the dark shower of my soulThe star of earth was swallowed whole.
Fredegond Shove
Fighting
Here is a temple strangely wrought: Within it I can seeTwo spirits of a diverse thought Contend for mastery.One is an angel fair and bright, Adown the aisle comes he,Adown the aisle in raiment white, A creature fair to see.The other wears an evil mien, And he hath doubtless slipt,A fearful being dark and lean, Up from the mouldy crypt.Is that the roof that grows so black? Did some one call my name?Was it the bursting thunder crack That filled this place with flame?I move--I wake from out my sleep: Some one hath victor been!I see two radiant pinions sweep, And I am borne between.Beneath the clouds that under roll An upturned face I see--
George MacDonald
The Gods Of Greece.
Ye in the age gone by,Who ruled the world a world how lovely then!And guided still the steps of happy menIn the light leading-strings of careless joy!Ah, flourished then your service of delight!How different, oh, how different, in the dayWhen thy sweet fanes with many a wreath were bright,O Venus Amathusia!Then, through a veil of dreamsWoven by song, truth's youthful beauty glowed,And life's redundant and rejoicing streamsGave to the soulless, soul where'r they flowedMan gifted nature with divinityTo lift and link her to the breast of love;All things betrayed to the initiate eyeThe track of gods above!Where lifeless fixed afar,A flaming ball to our dull sense is given,Phoebus Apollo, in his golden car,In silent glo...
Friedrich Schiller
Norse Nature (In Ringerike During The Student Meeting Of 1869)
(See Note 39)We wander and sing with gleeOf glorious Norway, fair to see.Let sweetly the tones go twiningIn colors so softly shiningOn mountain, forest, fjord, and shore,'Neath heaven's azure arching o'er.The warmth of the nation's heart,The depth, the strength, its songs impart,Here opens its eyes to greet you,Rejoicing just now to meet you,And giving, grateful for the chance,In love a self-revealing glance.Here wakened our history first,Here Halfdan dreamed of greatness erst,In vision of hope beholdingThe kingdom's future unfolding,And Nore stood and summons gave,While forth to conquest called the wave.Here singing we must unrollOf our dear land the pictured scroll!Let calm turn to ...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Henry Fielding.
(To James Russell Lowell.)Not from the ranks of those we callPhilosopher or Admiral,--Neither as LOCKE was, nor as BLAKE,Is that Great Genius for whose sakeWe keep this Autumn festival.And yet in one sense, too, was heA soldier--of humanity;And, surely, philosophic mindBelonged to him whose brain designedThat teeming COMIC EPOS where,As in CERVANTES and MOLIÈRE,Jostles the medley of Mankind.Our ENGLISH NOVEL'S pioneer!His was the eye that first saw clearHow, not in natures half-effacedBy cant of Fashion and of Taste,--Not in the circles of the Great,Faint-blooded and exanimate,--Lay the true field of Jest and Whim,Which we to-day reap after him.No:--he stepped lower down and tookThe pi...
Henry Austin Dobson
Doubt
My soul lives in my body's house,And you have both the house and her,But sometimes she is less your ownThan a wild, gay adventurer;A restless and an eager wraith,How can I tell what she will do,Oh, I am sure of my body's faith,But what if my soul broke faith with you?
Uschk Name. - One Pair More.
Love is indeed a glorious prize!What fairer guerdon meets our eyes?Though neither wealth nor power are thine,A very hero thou dost shine.As of the prophet, they will tell,Wamik and Asia's tale as well.They'll tell not of them, they'll but giveTheir names, which now are all that live.The deeds they did, the toils they provedNo mortal knows! But that they lovedThis know we. Here's the story trueOf Wamik and of Asia too.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
John S. Sargent
Here's Sargent doing the Duchess XIn pink velours and pea-green checks."It helps," says he, "to lift your GraceA bit above the commonplace."
Oliver Herford
Literature.
Here is a banquet-table of delights,A sumptuous feast of true ambrosial food;Here is a journey among goodly sights,In choice society or solitude;Here is a treasury of gems and gold -Of purest gold and gems of brightest sheen;Here is a landscape gloriously unroll'd,Of heights sublime and pleasant vales between.Here is the realm of Thought, diverse and wide,To Genius and her sovereign sons assign'd;The universal church, o'er which presideThe heaven-anointed hierarchy of mindAnd spirit; the imperishable prideAnd testament and promise of mankind.
W. M. MacKeracher
The Ultimate Joy
I have felt the thrill of passion in the poet's mystic bookAnd I've lingered in delight to catch the rhythm of the brook;I've felt the ecstasy that comes when prima donnas reachFor upper C and hold it in a long, melodious screech.And yet the charm of all these blissful memories fades awayAs I think upon the fortune that befell the other day,As I bring to recollection, with a joyous, wistful sigh,That I woke and felt the need of extra covers in July.Oh, eerie hour of drowsiness - 'twas like a fairy spell,That respite from the terrors we have known, alas, so well,The malevolent mosquito, with a limp and idle bill,Hung supinely from the ceiling, all exhausted by his chill.And the early morning sunbeam lost his customary leerAnd brought a gracious greeting and...
Unknown
Ode To The Moon.
I.Mother of light! how fairly dost thou goOver those hoary crests, divinely led! -Art thou that huntress of the silver bow,Fabled of old? Or rather dost thou treadThose cloudy summits thence to gaze below,Like the wild Chamois from her Alpine snow,Where hunter never climb'd, - secure from dread?How many antique fancies have I readOf that mild presence! and how many wrought!Wondrous and bright,Upon the silver light,Chasing fair figures with the artist, Thought!II.What art thou like? - Sometimes I see thee rideA far-bound galley on its perilous way,Whilst breezy waves toss up their silvery spray; -Sometimes behold thee glide,Cluster'd by all thy family of stars,Like a lone widow, through the welkin wide,<...
Thomas Hood