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Before The Birth Of One Of Her Children
All things within this fading world hath end,Adversity doth still our joys attend;No ties so strong, no friends so dear and sweet,But with death's parting blow is sure to meet.The sentence past is most irrevocable,A common thing, yet oh, inevitable.How soon, my Dear, death may my steps attend.How soon't may be thy lot to lose thy friend,We both are ignorant, yet love bids meThese farewell lines to recommend to thee,That when that knot's untied that made us one,I may seem thine, who in effect am none.And if I see not half my days that's due,What nature would, God grant to yours and you;The many faults that well you knowI have Let be interred in my oblivious grave;If any worth or virtue were in me,Let that live freshly in thy memoryAn...
Anne Bradstreet
To...
I send you here a sort of allegoryFor you will understand itof a soul,A sinful soul possessd of many gifts,A spacious garden full of flowering weeds,A glorious devil, large in heart and brain,That did love beauty onlybeauty seenIn all varieties of mould and mindAnd knowledge for its beauty; or if good,Good only for its beauty, seeing notThat Beauty, Good, and Knowledge are three sistersThat doat upon each other, friends to man,Living together under the same roof,And never can be sunderd without tears.And he that shuts Love out, in turn shall beShut out from Love, and on her threshold lieHowling in outer darkness. Not for thisWas common clay taen from the common earthMoulded by God, and temperd with the tearsOf angels to the ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Invitation To A Young But Learned Friend To Abandon Archaeology For The Moment, And Play Once More With His Neglected Muse.
In those good days when we were young and wise,You spake to music, you with the thoughtful eyes,And God looked down from heaven, pleased to hearA young man's song arise so firm and clear.Has Fancy died? The Morning Star gone cold?Why are you silent? Have we grown so old?Must I alone keep playing? Will not you,Lord of the Measures, string your lyre anew?Lover of Greece, is this the richest storeYou bring us,--withered leaves and dusty lore,And broken vases widowed of their wine,To brand you pedant while you stand divine?Decorous words beseem the learned lip,But Poets have the nicer scholarship.In English glades they watch the Cyprian glow,And all the Maenad melodies they know.They hear strange voices in a London street,And track the ...
James Elroy Flecker
The Souls Of The Slain
IThe thick lids of Night closed upon meAlone at the BillOf the Isle by the Race {1} -Many-caverned, bald, wrinkled of face -And with darkness and silence the spirit was on meTo brood and be still.IINo wind fanned the flats of the ocean,Or promontory sides,Or the ooze by the strand,Or the bent-bearded slope of the land,Whose base took its rest amid everlong motionOf criss-crossing tides.IIISoon from out of the Southward seemed nearingA whirr, as of wingsWaved by mighty-vanned flies,Or by night-moths of measureless size,And in softness and smoothness well-nigh beyond hearingOf corporal things.IVAnd they bore to the bluff, and alighted -A dim-discerned trainO...
Thomas Hardy
Fortune.
Fortune's a blind profuser of her own,Too much she gives to some, enough to none.
Robert Herrick
The Land Of The Gone-Away-Souls
Oh! that is a beautiful land I wis,The land of the Gone-Away Souls.Yes, a lovelier region by far than this(Though this is a world most fair),The goodliest goal of all good goals,Else why do our friends stay there?I walk in a world that is sweet with friends,And earth I have ever held dear;Yes, love with duty and beauty blends,To render the earth plane bright.But faster and faster, year on yearMy comrades hurry from sight.They hurry away to the Over-There,And few of them say Farewell.Yes, they go away with a secret airAs if on a secret quest.And they come not back to the earth to tellWhy that land seems the best.Messages come from the mystic sphere,But few know the code of that land;Yes, many the message, but ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Recollection Of The Arabian Nights
When the breeze of a joyful dawn blew freeIn the silken sail of infancy,The tide of time flow'd back with me,The forward-flowing tide of time;And many a sheeny summer-morn,Adown the Tigris I was borne,By Bagdat's shrines of fretted gold,High-walled gardens green and old;True Mussulman was I and sworn,For it was in the golden primeOf good Haroun Alraschid.Anight my shallop, rustling thro'The low and bloomed foliage, droveThe fragrant, glistening deeps, and cloveThe citron-shadows in the blue:By garden porches on the brim,The costly doors flung open wide,Gold glittering thro' lamplight dim,And broider'd sofas on each side:In sooth it was a goodly time,For it was in the golden primeOf good Haroun Alraschid.
The Peter Pan Alphabet
The Lord forgive if we transgressThus to familiarly address One of our betters.But Jamie, do you no recallThe slate whereon you learned to scrawl Your Humble Letters?Well we remember how you drewOur shapely features all askew, Unflattering really.You made A lame and B too fatAnd C too curly--what of that! We loved you dearly.From that first day we owned your spell,And just because you used us well We served you blindly.Why, even when you put us throughA fearsome Scottish Reel, we knew You meant it kindly.Jamie, 'tis said Grand Tales there beStill biding in the A B C-- If this be true,Quick Jamie! Cast your golden net.Maybe we have the grandest yet In store for y...
Oliver Herford
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XXVI
Florence exult! for thou so mightilyHast thriven, that o'er land and sea thy wingsThou beatest, and thy name spreads over hell!Among the plund'rers such the three I foundThy citizens, whence shame to me thy son,And no proud honour to thyself redounds.But if our minds, when dreaming near the dawn,Are of the truth presageful, thou ere longShalt feel what Prato, (not to say the rest)Would fain might come upon thee; and that chanceWere in good time, if it befell thee now.Would so it were, since it must needs befall!For as time wears me, I shall grieve the more.We from the depth departed; and my guideRemounting scal'd the flinty steps, which lateWe downward trac'd, and drew me up the steep.Pursuing thus our solitary wayAmong the cr...
Dante Alighieri
The Arbour
I'll rest me in this sheltered bower,And look upon the clear blue skyThat smiles upon me through the trees,Which stand so thickly clustering by;And view their green and glossy leaves,All glistening in the sunshine fair;And list the rustling of their boughs,So softly whispering through the air.And while my ear drinks in the sound,My winged soul shall fly away;Reviewing long departed yearsAs one mild, beaming, autumn day;And soaring on to future scenes,Like hills and woods, and valleys green,All basking in the summer's sun,But distant still, and dimly seen.Oh, list! 'tis summer's very breathThat gently shakes the rustling trees,But look! the snow is on the ground,How can I think of scenes like these?
Anne Bronte
The Annoyer
Common as light is love,And its familiar voice wearies not ever.- Shelley.Love knoweth every form of air,And every shape of earth,And comes, unbidden, everywhere,Like thoughts mysterious birth.The moonlit sea and the sunset skyAre written with Loves words,And you hear his voice unceasingly,Like song in the time of birds.He peeps into the warriors heartFrom the tip of a stooping plumeAnd the serried spears, and the many men,May not deny him room.Hell come to his tent in the weary night,And be busy in his dream;And hell float to his eye in morning lightLike a fay on a silver beam.He hears the sound of the hunters gun,And rides on the echo back,And sighs in his ear, like a stirring...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Psal. II Done into verse
Why do the Gentiles tumult, and the NationsMuse a vain thing, the Kings of th'earth upstandWith power, and Princes in their CongregationsLay deep their plots together through each Land,Against the Lord and his Messiah dear.Let us break off; say they, by strength of handTheir bonds, and cast from us, no more to wear,Their twisted cords: he who in Heaven doth dwellShall laugh, the Lord shall scoff them, then severeSpeak to them in his wrath, and in his fellAnd fierce ire trouble them; but I saith heeAnointed have my King (though ye rebell)On Sion my holi' hill. A firm decreeI will declare; the Lord to me hath say'dThou art my Son I have begotten theeThis day, ask of me, and the grant is made;As thy possession I on thee bestowTh'Heathen, and...
John Milton
The Fay And The Peri.
("Où vas-tu donc, jeune âme.")[XV.]THE PERI.Beautiful spirit, come with meOver the blue enchanted sea:Morn and evening thou canst playIn my garden, where the breezeWarbles through the fruity trees;No shadow falls upon the day:There thy mother's arms awaitHer cherished infant at the gate.Of Peris I the loveliest far -My sisters, near the morning star,In ever youthful bloom abide;But pale their lustre by my side -A silken turban wreathes my head,Rubies on my arms are spread,While sailing slowly through the sky,By the uplooker's dazzled eyeAre seen my wings of purple hue,Glittering with Elysian dew.Whiter than a far-off sailMy form of beauty glows,Fair as on a summer night
Victor-Marie Hugo
Translations. - Contentment. (From Claudius.)
I am content. In triumph's toneMy song, let people know!And many a mighty man, with throneAnd sceptre, is not so.And if he is, why then, I cry,The man is just the same as I.The Mogul's gold, the Sultan's show,The hero's bliss, who, vextTo find no other world below,Up to the moon looked next--I'd none of them; for things like thatAre only fit for laughing at.My motto is--Content with this.Gold--rank--I prize not such.That which I have, my measure is;Wise men desire not much.Men wish and wish, and have their will,And wish again, as hungry still.And gold or honour, though it rings,Is but a brittle glass;Experience of changing thingsMight teach a very ass!Right often Many turns to None,And...
George MacDonald
How Lightly Mounts The Muse'S Wing. (Air--Anonymous.)
How lightly mounts the Muse's wing, Whose theme is in the skies--Like morning larks that sweeter sing The nearer Heaven they rise,Tho' love his magic lyre may tune, Yet ah, the flowers he round it wreathes,Were plucked beneath pale Passion's moon, Whose madness in their ode breathes.How purer far the sacred lute, Round which Devotion tiesSweet flowers that turn to heavenly fruit, And palm that never dies.Tho' War's high-sounding harp may be., Most welcome to the hero's ears,Alas, his chords of victory Are wet, all o'er, with human tears.How far more sweet their numbers run, Who hymn like Saints above,No victor but the Eternal One, No trophies but of Love!
Thomas Moore
To An Unionist.
"If you only knewHow gladly I've given itAll these years -The light of mine eyes,The heat of my lips,Mine agonies,My yearning tears,My blood that drips,My brain that sears:If you only knewHow gladly I've given itAll these years -My hope and my youth,My manhood, my Art,My passion, my truth,My mind and my heart:"O my brother, you would not say, What have you to do with me?You would not, would not turn away Doubtingly and bitterly."If you only knewHow little I cared forThese other things -The delicate speech,The high demandOf each from each,The imaginingsOf Love's Holy Land:If you only knewHow little I cared forThese other things -The wide c...
Francis William Lauderdale Adams
Poetry.
I had rather write one word upon the rockOf ages than ten thousand in the sand.The rock of ages! lo I cannot reachIts lofty shoulders with my puny hand:I can but touch the sands about its feet.Yea, I have painted pictures for the blind,And sung my sweetest songs to ears of stone.What matter if the dust of ages driftFive fathoms deep above my grave unknown,For I have sung and loved the songs I sung.Who sings for fame the Muses may disown;Who sings for gold will sing an idle song;But he who sings because sweet music springsUnbidden from his heart and warbles long,May haply touch another heart unknown.There is sweeter poetry in the hearts of menThan ever poet wrote or minstrel sung;For words are clumsy wings for burning thought.The ful...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Offerings (A Movement In Four Parts)
The night is folly without the moon,trees blank space against a frontal skywhere lattice work from a bled fish revealsskeletal markings will not administerthe red jack of hearts to a mistress sea.Most fickle, the ways of a cockroach(I don't recommend them) to offeringsof white linen, cold squares atopa stone diamonded floor.Palaver shacks drone in ghostly lightcommunicating some message about eel runsup the black river, the equivalent brushof tombstones against dark nightsoil.Tiny bars open as cubicles.proverbial flashes of the coming evening,haciendas to count every blessing.The road to such placessnarls a dusty pleasureand will heat thin bloodto boil in the daylight hours.IISwe...
Paul Cameron Brown