Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 455 of 739
Previous
Next
The Spell
"We have the receipt of fern seed: we walk invisible."- HENRY IVAnd we have met but twice or thrice! -Three times enough to make me love! -I praised your hair once; then your glove;Your eyes; your gown; - you were like ice;And yet this might suffice, my love,And yet this might suffice.St. John hath told me what to do:To search and find the ferns that growThe fern seed that the faeries know;Then sprinkle fern seed in my shoe,And haunt the steps of you, my dear,And haunt the steps of you.You'll see the poppy pods dip here;The blow-ball of the thistle slip,And no wind breathing - but my lipNext to your anxious cheek and ear,To tell you I am near, my love,To tell you I am near.On wood-ways I sh...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XVII
"Lo! the fell monster with the deadly sting!Who passes mountains, breaks through fenced wallsAnd firm embattled spears, and with his filthTaints all the world!" Thus me my guide address'd,And beckon'd him, that he should come to shore,Near to the stony causeway's utmost edge.Forthwith that image vile of fraud appear'd,His head and upper part expos'd on land,But laid not on the shore his bestial train.His face the semblance of a just man's wore,So kind and gracious was its outward cheer;The rest was serpent all: two shaggy clawsReach'd to the armpits, and the back and breast,And either side, were painted o'er with nodesAnd orbits. Colours variegated moreNor Turks nor Tartars e'er on cloth of stateWith interchangeable embroidery wove,...
Dante Alighieri
Who But Is Pleased To Watch The Moon On High
Who but is pleased to watch the moon on highTraveling where she from time to time enshroudsHer head, and nothing loth her MajestyRenounces, till among the scattered cloudsOne with its kindling edge declares that soonWill reappear before the uplifted eyeA Form as bright, as beautiful a moon,To glide in open prospect through clear sky.Pity that such a promise e'er should proveFalse in the issue, that yon seeming spaceOf sky should be in truth the steadfast faceOf a cloud flat and dense, through which must move(By transit not unlike man's frequent doom)The Wanderer lost in more determined gloom.
William Wordsworth
By The North Sea
Her cheek was wet with North Sea spray,We walked where tide and shingle meet;The long waves rolled from far awayTo purr in ripples at our feet.And as we walked it seemed to meThat three old friends had met that day,The old, old sky, the old, old sea,And love, which is as old as they.Out seaward hung the brooding mistWe saw it rolling, fold on fold,And marked the great Sun alchemistTurn all its leaden edge to gold,Look well, look well, oh lady mine,The gray below, the gold above,For so the grayest life may shineAll golden in the light of love.
Arthur Conan Doyle
Exultate Deo.
Many a flower hath perfume for its dower,And many a bird a song,And harmless lambs milkwhite beside their damsFrolic along, -Perfume and song and whiteness offering praiseIn humble, peaceful ways.Man's high degree hath will and memory,Affection and desire;By loftier ways he mounts of prayer and praise,Fire unto fire,Deep unto deep responsive, height to height,Until he walk in white.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Mothers.
Beyond the tumult and the proud acclaim, Beyond the circle where the glory beats With withering light upon the mighty seats,They hear the far-resounding trump of fame;On other lips they hear the one-loved name In vaunting or derision, and they weep To know that they shall never lull to sleepThose tired heads, crowned with desolating flame.Beyond the hot arena's baleful glow, Beyond the towering pomp they dimly see,They sit and watch the fateful pageants go Through war's red arch, or up to Calvary,The First Love still within their hearts impearled--Mothers of all the masters of the world!
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
Sonnet: - XXI.
Intense young soul, that takest hearts by storm,And chills them into sorrow with a look!Some minds are open as a well-read book;But here the leaves are still uncut - unscanned,The volume clasped and sealed, and all the warmAnd passionate exuberance of loveHeld in submission to these threadbare flawsAnd creeds of weaknesses, poor human laws.Stand up erect - nay kneel - for from aboveGod's light is streaming on thee. Fashion's dawsMay fawn and natter like a cringing packOf servile hounds beneath the keeper's hand,But these are not thy peers; they drive thee back:Urge on the car of Thought, and take a higher stand!
Charles Sangster
Resurgam
Into the darkness and the deeps My thoughts have strayed, where silence dwells,Where the old world encrypted sleeps,-- Myriads of forms, in myriad cells,Of dead and inorganic things, That neither live, nor move, nor grow, Nor any change of atoms know;That have neither legs, nor arms, nor wings,That have neither heads, nor mouths, nor stings,That have neither roots, nor leaves, nor stems,To hold up flowers like diadems, Growing out of the ground below: But which hold instead The cycles dead,And out of their stony and gloomy foldsShape out new moulds For a new race begun;Shutting within dark pages, furled As in a vast herbarium, The flowers and balms, The pines and palms, The ferns...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Consider The Ravens
Lord, according to thy words,I have considered thy birds;And I find their life good,And better the better understood:Sowing neither corn nor wheatThey have all that they can eat;Reaping no more than they sowThey have more than they could stow;Having neither barn nor store,Hungry again, they eat more.Considering, I see too that theyHave a busy life, and plenty of play;In the earth they dig their bills deepAnd work well though they do not heap;Then to play in the air they are not loath,And their nests between are better than both.But this is when there blow no storms,When berries are plenty in winter, and worms,When feathers are rife, with oil enough--To keep the cold out and send the rain off;If there come, indeed, ...
George MacDonald
Above The Battle
Honor and pity for the smitten field,The valorous ranks mown down like precious corn,Whose want must famish love morn after morn,Till Death, the good physician, shall have healedThe craving and the tearspent eyelids sealed.Proud be the homes that for each cannon-torn,Encrimsoned rampart have been left forlorn;Holy the knells o'er fallen patriots pealed.But they, above the battle, throng a spaceOf starry silences and silver rest.Commingled ghosts, they press like brothers throughWhite, dove-winged portals, where one Father's faceAtones their passion, as the ethereal blueSerenes the fiery glows of east and west.
Katharine Lee Bates
Time Cures All
It was my shame, and now it is my boast,That I have loved you rather more than most.
Hilaire Belloc
Bearslayer - Canto I The Revelation Of Bearslayer
Scene 1: The Council of the Baltic godsThe gods gatherIn azure vaults of heaven soaring bright,In lofty castles filled with endless joy,The God of Thunder, Perkons, dwells in light,And pleasure knows whose sweetness cannot cloy.The Baltic gods in council gathered there,Of Destiny's Father tidings to debate.His will decides the hues-both dark and fair-And sets the fickle course of mortal fate.The steeds of Perkons saddled in the court,With trappings glowing waited in the morn;The sun's first rays a dazzling glitter brought,As polished harness glinted in the dawn.And Patrimps, God of Plenty, held in yokesHis beeswax-yellow steeds with flowing manes;Of golden stalks his wingèd chariot's spokes-Its course ensures the timely ...
Andrejs Pumpurs
Honours Are Hindrances.
Give me honours! what are these,But the pleasing hindrances?Stiles, and stops, and stays that comeIn the way 'twixt me and home;Clear the walk, and then shall ITo my heaven less run than fly.
Robert Herrick
Reciprocal Invitation To The Dance.
THE INDIFFERENT.COME to the dance with me, come with me, fair one!Dances a feast-day like this may well crown.If thou my sweetheart art not, thou canst be so,But if thou wilt not, we still will dance on.Come to the dance with me, come with me, fair one!Dances a feast-day like this may well crown.THE TENDER.Loved one, without thee, what then would all feast be?Sweet one, without thee, what then were the dance?If thou my sweetheart wert not, I would dance not.If thou art still so, all life is one feast.Loved one, without thee, what then would all feasts be?Sweet one, without thee, what then were the dance?THE INDIFFERENT.Let them but love, then, and leave us the dancing!Langu...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Communion
In the silence of my heart,I will spend an hour with thee,When my love shall rend apartAll the veil of mystery:All that dim and misty veilThat shut in between our soulsWhen Death cried, "Ho, maiden, hail!"And your barque sped on the shoals.On the shoals? Nay, wrongly said.On the breeze of Death that sweepsFar from life, thy soul has spedOut into unsounded deeps.I shall take an hour and comeSailing, darling, to thy side.Wind nor sea may keep me fromSoft communings with my bride.I shall rest my head on theeAs I did long days of yore,When a calm, untroubled seaRocked thy vessel at the shore.I shall take thy hand in mine,And live o'er the olden daysWhen thy smile to me was wine,--
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Sonnet to Asterie.
I was enveloped in black clouds of woe, Woven o'er my vision by dark-veiled Despair; I breathed the poison of the midnight air, And 'neath its dank oppression wasted low. I staggered wildly in the gloom at first; And prayed in anguish that it be removed; Then cursed the day I saw thee - saw and loved, And ceased to hope the clouds would be dispersed. At last that Heavenly Love that rules the night Removed thine orbit nearer to the earth, And filled my soul with rapturous delight; And in the place of that devouring dearth, When I can see, though distant still, thy light, Blest Happiness from Hope receives her birth.
W. M. MacKeracher
Himself
The houseful that we were then, you could count us by the dozens,The wonder was that sometimes the old walls wouldn't burst:Herself (the Lord be good to her!), the aunts and rafts of cousins,The young folks and the children,--but Himself came first.Master of the House he was, and well for them that knew it:His cheeks like winter apples and his head like snow;Eyes as blue as water when the sun of March shines through it.And steppin' like a soldier with his stick held so.Faith, but he could tell a tale would serve a man for wages,Sing a song would put the joy of dancin' in two sticks;But Saints between themselves and harm that saw him in his rages,Blazin' and oratin' over chess and politics.Master of the House he was, and...
Theodosia Garrison
My White Chrysanthemum.
As purely white as is the drifted snow,More dazzling fair than summer roses are,Petalled with rays like a clear rounded star,When winds pipe chilly, and red sunsets glow,Your blossoms blow.Sweet with a freshening fragrance, all their own,In which a faint, dim breath of bitter lies,Like wholesome breath mid honeyed flatteries;When other blooms are dead, and birds have flown,You stand alone.Fronting the winter with a fearless grace,Flavoring the odorless gray autumn chill,Nipped by the furtive frosts, but cheery still,Lifting to heaven from the bare garden placeA smiling face.Roses are fair, but frail, and soon grow faint,Nor can endure a hardness; violets blue,Short-lived and sweet, live but a day or two;The nun-lik...
Susan Coolidge