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Psalm Of The Day.
A something in a summer's day,As sIow her flambeaux burn away,Which solemnizes me.A something in a summer's noon, --An azure depth, a wordless tune,Transcending ecstasy.And still within a summer's nightA something so transporting bright,I clap my hands to see;Then veil my too inspecting face,Lest such a subtle, shimmering graceFlutter too far for me.The wizard-fingers never rest,The purple brook within the breastStill chafes its narrow bed;Still rears the East her amber flag,Guides still the sun along the cragHis caravan of red,Like flowers that heard the tale of dews,But never deemed the dripping prizeAwaited their low brows;Or bees, that thought the summer's nameSom...
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Fragment. Trionfo D' Amore.
I know how well Love shoots, how swift his flight,How now by force and now by stealth he steals,How he will threaten now, anon will smite,And how unstable are his chariot wheels.How doubtful are his hopes, how sure his pain,And how his faithful promise he repeals.How in one's marrow, in one's vital vein,His smouldering fire quickens a hidden wound,Where death is manifest, destruction plain.In sum, how erring, fickle and unsound,How timid and how bold are lovers' days,Where with scant sweetness bitter draughts abound.I know their songs, their sighs, their usual ways,Their broken speech, their sudden silences.Their passing laughter and their grief that stays,I know how mixed with gall their honey is.
Emma Lazarus
Sonnet CXI.
Quand' io v' odo parlar si dolcemente.TO ONE WHO SPOKE TO HIM OF LAURA. Whene'er you speak of her in that soft toneWhich Love himself his votaries surely taught,My ardent passion to such fire is wrought,That e'en the dead reviving warmth might own:Where'er to me she, dear or kind, was knownThere the bright lady is to mind now brought,In the same bearing which, to waken thought,Needed no sound but of my sighs alone.Half-turn'd I see her looking, on the breezeHer light hair flung; so true her memories rollOn my fond heart of which she keeps the keys;But the surpassing bliss which floods my soulSo checks my tongue, to tell how, queen-like, there,She sits as on her throne, I never dare.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Abide With Us
"Abide with us!" Where could we go?Thou art our strength, thou art our tower,Our refuge from the ills below,In darkness light, in weakness power."Abide with us!" We would prevail,And plead that thou be ever nearTo banish doubts when they assail,And give deliverance from fear."Abide with us" in words of love,For thou dost say, "Come unto me."Oh, guide us to thy home aboveTo dwell in joy and peace with thee!
Nancy Campbell Glass
Two Days
(February 15 - September 28, 1894)To V. G.That day we brought our Beautiful One to lieIn the green peace within your gates, he cameTo give us greeting, boyish and kind and shy,And, stricken as we were, we blessed his name:Yet, like the Creature of Light that had been ours,Soon of the sweet Earth disinherited,He too must join, even with the Year's old flowers,The unanswering generations of the Dead.So stand we friends for you, who stood our friendThrough him that day; for now through him you knowThat though where love was, love is till the end,Love, turned of death to longing, like a foe,Strikes: when the ruined heart goes forth to craveMercy of the high, austere, unpitying Grave.
William Ernest Henley
Gold Hair - A Story Of Pornic
I.Oh, the beautiful girl, too white,Who lived at Pornic, down by the sea,Just where the sea and the Loire unite!And a boasted name in BrittanyShe bore, which I will not write.II.Too white, for the flower of life is red;Her flesh was the soft seraphic screenOf a soul that is meant (her parents said)To just see earth, and hardly be seen,And blossom in heaven instead.III.Yet earth saw one thing, one how fair!One grace that grew to its full on earthSmiles might be sparse on her cheek so spare,And her waist want half a girdles girth,But she had her great gold hair.IV.Hair, such a wonder of flix and floss,Freshness and fragrance, floods of it, too!Gold, did I say? Nay, golds mere dross:Here, Lif...
Robert Browning
Young Jenny
The cockchafer hums down the rut-rifted laneWhere the wild roses hang and the woodbines entwine,And the shrill squeaking bat makes his circles againRound the side of the tavern close by the sign.The sun is gone down like a wearisome queen,In curtains the richest that ever were seen.The dew falls on flowers in a mist of small rain,And, beating the hedges, low fly the barn owls;The moon with her horns is just peeping again,And deep in the forest the dog-badger howls;In best bib and tucker then wanders my JaneBy the side of the woodbines which grow in the lane.On a sweet eventide I walk by her side;In green hoods the daisies have shut up their eyes.Young Jenny is handsome without any pride;Her eyes (O how bright!) have the hue of the skies.<...
John Clare
Sonnet LXXXI. On A Lock Of Miss Sarah Seward's Hair Who Died In Her Twentieth Year.
My Angel Sister, tho' thy lovely form Perish'd in Youth's gay morning, yet is mine This precious Ringlet! - still the soft hairs shine, Still glow the nut-brown tints, all bright and warmWith sunny gleam! - Alas! each kindred charm Vanish'd long since; deep in the silent shrine Wither'd to shapeless Dust! - and of their grace Memory alone retains the faithful trace. -Dear Lock, had thy sweet Owner liv'd, ere now Time on her brow had faded thee! - My care Screen'd from the sun and dew thy golden glow;And thus her early beauty dost thou wear, Thou all of that fair Frame my love cou'd save From the resistless ravage of the GRAVE!
Anna Seward
Nights Of Music.
Nights of music, nights of loving, Lost too soon, remembered long.When we went by moonlight roving, Hearts all love and lips all song.When this faithful lute recorded All my spirit felt to thee;And that smile the song rewarded-- Worth Whole years of fame to me!Nights of song, and nights of splendor,Filled with joys too sweet to last--Joys that, like the star-light, tender,While they shore no shadow cast.Tho' all other happy hours From my fading memory fly,Of, that starlight, of those bowers, Not a beam, a leaf may die!
Thomas Moore
To The Marquis Of Dufferin And Ava
I.At times our Britain cannot rest,At times her steps are swift and rash;She moving, at her girdle clashThe golden keys of East and West.II.Not swift or rash, when late she lentThe sceptres of her West, her East,To one, that ruling has increasedHer greatness and her self-content.III.Your rule has made the people loveTheir ruler. Your viceregal daysHave added fulness to the phraseOf Gauntlet in the velvet glove.IV.But since your name will grow with Time,Not all, as honouring your fair fameOf Statesman, have I made the nameA golden portal to my rhyme:V.But more, that you and yours may knowFrom me and mine, how dear a debtWe ow...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Mourning And Longing.
The Saviour hides his face!My spirit thirsts to proveRenewd supplies of pardoning grace,And never-fading love.The favourd souls who knowWhat glories shine in him,Pant for his presence as the roePants for the living stream!What trifles tease me now!They swarm like summer flies,They cleave to everything I do,And swim before my eyes.How dull the Sabbath-day,Without the Sabbaths Lord!How toilsome then to sing and pray,And wait upon the word!Of all the truths I hear,How few delight my taste!I glean a berry here and there,But mourn the vintage past.Yet let me (as I ought)Still hope to be supplied;No pleasure else is worth a thought,Nor shall I be ...
William Cowper
Song Of The Soldiers' Wives
IAt last! In sight of home again,Of home again;No more to range and roam againAs at that bygone time?No more to go away from usAnd stay from us? -Dawn, hold not long the day from us,But quicken it to prime!IINow all the town shall ring to them,Shall ring to them,And we who love them cling to themAnd clasp them joyfully;And cry, "O much we'll do for youAnew for you,Dear Loves! - aye, draw and hew for you,Come back from oversea."IIISome told us we should meet no more,Should meet no more;Should wait, and wish, but greet no moreYour faces round our fires;That, in a while, uncharilyAnd drearilyMen gave their lives - even wearily,Like those whom living tires.
Thomas Hardy
The Road
Along the road I smelt the rose,The wild-rose in its veil of rain;And how it was, God only knows,But with its scent I saw againA girl's face at a window-pane,Gazing through tears that fell like rain.'Tis twelve years now, so I suppose.Twelve years ago. 'Twas then I thought,"Love is a burden bitter-sweet.And he who runs must not be fraught:Free must his heart be as his feet."Again I heard myself repeat,"Love is a burden bitter-sweet."Yet all my aims had come to nought.I smelt the rose; I felt the rainLonely I stood upon the road.Of one thing only was I fainTo be delivered of my load.A moment more and on I strode.I cared not whither led the roadThat led not back to her again.
Madison Julius Cawein
Of The Three Seekers.
There met three knights on the woodland way,And the first was clad in silk array:The second was dight in iron and steel,But the third was rags from head to heel."Lo, now is the year and the day come roundWhen we must tell what we have found."The first said: "I have found a kingWho grudgeth no gift of anything."The second said: "I have found a knightWho hath never turned his back in fight."But the third said: "I have found a loveThat Time and the World shall never move."Whither away to win good cheer?"With me," said the first, "for my king is near."So to the King they went their ways;But there was a change of times and days."What men are ye," the great King said,"That ye should eat my children's bread?My waste has fed full many...
William Morris
Fleeing Away
My thoughts soar not as they ought to soar, Higher and higher on soul-lent wings;But ever and often, and more and more They are dragged down earthward by little things,By little troubles and little needs,As a lark might be tangled among the weeds.My purpose is not what it ought to be, Steady and fixed, like a star on high,But more like a fisherman's light at sea; Hither and thither it seems to fly -Sometimes feeble, and sometimes bright,Then suddenly lost in the gloom of night.My life is far from my dream of life - Calmly contented, serenely glad;But, vexed and worried by daily strife, It is always troubled, and ofttimes sad -And the heights I had thought I should reach one dayGrow dimmer and dimmer, and fart...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Song Of Elf
Blue-eyed was Elf the minstrel,With womanish hair and ring,Yet heavy was his hand on sword,Though light upon the string.And as he stirred the strings of the harpTo notes but four or five,The heart of each man moved in himLike a babe buried alive.And they felt the land of the folk-songsSpread southward of the Dane,And they heard the good Rhine flowingIn the heart of all Allemagne.They felt the land of the folk-songs,Where the gifts hang on the tree,Where the girls give ale at morningAnd the tears come easily,The mighty people, womanlike,That have pleasure in their pain;As he sang of Balder beautiful,Whom the heavens loved in vain.As he sang of Balder beautiful,Whom the heavens could not...
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Sonnet XXIV.
Something in me was born before the starsAnd saw the sun begin from far away.Our yellow, local day on its wont jars,For it hath communed with an absolute day.Through my Thought's night, as a worn robe's heard trailThat I have never seen, I drag this pastThat saw the Possible like a dawn grow paleOn the lost night before it, mute and vast.It dates remoter than God's birth can reach,That had no birth but the world's coming after.So the world's to me as, after whispered speech,The cause-ignored sudden echoing of laughter. That 't has a meaning my conjecture knows, But that 't has meaning's all its meaning shows.
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
The Indiscreet Confessions
FAMED Paris ne'er within its walls had got,Such magick charms as were Aminta's lot,Youth, beauty, temper, fortune, she possessed,And all that should a husband render blessed,The mother still retained her 'neath the wing;Her father's riches well might lovers bring;Whate'er his daughter wished, he would provide,Amusements, jewels, dress, and much beside.BLITHE Damon for her having felt the dart,The belle received the offer of his heart;So well he managed and expressed his flame.That soon her lord and master he became,By Hymen's right divine, you may conceive,And nothing short of it you should believe.A YEAR had passed, and still our charming pair,Were always pleased, and blisses seemed to share;(The honeymoon appeared but just began)<...
Jean de La Fontaine