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Aspasia.
'Twas in the fair Aspasia's bower,That Love and Learning, many an hour,In dalliance met; and Learning smiledWith pleasure on the playful child,Who often stole, to find a nestWithin the folds of Learning's vest. There, as the listening statesman hungIn transport on Aspasia's tongue,The destinies of Athens tookTheir color from Aspasia's look.Oh happy time, when laws of stateWhen all that ruled the country's fate,Its glory, quiet, or alarms,Was planned between two snow-white arms! Blest times! they could not always last--And yet, even now, they are not past,Though we have lost the giant mould.In which their men were cast of old,Woman, dear woman, still the same,While beauty breathes through soul or frame,...
Thomas Moore
A June Night.
Ten o'clock: the broken moon Hangs not yet a half hour high, Yellow as a shield of brass,In the dewy air of June, Poised between the vaulted sky And the ocean's liquid glass.Earth lies in the shadow still; Low black bushes, trees, and lawn Night's ambrosial dews absorb;Through the foliage creeps a thrill, Whispering of yon spectral dawn And the hidden climbing orb.Higher, higher, gathering light, Veiling with a golden gauze All the trembling atmosphere,See, the rayless disk grows white! Hark, the glittering billows pause! Faint, far sounds possess the ear.Elves on such a night as this Spin their rings upon the grass; On the beach the wate...
Emma Lazarus
Mater Triumphalis
Mother of mans time-travelling generations,Breath of his nostrils, heartblood of his heart,God above all Gods worshipped of all nations,Light above light, law beyond law, thou art.Thy face is as a sword smiting in sunderShadows and chains and dreams and iron things;The sea is dumb before thy face, the thunderSilent, the skies are narrower than thy wings.Angels and Gods, spirit and sense, thou takestIn thy right hand as drops of dust or dew;The temples and the towers of time thou breakest,His thoughts and words and works, to make them new.All we have wandered from thy ways, have hiddenEyes from thy glory and ears from calls they heard;Called of thy trumpets vainly, called and chidden,Scourged of thy speech and wounded of thy word.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Parables
IDear Love, you ask if I be true,If other women moveThe heart that only beats for youWith pulses all of love.Out in the chilly dew one mornI plucked a wild sweet rose,A little silver bud new-bornAnd longing to unclose.I took it, loving new-born things,I knew my heart was warm,'O little silver rose, come inAnd shelter from the storm.'And soon, against my body pressed,I felt its petals part,And, looking down within my breastI saw its golden heart.O such a golden heart it has,Your eyes may never see,To others it is always shut,It opens but for me.But that is why you see me passThe honeysuckle there,And leave the lilies in the grass,Although they be so fair;
Richard Le Gallienne
The Voortrekker
The gull shall whistle in his wake, the blind wave break in fire,He shall fulfill God's utmost will unknowing His desire;And he shall see old planets pass and alien stars arise,And give the gale his seaworn sail in shadow of new skies.Strong lust of gear shall drive him forth and hunger arm his handTo win his food from the desert rude, his foothold from the sand.His neighbors' smoke shall vex his eyes, their voices break his rest,He shall go forth till South is North, sullen and dispossessed.He shall desire loneliness, and his desire shall bringHard on his heels a thousand wheels, a People, and a King;He shall come back in his own track, and by his scarce cooled camp;There shall he meet the roaring street, the derrick, and the stamp;There he shall blaze a nation's way...
Rudyard
My Pansy Pets
My pansy pets are sleeping wellBeneath their quilt of snow;How they can breathe I cannot tell,Nor how their rootlets grow;But soon the snow will melt awayAnd April showers descend;Then shall appear in colors gayEach little pansy friend.Of pride it may not show a trace;Of lowly mind, alway;But will not blush to show its faceAll through the lifelong day:Its fragrance other flowers surpass,In form more stately, too.But when you see my pets in mass,Thank God they ever grew.For though the human face may frown,Or show a heart of guile,My pansy pets as you look downWill look at you and smile;Nor will they murmur if you shouldPluck off their brightest bloom;Their mission is to do us good,And smile a...
Joseph Horatio Chant
The New Amadis.
IN my boyhood's days so drearI was kept confined;There I sat for many a year,All alone I pined,As within the womb.Yet thou drov'st away my gloom,Golden phantasy!I became a hero true,Like the Prince Pipi,And the world roam'd through,Many a crystal palace built,Crush'd them with like art,And the Dragon's life-blood spiltWith my glitt'ring dart.Yes! I was a man!Next I formed the knightly planPrincess Fish to free;She was much too complaisant,Kindly welcomed me,And I was gallant.Heav'nly bread her kisses proved,Glowing as the wine;Almost unto death I loved.Sun-s appeared to shineIn her dazzling charms.Who h...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Astrophel
After reading Sir Philip Sidney's Arcadia in the garden of an old English manor houseIA star in the silence that followsThe song of the death of the sunSpeaks music in heaven, and the hollowsAnd heights of the world are as one;One lyre that outsings and outlightensThe rapture of sunset, and thrillsMute night till the sense of it brightensThe soul that it fills.The flowers of the sun that is sunkenHang heavy of heart as of head;The bees that have eaten and drunkenThe soul of their sweetness are fled;But a sunflower of song, on whose honeyMy spirit has fed as a bee,Makes sunnier than morning was sunnyThe twilight for me.The letters and lines on the pagesThat sundered mine eyes and the flowersWax faint as the s...
On A Tear.
Oh! that the Chemist's magic artCould crystallize this sacred treasure!Long should it glitter near my heart,A secret source of pensive pleasure.The little brilliant, ere it fell,Its lustre caught from CHLOE'S eye;Then, trembling, left its coral cell--The spring of Sensibility!Sweet drop of pure and pearly light!In thee the rays of Virtue shine;More calmly clear, more mildly bright,Than any gem that gilds the mine.Benign restorer of the soul!Who ever fly'st to bring relief,When first we feel the rude controulOf Love or Pity, Joy or Grief.The sage's and the poet's theme,In every clime, in every age;Thou charm'st in Fancy's idle dream,In Reason's philosophic page.That very law [Footnote] which ...
Samuel Rogers
Wages
Glory of warrior, glory of orator, glory of song,Paid with a voice flying by to be lost on an endless seaGlory of Virtue, to fight, to struggle, to right the wrongNay, but she aimd not at glory, no lover of glory she;Give her the glory of going on, and still to be.The wages of sin is death: if the wages of Virtue be dust,Would she have heart to endure for the life of the worm and the fly?She desires no isles of the blest, no quiet seats of the just,To rest in a golden grove, or to bask in a summer sky;Give her the wages of going on, and not to die.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Earth To Earth
What is the soul? Is it the windAmong the branches of the mind?Is it the sea against Time's shoreBreaking and broken evermore?Is it the shore that breaks Time's sea,The verge of vast Eternity?And in the night is it the soulSleep needs must hush, must needs kiss whole?Or does the soul, secure from sleep,Safe its bright sanctities yet keep?And oh, before the body's deathShall the confined soul ne'er gain breath,But ever to this serpent fleshSubdue its alien self afresh?Is it a bird that shuns earth's night,Or makes with song earth's darkness bright?Is it indeed a thought of God,Or merest clod-fellow to clod?A thought of God, and yet subduedTo any passion's apish mood?Itself a God--and yet, O God,As like to earth as c...
John Frederick Freeman
The Man With A Past
There was merry-makingWhen the first dart fellAs a heralding, -Till grinned the fully bared thing,And froze like a spell -Like a spell.Innocent was she,Innocent was I,Too simple we!Before us we did not see,Nearing, aught wry -Aught wry!I can tell it not now,It was long ago;And such things cow;But that is why and howTwo lives were so -Were so.Yes, the years matured,And the blows were threeThat time ensuredOn her, which she dumbly endured;And one on me -One on me.
Thomas Hardy
Upon Leech.
Leech boasts, he has a pill, that can aloneWith speed give sick men their salvation:'Tis strange, his father long time has been ill,And credits physic, yet not trusts his pill:And why? he knows he must of cure despair,Who makes the sly physician his heir.
Robert Herrick
Sonnet
Your own fair youth, you care so little for it, Smiling towards Heaven, you would not stay the advances Of time and change upon your happiest fancies.I keep your golden hour, and will restore it.If ever, in time to come, you would explore it-- Your old self whose thoughts went like last year's pansies, Look unto me; no mirror keeps its glances;In my unfailing praises now I store it.To keep all joys of yours from Time's estranging, I shall be then a treasury where your gay, Happy, and pensive past for ever is.I shall be then a garden charmed from changing, In which your June has never passed away. Walk there awhile among my memories.
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
A New Year Letter
To Two Friends married in the New Year(TO. MR. AND MRS. WELCH)Another year to its last day,Like a lost sovereign, runaway,Tips down the gloomy grid of time:In vain to holloa, 'Stop it! hey!' -A cab-horse that has taken fright,Be you a policeman, stop you may;But not a sovereign mad with gleeThat scampers to the grid, perdie,And not a year that's taken flight;To both 'tis just a grim good night.But no! the imagery, say you,Is wondrous witty - but not true;For the old year that last night wentHas not been so much lost as spent:You gave it in exchange to DeathFor just twelve months of happy breath.It was a ticket to admitTwo happy people close to sit -A 'Season' ticket, one might say,At ...
The Vale To You, To Me The Heights. - A Fable.
[Bk. III. vi., October, 1846.]A lion camped beside a spring, where came the Bird Of Jove to drink:When, haply, sought two kings, without their courtier herd, The moistened brink,Beneath the palm - they always tempt pugnacious hands - Both travel-sore;But quickly, on the recognition, out flew brands Straight to each core;As dying breaths commingle, o'er them rose the call Of Eagle shrill:"Yon crownèd couple, who supposed the world too small, Now one grave fill!Chiefs blinded by your rage! each bleachèd sapless bone Becomes a pipeThrough which siroccos whistle, trodden 'mong the stone By quail and snipe.Folly's liege-men, what boots such murd'rous raid, And mortal feud?I, Eagle, dwel...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet XLIII
Faire eyes, sweet lips, dear heart, that foolish ICould hope, by Cupids help, on you to pray,Since to himselfe he doth your gifts apply,As his maine force, choise sport, and easefull stay!For when he will see who dare him gain-say,Then with those eyes he looeks: lo, by and byEach soule doth at Loues feet his weapons lay,Glad if for her he giue them leaue to die.When he will play, then in her lips he is,Where, blushing red, that Loues selfe them doe loue,With either lip he doth the other kisse;But when he will, for quiets sake, remoueFrom all the world, her heart is then his rome,Where well he knowes no man to him can come.
Philip Sidney
Dora Versus Rose.
"The Case is proceeding."From the tragic-est novels at Mudie's--At least, on a practical plan--To the tales of mere Hodges and Judys,One love is enough for a man.But no case that I ever yet met isLike mine: I am equally fondOf Rose, who a charming brunette is,And Dora, a blonde.Each rivals the other in powers--Each waltzes, each warbles, each paints--Miss Rose, chiefly tumble-down towers;Miss Do., perpendicular saints.In short, to distinguish is folly;'Twixt the pair I am come to the passOf Macheath, between Lucy and Polly,--Or Buridan's ass.If it happens that Rosa I've singledFor a soft celebration in rhyme,Then the ringlets of Dora get mingledSomehow with the tune and the time;Or I painful...
Henry Austin Dobson