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An Epitaph On A Child Of Queen Elizabeth's Chapel
Weep with me, all you that readThis little story;And know, for whom a tear you shedDeaths self is sorry.Twas a child that so did thriveIn grace and feature,As heaven and nature seemed to striveWhich owned the creature.Years he numbered scarce thirteenWhen fates turned cruel,Yet three filled zodiacs had be beenThe stages jewel;And did act what now we moan,Old men so duly,As, sooth, the parcae thought him one,He played so truly.So by error, so his fateThey all consented;But viewing him since, alas too late,They have repented,And have sought to give new birth,In baths to steep him;But being so much too good for earth,Heaven vows to keep him.
Ben Jonson
The Answer
Up to the gates of gleaming Pearl,There came the spirit of a girl,And to the white-robed Guard she said:'Dear Angel, am I truly dead?Just yonder, lying on my bed,I heard them say it; and they wept.And after that, methinks I slept.Then when I woke, I saw your face,And suddenly was in this place.It seems a pleasant place to be,Yet earth was fair enough to me.What is there here, to do, or see?Will I see God, dear Angel, say?And is He very far away?'The Angel said, 'You are in truthWhat men call dead. That word to youthIs full of terror; but it meansOnly a change of tasks, and scenes.You have been brought to us becauseOf certain ancient karmic lawsSet into motion aeons gone.By us you will be guided onFro...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Ursula
There is a village in a southern land,By rounded hills closed in on every hand.The streets slope steeply to the market-square,Long lines of white-washed houses, clean and fair,With roofs irregular, and steps of stoneAscending to the front of every one.The people swarthy, idle, full of mirth,Live mostly by the tillage of the earth.Upon the northern hill-top, looking down,Like some sequestered saint upon the town,Stands the great convent. On a summer night,Ten years ago, the moon with rising lightMade all the convent towers as clear as day,While still in deepest shade the village lay.Both light and shadow with repose were filled,The village sounds, the convent bells were stilled.No foot in all the streets was now asti...
Robert Fuller Murray
Sonnets Upon The Punishment Of Death - In Series, 1839 VII - Before The World Had Past Her Time Of Youth
Before the world had past her time of youthWhile polity and discipline were weak,The precept eye for eye, and tooth for tooth,Came forth a light, though but as of daybreak,Strong as could then be borne. A Master meekProscribed the spirit fostered by that rule,Patience 'his' law, long-suffering 'his' school,And love the end, which all through peace must seek.But lamentably do they err who strainHis mandates, given rash impulse to controlAnd keep vindictive thirstings from the soul,So far that, if consistent in their scheme,They must forbid the State to inflict a pain,Making of social order a mere dream.
William Wordsworth
The Body To The Soul
RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED TO AN OVERWORKED STUDENT. O tyrant soul of mine, What's the useOf this never-ceasing toil,Of this struggle, this turmoil, This abuseOf the body and the brain,Of this labor and this pain,Of this never-ceasing strainOn the cords that bind us twain Each to each? O tyrant soul of mine, Is it wellThus to waste and wear awayThe poor, fragile walls of clay Where you dwell?Was I made your slave to be -I the abject, you the free,That you task me ceaselessly? -Tyrant soul, come, answer me, Is it well? O tyrant soul of mine, Don't you knowThat in slow, but sure decay,I a...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Lament XV
Golden-locked Erato, and thou, sweet lute,The comfort of the sad and destitute,Calm thou my sorrow, lest I too becomeA marble pillar shedding through the dumbBut living stone my almost bloody tears,A monument of grief for coming years.For when we think of mankind's evil chanceDoes not our private grief gain temperance?Unhappy mother (if 'tis evil hapWe blame when caught in our own folly's trap)Where are thy sons and daughters, seven each,The joyful cause of thy too boastful speech?I see their fourteen stones, and thou, alas,Who from thy misery wouldst gladly passTo death, dost kiss the tombs, O wretched one,Where lies thy fruit so cruelly undone.Thus blossoms fall where some keen sickle passesAnd so, when rain doth level them, green grass...
Jan Kochanowski
Thought.
The blight of life, the demon, Thought - BYRON.With demon's shriek or angel's voice,'Mid hellish gloom, or heav'nly light,Thought haunts our path o'er land and sea,And dwells with us, by day and night.In roomy hall, or narrow hut,It withers, blasts and kills with gloom,Or gently onward smooths the pathOf him, who gives the tyrant room.With siren voice it soothes our woe;It dwells with us in blissful dreams;But when we wake, it tells us then,That it is far from what it seems.Rebellious o'er its prostrate slave,Its iron chain of bondage swings,Or, govern'd by a master hand,In numbers loud and strong, it sings.And, with its keys of rarest mould,Its stores of hoarded wealth unlocks,It dives for ...
Thomas Frederick Young
The Bell
It is the bell of death I hear,Which tells me my own time is near,When I must join those quiet soulsWhere nothing lives but worms and moles;And not come through the grass again,Like worms and moles, for breath or rain;Yet let none weep when my life's through,For I myself have wept for few.The only things that knew me wellWere children, dogs, and girls that fell;I bought poor children cakes and sweets,Dogs heard my voice and danced the streets;And, gentle to a fallen lass,I made her weep for what she was.Good men and women know not me.Nor love nor hate the mystery.
William Henry Davies
Ode To A Nightingale
My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness painsMy sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk,Or emptied some dull opiate to the drainsOne minute past, and Lethe-wards had sunk:Tis not through envy of thy happy lot,But being too happy in thine happiness,That thou, light-winged Dryad of the trees,In some melodious plotOf beechen green and shadows numberless,Singest of summer in full-throated ease.O, for a draught of vintage! that hath beenCoold a long age in the deep-delved earth,Tasting of Flora and the country green,Dance, and Provenial song, and sunburnt mirth!O for a beaker full of the warm South,Full of the true, the blushful Hippocrene,With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,And purple-stained mouth;That I might drink, and leav...
John Keats
The Ballad of Melicertes
In Memory of Theodore de BanvilleDeath, a light outshining life, bids heaven resumeStar by star the souls whose light made earth divine.Death, a night outshining day, sees burn and bloomFlower by flower, and sun by sun, the fames that shineDeathless, higher than life beheld their sovereign sign.Dead Simonides of Ceos, late restored,Given again of God, again by man deplored,Shone but yestereve, a glory frail as breath.Frail? But fame's breath quickens, kindles, keeps in ward,Life so sweet as this that dies and casts off death.Mother's love, and rapture of the sea, whose wombBreeds eternal life of joy that stings like brine,Pride of song, and joy to dare the singer's doom,Sorrow soft as sleep and laughter bright as wine,Flushed and filled with fr...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Epitaphium. [Latin Version Of The Epitaph In Gray's Elegy.]
1.Hic sinu fessum caput hospitaliCespitis dormit juvenis, nec illiFata ridebant, popularis illeNescius aurae.2.Musa non vultu genus arrogantiRustica natum grege despicata,Et suum tristis puerum notavitSollicitudo.3.Indoles illi bene larga, pectusVeritas sedem sibi vindicavit,Et pari tantis meritis beavitMunere coelum.4.Omne quad moestis habuit misertoCorde largivit lacrimam, recepitOmne quod coelo voluit, fidelisPectus amici.5.Longius sed tu fuge curiosusCaeteras laudes fuge suspicari,Caeteras culpas fuge velle tractasSede tremenda.6.Spe tremescentes recubant in illaSede virtutes pariterque culpae,In sui Patris gremio, tremendaSede Deique...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Dead Leaves
DAWNAs though a gipsy maiden with dim look, Sat crooning by the roadside of the year, So, Autumn, in thy strangeness, thou art hereTo read dark fortunes for us from the bookOf fate; thou flingest in the crinkled brook The trembling maple's gold, and frosty-clear Thy mocking laughter thrills the atmosphere,And drifting on its current calls the rookTo other lands. As one who wades, alone, Deep in the dusk, and hears the minor talkOf distant melody, and finds the tone, In some wierd way compelling him to stalkThe paths of childhood over, - so I moan, And like a troubled sleeper, groping, walk. DUSKThe frightened herds of clouds across the sky Trample the sunshine down, and chase the day
James Whitcomb Riley
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXXIX.
Deh porgi mano all' affannato ingegno.HE BEGS LOVE TO ASSIST HIM, THAT HE MAY WORTHILY CELEBRATE HER. Ah, Love! some succour to my weak mind deign,Lend to my frail and weary style thine aid,To sing of her who is immortal made,A citizen of the celestial reign.And grant, Lord, that my verse the height may gainOf her great praises, else in vain essay'd,Whose peer in worth or beauty never stay'dIn this our world, unworthy to retain.Love answers: "In myself and Heaven what lay,By conversation pure and counsel wise,All was in her whom death has snatch'd away.Since the first morn when Adam oped his eyes,Like form was ne'er--suffice it this to say,Write down with tears what scarce I tell for sighs."MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XXVIII
Who, e'en in words unfetter'd, might at fullTell of the wounds and blood that now I saw,Though he repeated oft the tale? No tongueSo vast a theme could equal, speech and thoughtBoth impotent alike. If in one bandCollected, stood the people all, who e'erPour'd on Apulia's happy soil their blood,Slain by the Trojans, and in that long warWhen of the rings the measur'd booty madeA pile so high, as Rome's historian writesWho errs not, with the multitude, that feltThe grinding force of Guiscard's Norman steel,And those the rest, whose bones are gather'd yetAt Ceperano, there where treacheryBranded th' Apulian name, or where beyondThy walls, O Tagliacozzo, without armsThe old Alardo conquer'd; and his limbsOne were to show transpierc'd, another ...
Dante Alighieri
Childe Harold's Last Pilgrimage.
So ends Childe Harold his last pilgrimage!Above the Malian surge he stood, and cried,Liberty! and the shores, from age to ageRenowned, and Sparta's woods and rocks, replied,Liberty! But a spectre at his sideStood mocking, and its dart uplifting highSmote him; he sank to earth in life's fair pride:Sparta! thy rocks echoed another cry,And old Ilissus sighed, Die, generous exile, die!I will not ask sad pity to deploreHis wayward errors, who thus early died;Still less, Childe Harold, now thou art no more,Will I say aught of genius misapplied;Of the past shadows of thy spleen or pride.But I will bid the Arcadian cypress wave,Pluck the green laurel from Peneus' side,And pray thy spirit may such quiet have,That not one thought unkind be mu...
William Lisle Bowles
A Death
Crushed with a burden of woe,Wrecked in the tempest of sin:Death came, and two lips murmured low,"Ah! once I was white as the snow,In the happy and pure long ago;But they say God is sweet -- is it so?Will He let a poor wayward one in --In where the innocent are?Ah! justice stands guard at the gate;Does it mock at a poor sinner's fate?Alas! I have fallen so far!Oh, God! Oh, my God! 'tis too late!I have fallen as falls a lost star:"The sky does not miss the gone gleam,But my heart, like the lost star, can dreamOf the sky it has fall'n from. Nay!I have wandered too far -- far away.Oh! would that my mother were here;Is God like a mother? Has HeAny love for a sinner like me?"Her face wore the wildness of woe --
Abram Joseph Ryan
Katie, Aged Five Years.
(ASLEEP IN THE DAYTIME.)All rough winds are hushed and silent, golden light the meadow steepeth, And the last October roses daily wax more pale and fair;They have laid a gathered blossom on the breast of one who sleepeth With a sunbeam on her hair.Calm, and draped in snowy raiment she lies still, as one that dreameth, And a grave sweet smile hath parted dimpled lips that may not speak;Slanting down that narrow sunbeam like a ray of glory gleameth On the sainted brow and cheek.There is silence! They who watch her, speak no word of grief or wailing, In a strange unwonted calmness they gaze on and cannot cease,Though the pulse of life beat faintly, thought shrink back, and hope be failing, They, like Aaron, "hold their peace."
Jean Ingelow
Separation.
Parted cruelly from thee, What, Oh! what is life to me? 'Tis the morn without the lark; It is wine without its spark. Christmas time without its glee; Music without harmony. New Year's eve devoid of mirth; Winter night without the hearth. 'Tis a day without the light; 'Tis a moonless, starless night. Thorn-bush, barren of its leaf; Weeping, without its relief. 'Tis a fire, but unconsuming; Poisonous plant, but never blooming. Ship becalmed, without its peace; Death, without its sweet release.
W. M. MacKeracher