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Mi Fayther's Pipe.
Aw've a treasure yo'd laff if yo saw,But its mem'ries are dear to mi heart;For aw've oft seen it stuck in a jaw,Whear it seem'd to form ommost a part.Its net worth a hawpny, aw know,But its given mooar pleasure maybe,Nor some things at mak far mooar show,An yo can't guess its vally to me.Mi fayther wor fond ov his pipe,An this wor his favorite clay;An if mi ideas wor ripe,Awd enshrine it ith' folds ov a lay;But words allus fail to expressWhat aw think when aw see its old face;For aw know th' world holds one friend the less,An mi hearth has one mooar vacant place.Ov trubbles his life had its share,But he kept all his griefs to hissen;Tho aw've oft seen his brow knit wi care,Wol he tried to crack jooaks nah an then.<...
John Hartley
Suppose
If 'twere fair to supposeThat your heart were not taken,That the dew from the rosePetals still were not shaken,I should pluck you,Howe'er you should thorn me and scorn me,And wear you for life as the green of the bower.If 'twere fair to supposeThat that road was for vagrants,That the wind and the rose,Counted all in their fragrance;Oh, my dear one,By love, I should take you and make you,The green of my life from the scintillant hour.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
My Land.
I.She is a rich and rare land;Oh! she's a fresh and fair land;She is a dear and rare land--This native land of mine.II.No men than her's are braver--Her women's hearts ne'er waver;I'd freely die to save her,And think my lot divine.III.She's not a dull or cold land;No! she's a warm and bold land;Oh! she's a true and old land--This native land of mine.IV.Could beauty ever guard her,And virtue still reward her,No foe would cross her border--No friend within it pine!V.Oh! she's a fresh and fair land;Oh! she's a true and rare land;Yes! she's a rare and fair land--This native land of mine.
Thomas Osborne Davis
Flood
White ermine/white semen, green eyes jade from the night. Eternity falls in sparrow, an inch-worm down a pear-coloured leg, within this droplet lies coiled raptures of a snake, anointed coils musky as in woolen handshake where tributaries turn into socks wrapped to the vertebrae clasp of a teenager's leg. My fingers are frying skillets slow-boiling water, with precision, your rivers & chasms, a vagina white knuckle rafting across your enchantment.
Paul Cameron Brown
The Dying Lover
I cannot change, as others do,Though you unjustly scorn;Since that poor swain that sighs for you,For you alone was born.No, Phyllis, no, your heart to moveA surer way I'll try:And to revenge my slighted love,Will still love on, will still love on, and die.When, killed with grief, Amintas liesAnd you to mind shall call,The sighs that now unpitied rise,The tears that vainly fall,That welcome hour that ends this smartWill then begin your pain;For such a faithful tender heartCan never break, can never break in vain.
John Wilmot
Lucy: - A Song.
Thy favourite Bird is soaring still:My Lucy, haste thee o'er the dale;The Stream's let loose, and from the MillAll silent comes the balmy gale;Yet, so lightly on its way,Seems to whisper 'Holiday.'The pathway flowers that bending meetAnd give the Meads their yellow hue,The May-bush and the Meadow-sweetReserve their fragrance all for you.Why then, Lucy, why delay?Let us share the Holiday.Since there thy smiles, my charming Maid,Are with unfeigned rapture seen,To Beauty be the homage paid;Come, claim the triumph of the Green.Here's my hand, come, come away;Share the merry Holiday.A promise too my Lucy made,(And shall my heart its claim resign?)That ere May-flowers again should fade,Her heart and han...
Robert Bloomfield
General Confession.
In this noble ring to-dayLet my warning shame ye!Listen to my solemn voice,Seldom does it name ye.Many a thing have ye intended,Many a thing have badly ended,And now I must blame ye.At some moment in our livesWe must all repent us!So confess, with pious trust,All your sins momentous!Error's crooked pathways shunning.Let us, on the straight road running,Honestly content us!Yes! we've oft, when waking, dream'd,Let's confess it rightly;Left undrain'd the brimming cup,When it sparkled brightly;Many a shepherd's-hour's soft blisses,Many a dear mouth's flying kissesWe've neglected lightly.Mute and silent have we sat,Whilst the blockheads ...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
To The Memory Of Raisley Calvert
Calvert! it must not be unheard by themWho may respect my name, that I to theeOwed many years of early liberty.This care was thine when sickness did condemnThy youth to hopeless wasting, root and stemThat I, if frugal and severe, might strayWhere'er I liked; and finally arrayMy temples with the Muse's diadem.Hence, if in freedom I have loved the truth;If there be aught of pure, or good, or great,In my past verse; or shall be, in the laysOf higher mood, which now I meditate;It gladdens me, O worthy, short-lived, Youth!To think how much of this will be thy praise.
William Wordsworth
To An Old Danish Song-Book
Welcome, my old friend,Welcome to a foreign fireside,While the sullen gales of autumnShake the windows.The ungrateful worldHas, it seems, dealt harshly with thee,Since, beneath the skies of Denmark,First I met thee.There are marks of age,There are thumb-marks on thy margin,Made by hands that clasped thee rudely,At the alehouse.Soiled and dull thou art;Yellow are thy time-worn pages,As the russet, rain-molestedLeaves of autumn.Thou art stained with wineScattered from hilarious goblets,As the leaves with the libationsOf Olympus.Yet dost thou recallDays departed, half-forgotten,When in dreamy youth I wanderedBy the Baltic,--When I paused to hearThe old ballad...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Common Fate.
See how we hate, how we quarrel, how thought and how feeling divide us!But thy locks, friend, like mine, meanwhile are bleachening fast.
Friedrich Schiller
At Twilight Time
At twilight time when tolls the chime, And saddest notes are falling,A lonely bird with plaintive word Across the dusk is calling.Vain doth it wait for one dear mate, That ne'er shall know the morrow;Then sinks to rest with drooping crest In one long dream of sorrow.Dearest, when night is here, To thee I'm calling,Sadly as tear on tear Is slowly falling,Oh, fold me near, more near - In love enthralling!Here on thy breast, While life shall last,With thee I stay. Here will I restTill night is past, And comes the day!
Arthur Macy
At Oxford, 1786
Bereave me not of Fancy's shadowy dreams,Which won my heart, or when the gay careerOf life begun, or when at times a tearSat sad on memory's cheek--though loftier themesAwait the awakened mind to the high prizeOf wisdom, hardly earned with toil and pain,Aspiring patient; yet on life's wide plainLeft fatherless, where many a wanderer sighsHourly, and oft our road is lone and long,'Twere not a crime should we a while delayAmid the sunny field; and happier theyWho, as they journey, woo the charm of song,To cheer their way; till they forget to weep,And the tired sense is hushed, and sinks to sleep.
William Lisle Bowles
A Reverie.
When I do sit apart And commune with my heart,She brings me forth the treasures once my own; Shows me a happy place Where leaf-buds swelled apace,And wasting rims of snow in sunlight shone. Rock, in a mossy glade, The larch-trees lend thee shade,That just begin to feather with their leaves; From out thy crevice deep White tufts of snowdrops peep,And melted rime drips softly from thine eaves. Ah, rock, I know, I know That yet thy snowdrops grow,And yet doth sunshine fleck them through the tree, Whose sheltering branches hide The cottage at its side,That nevermore will shade or shelter me. I know the stockdoves' note ...
Jean Ingelow
Song.
When you mournfully rivet your tear-laden eyes, That have seen the last sunset of hope pass away,On some bright orb that seems, through the still sapphire skies, In beauty and splendour to roll on its way:Oh, remember this earth, if beheld from afar, Appears wrapt in a halo as soft, and as bright,As the pure silver radiance enshrining yon star, Where your spirit is eagerly soaring to-night.And at this very midnight, perhaps some poor heart, That is aching, or breaking, in that distant sphere;Gazes down on this dark world, and longs to depart From its own dismal home, to a happier one here.
Frances Anne Kemble
The Sonnets VIII - Music to hear, why hearst thou music sadly?
Music to hear, why hearst thou music sadly?Sweets with sweets war not, joy delights in joy:Why lovst thou that which thou receivst not gladly,Or else receivst with pleasure thine annoy?If the true concord of well-tuned sounds,By unions married, do offend thine ear,They do but sweetly chide thee, who confoundsIn singleness the parts that thou shouldst bear.Mark how one string, sweet husband to another,Strikes each in each by mutual ordering;Resembling sire and child and happy mother,Who, all in one, one pleasing note do sing:Whose speechless song being many, seeming one,Sings this to thee: Thou single wilt prove none.
William Shakespeare
The Sleeper.
She sleeps and dreams; one milk-white, lawny armPillowing her heavy hair, as might cold NightMeeting her sister Day, with glory warm,Subside in languor on her bosom's white.The naked other on the damask cloth, -White, smooth, and light as the light thistle-down,Or the pink, fairy, fluffy evening mothOn June-drunk beds of roses red, - lies thrown.And one sweet cheek, kissed with the enamored moon,Grown pale with anger at the liberty.While, dusk in darkness, at the favor shownThe pouting other frowns still envity.Hangs fall'n in folds the rich, dark covering,With fretfulness thrust partly from her breast;As through storm-broken clouds the moon might spring,From this the orb of one pure bosom prest.She sleeps; and where the...
Madison Julius Cawein
To The Invisible Girl.
They try to persuade me, my dear little sprite,That you're not a true daughter of ether and light,Nor have any concern with those fanciful formsThat dance upon rainbows and ride upon storms;That, in short, you're a woman; your lip and your eyeAs mortal as ever drew gods from the sky.But I will not believe them--no, Science, to youI have long bid a last and a careless adieu:Still flying from Nature to study her laws,And dulling delight by exploring its cause,You forget how superior, for mortals below,Is the fiction they dream to the truth that they know.Oh! who, that has e'er enjoyed rapture complete,Would ask how we feel it, or why it is sweet;How rays are confused, or how particles flyThrough the medium refined of a glance or a ...
Thomas Moore
Sonnet XI.
How sweet to rove, from summer sun-beams veil'd, In gloomy dingles; or to trace the tide Of wandering brooks, their pebbly beds that chide; To feel the west-wind cool refreshment yield,That comes soft creeping o'er the flowery field, And shadow'd waters; in whose bushy side The Mountain-Bees their fragrant treasure hide Murmuring; and sings the lonely Thrush conceal'd! -Then, Ceremony, in thy gilded halls, Where forc'd and frivolous the themes arise, With bow and smile unmeaning, O! how pallsAt thee, and thine, my sense! - how oft it sighs For leisure, wood-lanes, dells, and water-falls; And feels th' untemper'd heat of sultry skies!
Anna Seward