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Alciphron: A Fragment. Letter II.
FROM THE SAME TO THE SAME.Memphis.'Tis true, alas--the mysteries and the loreI came to study on this, wondrous shore.Are all forgotten in the new delights.The strange, wild joys that fill my days and nights.Instead of dark, dull oracles that speakFrom subterranean temples, those I seekCome from the breathing shrines where Beauty lives,And Love, her priest, the soft responses gives.Instead of honoring Isis in those ritesAt Coptos held, I hail her when she lightsHer first young crescent on the holy stream--When wandering youths and maidens watch her beamAnd number o'er the nights she hath to run,Ere she again embrace her bridegroom sun.While o'er some mystic leaf that dimly lendsA clew into past times the stu...
Thomas Moore
We Too Shall Sleep
Not, not for thee,Beloved child, the burning grasp of lifeShall bruise the tender soul. The noise, and strife,And clamour of midday thou shall not see;But wrapt for ever in thy quiet grave,Too little to have known the earthly lot,Time's clashing hosts above thine innocent head,Wave upon wave,Shall break, or pass as with an army's tread,And harm thee not.A few short yearsWe of the living flesh and restless brainShall plumb the deeps of life and know the strain,The fleeting gleams of joy, the fruitless tears;And then at last when all is touched and tried,Our own immutable night shall fall, and deepIn the same silent plot, O little friend,Side by thy side,In peace that changeth not, nor knoweth end,We too shall sleep.
Archibald Lampman
Unknowing
When, soul in soul reflected,We breathed an aethered air,When we neglectedAll things elsewhere,And left the friendly friendlessTo keep our love aglow,We deemed it endless . . .We did not know!When, by mad passion goaded,We planned to hie away,But, unforeboded,The storm-shafts graySo heavily down-patteredThat none could forthward go,Our lives seemed shattered . . .We did not know!When I found you, helpless lying,And you waived my deep misprise,And swore me, dying,In phantom-guiseTo wing to me when grieving,And touch away my woe,We kissed, believing . . .We did not know!But though, your powers outreckoning,You hold you dead and dumb,Or scorn my beckoning,And will ...
Thomas Hardy
To R. B.
The fine delight that fathers thought; the strongSpur, live and lancing like the blowpipe flame,Breathes once and, quenchèd faster than it came,Leaves yet the mind a mother of immortal song.Nine months she then, nay years, nine years she longWithin her wears, bears, cares and moulds the same:The widow of an insight lost she lives, with aimNow known and hand at work now never wrong.Sweet fire the sire of muse, my soul needs this;I want the one rapture of an inspiration.O then if in my lagging lines you missThe roll, the rise, the carol, the creation,My winter world, that scarcely breathes that blissNow, yields you, with some sighs, our explanation.
Gerard Manley Hopkins
Endymion (For Music)
The apple trees are hung with gold,And birds are loud in Arcady,The sheep lie bleating in the fold,The wild goat runs across the wold,But yesterday his love he told,I know he will come back to me.O rising moon! O Lady moon!Be you my lover's sentinel,You cannot choose but know him well,For he is shod with purple shoon,You cannot choose but know my love,For he a shepherd's crook doth bear,And he is soft as any dove,And brown and curly is his hair.The turtle now has ceased to callUpon her crimson-footed groom,The grey wolf prowls about the stall,The lily's singing seneschalSleeps in the lily-bell, and allThe violet hills are lost in gloom.O risen moon! O holy moon!Stand on the top of Helice,And if my...
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
The Birthright
The miracle of our land's speech so knownAnd long received, none marvel when 'tis shown!We have such wealth as Rome at her most prideHad not or (having) scattered not so wide;Nor with such arrant prodigality,Beneath her any pagan's foot let lie...Lo! Diamond that cost some half their daysTo find and t'other half to bring to blaze:Rubies of every heat, wherethrough we scanThe fiercer and more fiery heart of man:Emerald that with the uplifted billow vies,And Sapphires evening remembered skies:Pearl perfect, as immortal tears must show,Bred, in deep waters, of a piercing woe;And tender Turkis, so with charms y-writ,Of woven gold, Time dares not bite on it.Thereafter, in all manners worked and set,Jade, coral, amber, crystal ivories, je...
Rudyard
The Poet And His Book
Down, you mongrel, Death! Back into your kennel! I have stolen breath In a stalk of fennel! You shall scratch and you shall whine Many a night, and you shall worry Many a bone, before you bury One sweet bone of mine! When shall I be dead? When my flesh is withered, And above my head Yellow pollen gathered All the empty afternoon? When sweet lovers pause and wonder Who am I that lie thereunder, Hidden from the moon? This my personal death?-- That lungs be failing To inhale the breath Others are exhaling? This my subtle spirit...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
The Light That Is Felt
A tender child of summers three,Seeking her little bed at night,Paused on the dark stair timidly."Oh, mother! Take my hand," said she,"And then the dark will all be light."We older children grope our wayFrom dark behind to dark before;And only when our hands we lay,Dear Lord, in Thine, the night is day,And there is darkness nevermore.Reach downward to the sunless daysWherein our guides are blind as we,And faith is small and hope delays;Take Thou the hands of prayer we raise,And let us feel the light of Thee
John Greenleaf Whittier
Summer Noontide
The slender snail clings to the leaf,Gray on its silvered underside;And slowly, slowlier than the snail, with briefBright steps, whose ripening touch foretells the sheaf,Her warm hands berry-dyed,Comes down the tanned Noontide.The pungent fragrance of the mintAnd pennyroyal drench her gown,That leaves long shreds of trumpet-blossom tintAmong the thorns, and everywhere the glintOf gold and white and brownHer flowery steps waft down.The leaves, like hands with emerald veined,Along her way try their wild bestTo reach the jewel whose hot hue was drainedFrom some rich rose that all the June containedThe butterfly, soft pressedUpon her sunny breast.Her shawl, the lace-like elder bloom,She hangs upon the hillside br...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Three Urgandas.
Cast on sleep there came to meThree Urgandas; and the seaIn lost lands of BriogneSounded moaning, moaning:Cloudy clad in awful white;And each face a lucid lightRayed and blossomed out of night, -And a wind was groaning.In my sleep I saw them rest,Each a long hand at her breast,A soft flame that lulls the West; -And the sea was moaning, moaning; -Hair like hoarded ingots rolledDown white shoulders glossy gold,Streaks of molten moonlight cold, -And a wind was groaning.Rosy 'round each high brow bentFour-fold starry gold that sentBarbs of fire redolent; -And the sea was moaning, moaning; -'Neath their burning crowns their eyesBurned like southern stars the skiesRock in shattered storm that flies, -
Before Sunset
Love's twilight wanes in heaven above,On earth ere twilight reigns:Ere fear may feel the chill thereof,Love's twilight wanes.Ere yet the insatiate heart complains'Too much, and scarce enough,'The lip so late athirst refrains.Soft on the neck of either doveLove's hands let slip the reins:And while we look for light of loveLove's twilight wanes.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Garden
My heart is a garden tired with autumn,Heaped with bending asters and dahlias heavy and dark,In the hazy sunshine, the garden remembers April,The drench of rains and a snow-drop quick and clear as a spark;Daffodils blowing in the cold wind of morning,And golden tulips, goblets holding the rain,The garden will be hushed with snow, forgotten soon, forgotten,After the stillness, will spring come again?
Sara Teasdale
Prefatory. to Proverbial Philosophy
Thoughts, that have tarried in my mind, and peopled its inner chambers,The sober children of reason, or desultory train of fancy;Clear-running wine of conviction, with the scum and the lees of speculation;Corn from the sheaves of science, with stubble from mine own garner:Searchings after Truth, that have tracked her secret lodes.And come up again to the surface-world, with a know-ledge grounded deeper;Arguments of high scope, that have soared to the key-stone of heaven.And thence have swooped to their certain mark, as the falcon to its quarry;The fruits I have gathered of prudence, the ripened harvest of my musings.These commend I unto thee, docile scholar of Wisdom,These I give to thy gentle heart, thou lover of the right.What, though a guilty man renew that hallowed ...
Martin Farquhar Tupper
Odes Of Anacreon - Ode LV.
[1]While we invoke the wreathed spring,Resplendent rose! to thee we'll sing;Resplendent rose, the flower of flowers,Whose breath perfumes the Olympian bowers;Whose virgin blush, of chastened dye,Enchants so much our mortal eye.When pleasure's spring-tide season glows.The Graces love to wreathe the rose;And Venus, in its fresh-blown leaves,An emblem of herself perceives.Oft hath the poet's magic tongueThe rose's fair luxuriance sung;And long the Muses, heavenly maids,Have reared it in their tuneful shades.When, at the early glance of morn,It sleeps upon the glittering thorn,'Tis sweet to dare the tangled fenceTo cull the timid floweret thence,And wipe with tender hand awayThe tear that on its blushe...
To Cara, On The Dawning Of A New Year's Day.
When midnight came to close the year, We sighed to think it thus should takeThe hours it gave us--hours as dear As sympathy and love could makeTheir blessed moments,--every sunSaw us, my love, more closely one.But, Cara, when the dawn was nigh Which came a new year's light to shed,That smile we caught from eye to eye Told us, those moments were not fled:Oh, no,--we felt, some future sunShould see us still more closely one.Thus may we ever, side by side,From happy years to happier glide;And still thus may the passing sigh We give to hours, that vanish o'er us,Be followed by the smiling eye, That Hope shall shed on scenes before us!
Keeping Tryst
Who is the maid with silken hair By clear Maine Water roaming?For the fairy Queen is not so fair As she in the lonely gloamingIt is sweet Mysie of Bellee, John Millar's lovely daughter;She is waiting where the old elm tree Droops over the sweet Maine Water."The trysting time has come and past, The day is fast declining;Oh my true love, are you coming fast, For the star of love is shining?""The moon is bright, the ford is safe, The market folks crossed over;Oh, come to me, it is wearing late, And I wait for thee, my lover."I fear me there will be a storm, The clouds, with murky fingers,Are muffling the stars o'er far Galgorm, Where my own true lover lingers."She ...
Nora Pembroke
To Daffodils
Fair Daffodils, we weep to seeYou haste away so soon;As yet the early-rising sunHas not attain'd his noon.Stay, stay,Until the hasting dayHas runBut to the even-song;And, having pray'd together, weWill go with you along.We have short time to stay, as you,We have as short a spring;As quick a growth to meet decay,As you, or anything.We dieAs your hours do, and dryAway,Like to the summer's rain;Or as the pearls of morning's dew,Ne'er to be found again.
Robert Herrick
The Voices Of The City
The voices of the city - merged and swelledInto a mighty dissonance of sound,And from the medley rose these broken strainsIn changing time and ever-changing keys.IPleasure seekers, silken clad, Led by cherub Day,Ours the duty to be glad, Ours the toil of play.Sleep has bound the commonplace, Pleasure rules the dawn.Small hours set the merry pace And we follow on.We must use the joys of earth, All its cares we'll keep;Night was made for youth and mirth, Day was made for sleep.Time has cut his beard, and lo! He is but a boy,Singing, on with him we go, Ah! but life is joy.IIWe are the vendors of beauty, We the purveyors for hell;The...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox