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Sonnet CCII.
I' ho pregato Amor, e nel riprego.HE PLEADS THE EXCESS OF HIS PASSION IN PALLIATION OF HIS FAULT. Oft have I pray'd to Love, and still I pray,My charming agony, my bitter joy!That he would crave your grace, if consciouslyFrom the right path my guilty footsteps stray.That Reason, which o'er happier minds holds sway,Is quell'd of Appetite, I not deny;And hence, through tracks my better thoughts would fly,The victor hurries me perforce away,You, in whose bosom Genius, Virtue reignWith mingled blaze lit by auspicious skies--Ne'er shower'd kind star its beams on aught so rare!You, you should say with pity, not disdain;"How could he 'scape, lost wretch! these lightning eyes--So passionate he, and I so direly fair?"WR...
Francesco Petrarca
Worn Out
You bid me hold my peaceAnd dry my fruitless tears,Forgetting that I bearA pain beyond my years.You say that I should smileAnd drive the gloom away;I would, but sun and smilesHave left my life's dark day.All time seems cold and void,And naught but tears remain;Life's music beats for meA melancholy strain.I used at first to hope,But hope is past and, gone;And now without a rayMy cheerless life drags on.Like to an ash-stained hearthWhen all its fires are spent;Like to an autumn woodBy storm winds rudely shent,--So sadly goes my heart,Unclothed of hope and peace;It asks not joy again,But only seeks release.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Mary.
The drowsy summer in the flowering limesHad laid her down at ease,Lulled by soft, sportive winds, whose tinkling chimesSummoned the wandering beesTo feast, and dance, and hold high carnivalWithin that vast and fragrant banquet-hall.She stood, my Mary, on the wall below,Poised on light, arching feet,And drew the long, green branches down to showWhere hung, mid odors sweet,--A tiny miracle to touch and view,--The humming-bird's, small nest and pearls of blue.Fair as the summer's self she stood, and smiled,With eyes like summer sky,Wistful and glad, half-matron and half-child,Gentle and proud and shy;Her sweet head framed against the blossoming bough,She stood a moment,--and she stands there now!'Tis sixteen years sin...
Susan Coolidge
At The Play
Just above the boxes and where the high lights fallLooketh down a carven face from out the gilded wall.Van Dyke beard and broidered ruff silently confessThat he lived - and loved perchance - in days of Good Queen Bess.(Laces fine and linen sheer, curled and perfumed hairWell became those gentlemen of gay, insouciant air.)See! He gazeth evermore at the stage below;Noteth well the players as they quickly come and go;Queens and kings and maidens fair, motley fools and friars,Lords and ladies, stately dames, mounted knights and squires.Well he knoweth all of them, all the grave and gay,These are they he dreamt of in the far and far away;Saints and sinners, see they come down the bygone years,And the world still shares with them its laughter and its...
Virna Sheard
Even So
The days go by, the days go by,Sadly and wearily to die:Each with its burden of small cares,Each with its sad gift of gray hairsFor those who sit, like me, and sigh,The days go by! The days go by!Ah, nevermore on shining plumes,Shedding a rain of rare perfumesThat men call memories, they are borneAs in lifes many-visioned morn,When Love sang in the myrtle-blooms,Ah, nevermore on shining plumes!Where is my life? Where is my life?The morning of my youth was rifeWith promise of a golden day.Where have my hopes gone? Where are they,The passion and the splendid strife?Where is my life? Where is my life?My thoughts take hue from this wild day,And, like the skies, are ashen gray;The sharp rain, falling cons...
Victor James Daley
The Sisters (1880)
They have left the doors ajar; and by their clash,And prelude on the keys, I know the song,Their favouritewhich I call The Tables Turned.Evelyn begins it O diviner Air.EVELYN.O diviner Air,Thro the heat, the drowth, the dust, the glare,Far from out the west in shadowing showers,Over all the meadow baked and bare,Making fresh and fairAll the bowers and the flowers,Fainting flowers, faded bowers,Over all this weary world of ours,Breathe, diviner Air!A sweet voice thatyou scarce could better that.Now follows Edith echoing Evelyn.EDITH.O diviner light,Thro the cloud that roofs our noon with night,Thro the blotting mist, the blinding showers,Far from out a sky for ever bright,Over ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Ritualist
He wore, I think, a chasuble, the day when first we met;A stole and snowy alb likewise, I recollect it yet.He called me daughter, as he raised his jeweled hand to bless;And then, in thrilling undertones, he asked, Would I confess?O mother dear! blame not your child, if then on bended kneesI dropped, and thought of Abelard, and also Eloise;Or when, beside the altar high, he bowed before the pyx,I envied that seraphic kiss he gave the crucifix.The cruel world may think it wrong, perhaps may deem me weak,And, speaking of that sainted man, may call his conduct cheek;And, like that wicked barrister whom Cousin Harry quotes,May term his mixed chalice grog, his vestments petticoats;But, whatsoeer they do or say, Ill build a Christians hope
Bret Harte
Life
All in the dark we grope along, And if we go amissWe learn at least which path is wrong, And there is gain in this.We do not always win the race By only running right;We have to tread the mountain's base Before we reach its height.The Christs alone no errors made; So often had they trodThe paths that lead through light and shade, They had become as God.As Krishna, Buddha, Christ again, They passed along the way,And left those mighty truths which men But dimly grasp to-day.But he who loves himself the last And knows the use of pain,Though strewn with errors all his past, He surely shall attain.Some souls there are that needs must taste Of wrong, ere choo...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Flower's Song
Star! Star, why dost thou shineEach night upon my brow?Why dost thou make me dream the dreamsThat I am dreaming now?Star! Star, thy home is high --I am of humble birth;Thy feet walk shining o'er the sky,Mine, only on the earth.Star! Star, why make me dream?My dreams are all untrue;And why is sorrow dark for meAnd heaven bright for you?Star! Star, oh, hide thy ray,And take it off my face;Within my lowly home I stay,Thou, in thy lofty place.Star! Star, and still I dream,Along thy light afarI seem to soar until I seemTo be, like you, a star.
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Revisitation
As I lay awake at night-timeIn an ancient country barrack known to ancient cannoneers,And recalled the hopes that heralded each seeming brave and bright timeOf my primal purple years,Much it haunted me that, nigh there,I had borne my bitterest loss - when One who went, came not again;In a joyless hour of discord, in a joyless-hued July there -A July just such as then.And as thus I brooded longer,With my faint eyes on the feeble square of wan-lit window frame,A quick conviction sprung within me, grew, and grew yet stronger,That the month-night was the same,Too, as that which saw her leave meOn the rugged ridge of Waterstone, the peewits plaining round;And a lapsing twenty years had ruled that - as it were to grieve me -I should near ...
Thomas Hardy
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LVIII.
O giorno, o ora, o ultimo momento.HE MOURNS HIS WANT OF PERCEPTION AT THAT MEETING. O Day, O hour, O moment sweetest, last,O stars conspired to make me poor indeed!O look too true, in which I seem'd to read.At parting, that my happiness was past;Now my full loss I know, I feel at last:Then I believed (ah! weak and idle creed!)'Twas but a part alone I lost; instead,Was there a hope that flew not with the blast?For, even then, it was in heaven ordain'dThat the sweet light of all my life should die:'Twas written in her sadly-pensive eye!But mine unconscious of the truth remain'd;Or, what it would not see, to see refrain'd,That I might sink in sudden misery!MOREHEAD. Dark hour, last moment of t...
The Star To Its Light
"Go," said the star to its light:"Follow your fathomless flight!Into the dreams of spaceCarry the joy of my face.Go," said the star to its light:"Tell me the tale of your flight."As the mandate rangThe heavens through,Quick the ray sprang:Unheard it flew,Sped by the touch of an unseen spur.It crumbled the dusk of the deepThat folds the worlds in sleep,And shot through night with noiseless stir.Then came the day;And all that swift arrayOf diamond-sparkles died.And lo! the far star cried:"My light has lost its way!"Ages on ages passed:The light returned, at last."What have you seen,What have you heard -O ray serene,O flame-winged birdI loosed on endless air?Why do you l...
George Parsons Lathrop
My Cicely
"Alive?" And I leapt in my wonder,Was faint of my joyance,And grasses and grove shone in garmentsOf glory to me."She lives, in a plenteous well-being,To-day as aforehand;The dead bore the name though a rare one -The name that bore she."She lived . . . I, afar in the cityOf frenzy-led factions,Had squandered green years and maturerIn bowing the kneeTo Baals illusive and specious,Till chance had there voiced meThat one I loved vainly in nonageHad ceased her to be.The passion the planets had scowled on,And change had let dwindle,Her death-rumour smartly reliftedTo full apogee.I mounted a steed in the dawningWith acheful remembrance,And made for the ancient West HighwayTo far E...
Sonnet II
Not that I always struck the proper meanOf what mankind must give for what they gain,But, when I think of those whom dull routineAnd the pursuit of cheerless toil enchain,Who from their desk-chairs seeing a summer cloudRace through blue heaven on its joyful courseSigh sometimes for a life less cramped and bowed,I think I might have done a great deal worse;For I have ever gone untied and free,The stars and my high thoughts for company;Wet with the salt-spray and the mountain showers,I have had the sense of space and amplitude,And love in many places, silver-shoed,Has come and scattered all my path with flowers.
Alan Seeger
The Worship Of Nature
The harp at Nature's advent strungHas never ceased to play;The song the stars of morning sungHas never died away.And prayer is made, and praise is given,By all things near and far;The ocean looketh up to heaven,And mirrors every star.Its waves are kneeling on the strand,As kneels the human knee,Their white locks bowing to the sand,The priesthood of the sea!They pour their glittering treasures forth,Their gifts of pearl they bring,And all the listening hills of earthTake up the song they sing.The green earth sends its incense upFrom many a mountain shrine;From folded leaf and dewy cupShe pours her sacred wine.The mists above the morning rillsRise white as wings of prayer;The altar...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Providential Escape.
Providential escape of Ruby and Neil McLeod, children of Angus McLeod of this town. Little Neil McKay McLeod, a child of three years of age, was carried under a covered raceway, upwards of one hundred yards, the whole distance being either covered o'er with roadway, buildings or ice. A wondrous tale we now do trace Of little children fell in race, The youngest of these little dears, The boy's age is but three years. While coasting o'er the treacherous ice, These precious pearls of great price, The elder Ruby, the daughter, Was rescued from the ice cold water. But horrid death each one did feel, Had sure befallen little Neil, Consternation all did fill, And they ...
James McIntyre
War.
Dark spirit! who through every age Hast cast a baleful gloom;Stern lord of strife and civil rage, The dungeon and the tomb!What homage should men pay to thee,Spirit of woe and anarchy?Yet there are those who in thy train Can feel a fierce delight;Who rush, exulting, to the plain, And triumph in the fight,Where the red banner floats afarAlong the crimson tide of war.Who is the knight on sable steed, That comes with thundering tread?Dark warrior, slack thy furious speed, Nor trample on the dead:A youthful chief before thee lies,Struggling in life's last agonies.Oh pause one moment in thy course, Those lineaments to trace;Dost thou not feel a strange remorse, Whilst gazing on ...
Susanna Moodie
Heaven.
Heaven is most fair; but fairer HeThat made that fairest canopy.
Robert Herrick