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To ---- .
Strange was the doom of Heracles, whose shade Had dwelling in dim Hades the unblest, While yet his form and presence sat a guestWith the old immortals when the feast was made.Thine like, thus differs; form and presence laid In this dim chamber of enforcèd rest, It is the unseen "shade" which, risen, hath pressedAbove all heights where feet Olympian strayed.My soul admires to hear thee speak; thy thought Falls from a high place like an August star,Or some great eagle from his air-hung rings - When swooping past a snow-cold mountain scar -Down he steep slope of a long sunbeam brought, He stirs the wheat with the steerage of his wings.
Jean Ingelow
Sehnsucht
Whence are ye, vague desires,Which carry men along,However proud and strong;Which, having ruled to-day,To-morrow pass away?Whence are ye, vague desires?Whence are ye?Which women, yielding to,Find still so good and true;So true, so good to-day,To-morrow gone away.Whence are ye, vague desires?Whence are ye?From seats of bliss above,Where angels sing of love;From subtle airs around,Or from the vulgar ground,Whence are ye, vague desires?Whence are ye?A message from the blest,Or bodily unrest;A call to heavenly good,A fever in the bloodWhat are ye, vague desires?What are ye?Which men who know you bestAre proof against the least,And rushing on to-day,To-mo...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Epistle To My Brother George
Full many a dreary hour have I past,My brain bewildered, and my mind o'ercastWith heaviness; in seasons when I've thoughtNo spherey strains by me could e'er be caughtFrom the blue dome, though I to dimness gazeOn the far depth where sheeted lightning plays;Or, on the wavy grass outstretched supinely,Pry 'mong the stars, to strive to think divinely:That I should never hear Apollo's song,Though feathery clouds were floating all alongThe purple west, and, two bright streaks between,The golden lyre itself were dimly seen:That the still murmur of the honey beeWould never teach a rural song to me:That the bright glance from beauty's eyelids slantingWould never make a lay of mine enchanting,Or warm my breast with ardour to unfoldSome tale of lov...
John Keats
The Mother Of Poets. To H. F. H.
The typewriter ticketh no more in the twilight;The mother of poets is sitting alone;Only the katydid teases the noonday;Where are the good-for-naught wanderbirds flown?Tom's in the North with his purple impressions;Dickon's in London a-building his fame;Fred's in the mountains a-minding his cattle;Kavanagh's teaching and preaching and game.Over in Kingscroft a toiler is writing,The boyish Old Man whom no fate ever floored;Karl's in New York with his briefs and his logic,That subtile mind like a velvet-sheathed sword.Blomidon welcomes his brother in silence;Grand Pré is luring him back to her breast;Faint and far off are the cries of the city,There in the country of infinite rest.All of them turn in their wide vagabondage...
Bliss Carman
The Country Gods
I dwell, with all things great and fair:The green earth and the lustral air,The sacred spaces of the sea,Day in, day out, companion me.Pure-faced, pure-thoughted, folk are mineWith whom to sit and laugh and dine;In every sunlit room is heardLove singing, like an April bird,And everywhere the moonlit eyesOf beauty guard our paradise;While, at the ending of the day,To the kind country gods we pray,And dues of our fair living pay.Thus, when, reluctant, to the townI go, with country sunshine brown,So small and strange all seems to me -the boonfellow of the sea -That these town-people say and be:Their insect lives, their insect talk,Their busy little insect walk,Their busy little insect stings -And all the while t...
Richard Le Gallienne
To Electra.
'Tis evening, my sweet,And dark, let us meet;Long time w'ave here been a-toying,And never, as yet,That season could getWherein t'ave had an enjoying.For pity or shame,Then let not love's flameBe ever and ever a-spending;Since now to the portThe path is but short,And yet our way has no ending.Time flies away fast,Our hours do waste,The while we never rememberHow soon our life, here,Grows old with the yearThat dies with the next December.
Robert Herrick
Fear
I know where lurkThe eyes of Fear;I, I alone,Where shadowy-clear,Watching for me,Lurks Fear.'Tis ever stillAnd dark, despiteAll singing andAll candlelight,'Tis ever cold,And night.He touches me;Says quietly,"Stir not, nor whisper,I am nigh;Walk noiseless on,I am by!"He drives meAs a dog a sheep;Like a cold stoneI cannot weep.He lifts meHot from sleepIn marble handsTo where on highThe jewelled horrorOf his eyeDares me to struggleOr cry.No breast whereinTo chase awayThat watchful shape!Vain, vain to say"Haunt not with nightThe Day!"
Walter De La Mare
The Rape of the Lock (Canto 4)
But anxious cares the pensive nymph oppress'd,And secret passions labour'd in her breast.Not youthful kings in battle seiz'd alive,Not scornful virgins who their charms survive,Not ardent lovers robb'd of all their bliss,Not ancient ladies when refus'd a kiss,Not tyrants fierce that unrepenting die,Not Cynthia when her manteau's pinn'd awry,E'er felt such rage, resentment, and despair,As thou, sad virgin! for thy ravish'd hair.For, that sad moment, when the Sylphs withdrew,And Ariel weeping from Belinda flew,Umbriel, a dusky, melancholy sprite,As ever sullied the fair face of light,Down to the central earth, his proper scene,Repair'd to search the gloomy cave of Spleen.Swift on his sooty pinions flits the Gnome,And in a vapour...
Alexander Pope
The Sculptor.
The dream fell on him one calm summer night, Stealing amid the waving of the corn, That waited, golden, for the harvest morn--The dream fell on him through the still moonlight.The land lay silent, and the new mown hay Rested upon it like a dreamy sleep; And stealing softly o'er each yellow heap,The night-breeze bore sweet incense-breath away.The dew lay thick upon the unstirr'd leaves; The glow-worm glisten'd brightly as he pass'd; The thrush still chaunted, but the swallows fastHied to their home beneath lone cottage eaves.He had been straying through the land that day, Dreaming of beauty as some dream of love; And all the earth beneath, the heaven above,In mirror'd glory on his spirit lay.And, a...
Walter R. Cassels
Dennis Invitation To Steele; Horace, Book I, Ep. V
JOHN DENNIS, THE SHELTERING POET'S INVITATION TO RICHARD STEELE, THE SECLUDED PARTY-WRITER AND MEMBER, TO COME AND LIVE WITH HIM, IN THE MINT 1714Fit to be bound up with "The Crisis"If thou canst lay aside a spendthrift's air,And condescend to feed on homely fare,Such as we minters, with ragouts unstored,Will, in defiance of the law, afford:Quit thy patrols with Toby's Christmas box,[1]And come to me at The Two Fighting Cocks;Since printing by subscription now is grownThe stalest, idlest cheat about the town;And ev'n Charles Gildon, who, a Papist bred,Has an alarm against that worship spread,Is practising those beaten paths of cruising,And for new levies on proposals musing. 'Tis true, that Bloomsbury-squares a noble place:But w...
Jonathan Swift
To Isabel.
Come near me with thy lips, and, breathe o'er mine Their breath, for I consume with love's desire, -Thine ivory arms about me clasp and twine, And beam upon mine eye thine eye's soft fire;Clasp me yet closer, till my heart feels thine Thrill, as the chords of Memnon's mystic lyreThrilled at the sun's uprising! thou who artThe lone, the worshipped idol of my heart!There! balmier than the south wind, when it brings The scent of aromatic shrub and tree,And tropic flower on ifs glowing wings, Thine odorous breath is wafted over me;How to thy dewy lips mine own lip clings, And my whole being is absorbed in thee;And in my breast thine eyes have lit a fireThat never, never, never shall expire!Eternal - is it not eternal -...
George W. Sands
Young Love VIII - Orbits
Two stars once on their lonely wayMet in the heavenly height,And they dreamed a dream they might shine alwayWith undivided light;Melt into one with a breathless throe,And beam as one in the night.And each forgot in the dream so strangeHow desolately farSwept on each path, for who shall changeThe orbit of a star?Yea, all was a dream, and they still must goAs lonely as they are.
I'd Back Agen The World
She's not like an empress,And crowned with raven hair,She is not pert an bonny,Nor winsome, wee, an fair.But when a mans in trouble,And darkest shadows fall,Shes just a little womanId back against them all.Id back against them all,When friends on rocks are hurled,Oh, shes the little womanId back against the world.She has her little temper(As all the world can know)When things are running smoothly,She sometimes lets it go;But when the sea is stormy,And clouds are like a pall,Oh, shes the little womanId back against them all.Id back against the world,When darkest shadows fall,Oh, shes the little womanId back against them all.Shes had to stand at businessTill...
Henry Lawson
To His Saviour, A Child; A Present, By A Child
Go, pretty child, and bear this flowerUnto thy little Saviour;And tell him, by that bud now blown,He is the Rose of Sharon known.When thou hast said so, stick it thereUpon his bib or stomacher;And tell him, for good handsel too,That thou hast brought a whistle new,Made of a clean straight oaten reed,To charm his cries at time of need;Tell him, for coral, thou hast none,But if thou hadst, he should have one;But poor thou art, and known to beEven as moneyless as he.Lastly, if thou canst win a kissFrom those mellifluous lips of his;Then never take a second on,To spoil the first impression.
Lamentation
(WALTER AND FREDDIE.)From morn to eve, from evening unto morning, I mourn and cannot rest;So mourns the mother bird when home returning She finds an empty nest.I mourn the little children of my dwelling, That are forever gone,Sorrows that mothers feel my heart is swelling, And so I make my moan.One little blossom on my bosom faded, And passed from me away,But near my door the drooping willows shaded My little boys at playMy boys that came with flying feet to meet me, And questions wondrous wise,And bits of news which they had brought to greet me, And see my glad surpriseBitter for sweet no human hand can alter Nor bid one sorrow pass,With sudden stroke our darling ...
Nora Pembroke
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto XIV
"Say who is he around our mountain winds,Or ever death has prun'd his wing for flight,That opes his eyes and covers them at will?""I know not who he is, but know thus muchHe comes not singly. Do thou ask of him,For thou art nearer to him, and take heedAccost him gently, so that he may speak."Thus on the right two Spirits bending eachToward the other, talk'd of me, then bothAddressing me, their faces backward lean'd,And thus the one began: "O soul, who yetPent in the body, tendest towards the sky!For charity, we pray thee' comfort us,Recounting whence thou com'st, and who thou art:For thou dost make us at the favour shown theeMarvel, as at a thing that ne'er hath been.""There stretches through the midst of Tuscany,"I stra...
Dante Alighieri
Sitting by the Fire
Barren age and withered World!Oh! the dying leaves,Like a drizzling rain,Falling round the roofPattering on the pane!Frosty Age and cold, cold World!Ghosts of other days,Trooping past the faded fire,Flit before the gaze.Now the wind goes soughing wildOer the whistling Earth;And we front a feeble flame,Sitting round the hearth!Sitting by the fire,Watching in its glow,Ghosts of other daysTrooping to and fro.. . . . .Oh, the nights the nights weve spent,Sitting by the fire,Cheerful in its glow;Twenty summers backTwenty years ago!If the days were days of toilWherefore should we mourn;There were shadows near the shine,Flowers with the thorn?And we still can r...
Henry Kendall
Now Hark, Little May
"Now hark, little May, If you want to do right, Under your pillow Just look every night. If you have been good All through the day, A gift you will find, Useful or gay; But if you have been Cross, selfish, or wild, A bad thing will come For the naughty child. So try, little dear, And soon you will see How easy and sweet To grow good it will be." "Ha, ha, you can't see, Although I am here; But listen to what I say in your ear. Tell no one of this. Because, if you do, My fun will be spoilt, And so will yours too. But if you are good, And patient, and gay, A real fairy will come To see l...
Louisa May Alcott