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Rest Refreshes.
Lay by the good a while; a resting fieldWill, after ease, a richer harvest yield;Trees this year bear: next, they their wealth withhold:Continual reaping makes a land wax old.
Robert Herrick
Childless.
Up to the little grave, with blossoms kept,They went together; and one hid her face,And spoke aloud the boy's dear name, and wept.The other woman stood apart a space.And prayed to God. "If only I," she said,"Might keep a grave, and mourn my little dead!"
Margaret Steele Anderson
March
[From HONE'S "Year Book"]The insect world, now sunbeams higher climb,Oft dream of Spring, and wake before their time:Bees stroke their little legs across their wings,And venture short flights where the snow-drop hingsIts silver bell, and winter aconiteIts buttercup-like flowers that shut at night,With green leaf furling round its cup of gold,Like tender maiden muffled from the cold:They sip and find their honey-dreams are vain,Then feebly hasten to their hives again.The butterflies, by eager hopes undone,Glad as a child come out to greet the sun,Beneath the shadows of a sunny showerAre lost, nor see to-morrow's April flower.
John Clare
A Channel Passage
Forth from Calais, at dawn of night, when sunset summer on autumn shone,Fared the steamer alert and loud through seas whence only the sun was gone:Soft and sweet as the sky they smiled, and bade man welcome: a dim sweet hourGleamed and whispered in wind and sea, and heaven was fair as a field in flower.Stars fulfilled the desire of the darkling world as with music: the starbright airMade the face of the sea, if aught may make the face of the sea, more fair.Whence came change? Was the sweet night weary of rest? What anguish awoke in the dark?Sudden, sublime, the strong storm spake: we heard the thunders as hounds that bark.Lovelier if aught may be lovelier than stars, we saw the lightnings exalt the sky,Living and lustrous and rapturous as love that is born but to quicken and lighten an...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
A Flying Visit.
"A Calendar! a Calendar! look in the Almanac, find out moonshine - find out moonshine!" - Midsummer Night's Dream.I. The by-gone September, As folks may remember,At least if their memory saves but an ember, One fine afternoon, There went up a Balloon,Which did not return to the Earth very soon.II. For, nearing the sky, At about a mile high,The Aëronaut bold had resolved on a fly; So cutting his string, In a Parasol thingDown he came in a field like a lark from the wing.III. Meanwhile, thus adrift, The Balloon made a shiftTo rise very fast, with no burden to lift; It got very small, Then to nothing at all;And then rose t...
Thomas Hood
The Iron Pen
Made from a fetter of Bonnivard, the Prisoner of Chillon; the handle of wood from the Frigate Constitution, and bound with a circlet of gold, inset with three precious stones from Siberia, Ceylon, and Maine.I thought this Pen would ariseFrom the casket where it lies-- Of itself would arise and writeMy thanks and my surprise.When you gave it me under the pines,I dreamed these gems from the mines Of Siberia, Ceylon, and MaineWould glimmer as thoughts in the lines;That this iron link from the chainOf Bonnivard might retain Some verse of the Poet who sangOf the prisoner and his pain;That this wood from the frigate's mastMight write me a rhyme at last, As it used to write on the skyThe song of the sea and the blas...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
If Love Were King.
If Love were king, That sacred Love which knows not selfish pleasure, But for its children spends its fondest treasure, Sad hearts would sing, And all the hosts of misery and wrong Forget their anguish in the happy song That joy would bring. If Love were king, Gaunt wickedness would hide his loathsome features, And virtue would to all the world's sad creatures Her treasures fling; Till drooping souls would rise above their fate, And find sweet flowers for all the desolate And sorrowing. If Love were king, Before the scepter of his might should vanish Toil's curse and care, and happiness should banish Want's aw...
Freeman Edwin Miller
Rhymes And Rhythms - XII
Some starlit garden grey with dew,Some chamber flushed with wine and fire,What matters where, so I and youAre worthy our desire?Behind, a past that scolds and jeersFor ungirt loin and lamp unlit;In front the unmanageable years,The trap upon the pit;Think on the shame of dreams for deeds,The scandal of unnatural strife,The slur upon immortal needs,The treason done to life:Arise! no more a living lieAnd with me quicken and controlA memory that shall magnifyThe universal Soul.
William Ernest Henley
The Tomb.
Once musing o'er an old effaced stone,Longing to know whose dust it did conceal,I anxious ponder'd o'er what might reveal,And sought the seeming date with weeds o'ergrown;But that prov'd fruitless--both the date and nameHad been for ages in oblivion thrown.The dim remains of sculptur'd ornamentGave proof sufficient 'twas reward for fame:This did my searching view so much torment,That Time I question'd to expose the same;But soon a check--"And what is it to theeWhose dust lies here?--since thou wilt quickly beForgot like him:--then Time shall bid thee goTo heaven's pure bliss, or hell's tormenting woe."
Lines On A Grotto, At Crux-Easton, Hants.
Here shunning idleness at once and praise,This radiant pile nine rural sisters[130] raise;The glittering emblem of each spotless dame,Clear as her soul, and shining as her frame;Beauty which nature only can impart,And such a polish as disgraces art;But Fate disposed them in this humble sort,And hid in deserts what would charm a court.
Alexander Pope
Grief, Thou Hast Lost An Ever-Ready Friend
Grief, thou hast lost an ever-ready friendNow that the cottage Spinning-wheel is mute;And Care, a comforter that best could suitHer froward mood, and softliest reprehend;And Love, a charmer's voice, that used to lend,More efficaciously than aught that flowsFrom harp or lute, kind influence to composeThe throbbing pulse, else troubled without end:Even Joy could tell, Joy craving truce and restFrom her own overflow, what power sedateOn those revolving motions did awaitAssiduously to soothe her aching breast;And, to a point of just relief, abateThe mantling triumphs of a day too blest.
William Wordsworth
The Oracle And The Atheist.
[1]That man his Maker can deceive,Is monstrous folly to believe.The labyrinthine mazes of the heartAre open to His eyes in every part.Whatever one may do, or think, or feel,From Him no darkness can the thing conceal.A pagan once, of graceless heart and hollow,Whose faith in gods, I'm apprehensive,Was quite as real as expensive.Consulted, at his shrine, the god Apollo.'Is what I hold alive, or not?'Said he, - a sparrow having brought,Prepared to wring its neck, or let it fly,As need might be, to give the god the lie.Apollo saw the trick,And answer'd quick,'Dead or alive, show me your sparrow,And cease to set for me a trapWhich can but cause yourself mishap.I see afar, and far I shoot my arrow.'
Jean de La Fontaine
Death Song Of The Enfants Perdus.
'Tis here we invade the valley,Away from the realms of breath,And, in most successful sally,We enter the gates of death;So, stand in the last line steady,'Tis here our true glory lies;Hurrah for the dead already!Three cheers for the next who dies!Though here, the wet eyes of womanWill fill with the falling tear,Yet, facing old Death, our foeman,We shout our reviving cheer.Though high beat the hearts we cherish,The dead we most highly prize:Hurrah for the first to perish!Three cheers for the next who dies!The earth we now leave behind us,The heavens now beckon before,Though dust of the dead may blind us,We march for the shining shore;No more can our Hope deceive us,Our heart to it now replies,Hurra...
A. H. Laidlaw
Romance
Oh, go not to the lonely hill,That from its heart pours one clear well!There is a witch who haunts it still,Who would undo you with her spell.Oh, go not to the lonely hill.There was a youth who, with his book,Would dream for hours and hours aloneBeneath the boughs, beside the brook,Seated upon a mossy stone,His gaze upon his wonder-book.The scent of lilies there is cool,Hanging in many a wild racemeAround a glimmering woodland pool,From whence flows down a shadowy stream.The scent of lilies there is cool. . . .Between his eyes and unturned pageHe saw her bright face, smiling, nod:And knew her of another Age,A pagan Age that mocked at God.She seemed to rise from out the page,Clothed on with dreams and forest scent,A...
Madison Julius Cawein
My Mistress Commanding Me To Return Her Letters.
So grieves th' adventurous merchant, when he throwsAll the long toil'd-for treasure his ship stowsInto the angry main, to save from wrackHimself and men, as I grieve to give backThese letters: yet so powerful is your swayAs if you bid me die, I must obey.Go then, blest papers, you shall kiss those handsThat gave you freedom, but hold me in bands;Which with a touch did give you life, but I,Because I may not touch those hands, must die.Methinks, as if they knew they should be sentHome to their native soil from banishment;I see them smile, like dying saints that knowThey are to leave the earth and toward heaven go.When you return, pray tell your sovereignAnd mine, I gave you courteous entertain;Each line received a tear, and then a kiss;Firs...
Thomas Carew
The Mother's Song (From Arne)
Lord! Oh, hold in Thy hand my child,Guard by the river its playing!Send Thou Thy Spirit as comrade mild,Lest it be lost in its straying!Deep is the water and false the ground.Lord, if His arms shall the child surround,Drowned it shall not be, but living,Till Thou salvation art giving.Mother, whom loneliness befalls,Knowing not where it is faring,Goes to the door, and its name there calls;Breezes no answer are bearing.This is her thought, that everywhereHe and Thou for it always care;Jesus, its little brother,Follows it home to mother.
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
The Supreme Sacrifice.
Well-nigh two thousand years hath IsraelSuffered the scorn of man for love of God;Endured the outlaw's ban, the yoke, the rod,With perfect patience. Empires rose and fell,Around him Nebo was adored and Bel;Edom was drunk with victory, and trodOn his high places, while the sacred sodWas desecrated by the infidel.His faith proved steadfast, without breach or flaw,But now the last renouncement is required.His truth prevails, his God is God, his LawIs found the wisdom most to be desired.Not his the glory! He, maligned, misknown,Bows his meek head, and says, "Thy will be done!"
Emma Lazarus
Prologue To The Indian Queen.
As the music plays a soft air, the curtain rises slowly and discovers an Indian boy and girl sleeping under two plantain-trees; and, when the curtain is almost up, the music turns into a tune expressing an alarm, at which the boy awakes, and speaks: BOY. Wake, wake, Quevira! our soft rest must cease, And fly together with our country's peace! No more must we sleep under plantain shade, Which neither heat could pierce, nor cold invade; Where bounteous nature never feels decay, And opening buds drive falling fruits away. QUE. Why should men quarrel here, where all possess As much as they can hope for by success?-- None can have most, where nature is so kind, As to exceed man's use, though not his mind. BOY. By ancient p...
John Dryden