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Bitterness
Yes, they were kind exceedingly; most mildEven in indignation, taking by the handOne that obeyed them mutely, as a childSubmissive to a law he does not understand.They would not blame the sins his passion wrought.No, they were tolerant and Christian, saying, 'WeOnly deplore ...' saying they only soughtTo help him, strengthen him, to show him love; but heFollowing them with unrecalcitrant tread,Quiet, towards their town of kind captivities,Having slain rebellion, ever turned his headOver his shoulder, seeking still with his poor eyesHer motionless figure on the road. The songRang still between them, vibrant bell to answering bell,Full of young glory as a bugle; strong;Still brave; now breaking like a sea-bird's cry 'Farewell!'<...
Victoria Mary Sackville-West
Her Lament For His Death
Then when Grania was certain of Diarmuid's death she gave out a long very pitiful cry that was heard through the whole place, and her women and her people came to her, and asked what ailed her to give a cry like that. And she told them how Diarmuid had come to his death by the Boar of Beinn Gulbain in the hunt Finn had made. When her people heard that, they gave three great heavy cries in the same way, that were heard in the clouds and the waste places of the sky. And then Grania bade the five hundred that she had for household to go to Beinn Gulbain for the body of Diarmuid, and when they were bringing it back, she went out to meet them, and they put down the body of Diarmuid, and it is what she said: I am your wife, beautiful Diarmuid, the man I would do no hurt to; it is sorrowful I am after you to-night.I am looking at the...
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
Song
My silks and fine array,My smiles and languish'd air,By love are driv'n away;And mournful lean DespairBrings me yew to deck my grave;Such end true lovers have.His face is fair as heav'nWhen springing buds unfold;O why to him was't giv'nWhose heart is wintry cold?His breast is love's all-worshipp'd tomb,Where all love's pilgrims come.Bring me an axe and spade,Bring me a winding sheet;When I my grave have madeLet winds and tempests beat:Then down I'll lie as cold as clay.True love doth pass away!
William Blake
Remorse After Death
When, sullen beauty, you will sleep and haveAs resting place a fine black marble tomb,When for a boudoir in your manor-homeYou have a hollow pit, a sodden cave,When stone, now heavy on your fearful breastAnd loins once supple in their tempered fire,Will stop your heart from beating, and desire,And keep your straying feet from wantonness,The Tomb, who knows what yearning is about(The Tomb grasps what the poet has to say)Will question you these nights you cannot rest,'Vain courtesan, how could you live that wayAnd not have known what all the dead cry out?'And like remorse the worm will gnaw your flesh.
Charles Baudelaire
J. D. R.
The friends that are, and friends that were,What shallow waves divide!I miss the form for many a yearStill seated at my side.I miss him, yet I feel him stillAmidst our faithful band,As if not death itself could chillThe warmth of friendship's hand.His story other lips may tell, -For me the veil is drawn;I only knew he loved me well,He loved me - and is gone!
Oliver Wendell Holmes
An Image From A Past Life
(He.) Never until this night have I been stirred.The elaborate starlight throws a reflectionOn the dark stream,Till all the eddies gleam;And thereupon there comes that screamFrom terrified, invisible beast or bird:Image of poignant recollection.(She.) An image of my heart that is smitten throughOut of all likelihood, or reason,And when at last,Youth's bitterness being past,I had thought that all my days were castAmid most lovely places; smitten as thoughIt had not learned its lesson.(He.) Why have you laid your hands upon my eyes?What can have suddenly alarmed youWhereon 'twere bestMy eyes should never rest?What is there but the slowly fading west,The river imaging the flashing skies,All that to this moment c...
William Butler Yeats
Consolation
All are not taken; there are left behindLiving Belovèds, tender looks to bringAnd make the daylight still a happy thing,And tender voices, to make soft the wind:But if it were not so, if I could findNo love in all this world for comforting,Nor any path but hollowly did ringWhere 'dust to dust' the love from life disjoin'd;And if, before those sepulchres unmovingI stood alone (as some forsaken lambGoes bleating up the moors in weary dearth)Crying 'Where are ye, O my loved and loving?'I know a voice would sound, 'Daughter, I am.Can I suffice for Heaven and not for earth?'
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Into The Twilight
Out-worn heart, in a time out-worn,Come clear of the nets of wrong and right;Laugh heart again in the gray twilight,Sigh, heart, again in the dew of the morn.Your mother Eire is always young,Dew ever shining and twilight gray;Though hope fall from you and love decay,Burning in fires of a slanderous tongue.Come, heart, where hill is heaped upon hill:For there the mystical brotherhoodOf sun and moon and hollow and woodAnd river and stream work out their will;And God stands winding His lonely horn,And time and the world are ever in flight;And love is less kind than the gray twilight,And hope is less dear than the dew of the morn.
The Lament Of The Looking-Glass
Words from the mirror softly passTo the curtains with a sigh:"Why should I trouble again to glassThese smileless things hard by,Since she I pleasured once, alas,Is now no longer nigh!""I've imaged shadows of coursing cloud,And of the plying limbOn the pensive pine when the air is loudWith its aerial hymn;But never do they make me proudTo catch them within my rim!"I flash back phantoms of the nightThat sometimes flit by me,I echo roses red and white -The loveliest blooms that be -But now I never hold to sightSo sweet a flower as she."
Thomas Hardy
A Motive In Gold And Gray
I.To-night he sees their star burn, dewy-bright,Deep in the pansy, eve hath made for it,Low in the west; a placid purple litAt its far edge with warm auroral light:Love's planet hangs above a cedared height;And there in shadow, like gold music writOf dusk's dark fingers, scale-like fire-flies flitNow up, now down the balmy bars of night.How different from that eve a year ago!Which was a stormy flower in the hairOf dolorous day, whose sombre eyes looked, blurred,Into night's sibyl face, and saw the woeOf parting near, and imaged a despair,As now a hope caught from a homing word.II.She came unto him, as the springtime doesUnto the land where all lies dead and cold,Until her rosary of days is toldAnd beaut...
Madison Julius Cawein
Lines Written In Dejection
When have I last looked onThe round green eyes and the long wavering bodiesOf the dark leopards of the moon?All the wild witches, those most noble ladies,For all their broom-sticks and their tears,Their angry tears, are gone.The holy centaurs of the hills are banished;I have nothing but the harsh sun;Heroic mother moon has vanished,And now that I have come to fifty yearsI must endure the timid sun.
The Triumph Of Music.
I There lay in a vale 'twixt lone mountains A garden entangled with flowers, Where the whisper of echoing fountains Stirred softly the musk-breathing bowers. Where torrents cast down from rock-masses, From caverns of red-granite steeps, With thunders sonorous clove passes And maddened dark gulfs with rash leaps, With the dolorous foam of their leaps. II And, oh, when the sunrays came heaping The foam of those musical chasms, With a scintillant dust as of diamonds, It seemed that white spirits were sweeping Down, down thro' those voluble chasms, Wild weeping in resonant spasms. And the wave from the red-hearted granite ...
Love And Loss.
Loss molds our lives in many ways,And fills our souls with guesses;Upon our hearts sad hands it laysLike some grave priest that blesses.Far better than the love we win,That earthly passions leaven,Is love we lose, that knows no sin,That points the path to Heaven.Love, whose soft shadow brightens Earth,Through whom our dreams are nearest;And loss, through whom we see the worthOf all that we held dearest.Not joy it is, but miseryThat chastens us, and sorrow;Perhaps to make us all that weExpect beyond To-morrow.Within that life where time and fateAre not; that knows no seeming:That world to which death keeps the gateWhere love and loss sit dreaming.
Old Memory
O thought, fly to her when the end of dayAwakens an old memory, and say,"Your strength, that is so lofty and fierce and kind,It might call up a new age, calling to mindThe queens that were imagined long ago,Is but half yours: he kneaded in the doughThrough the long years of youth, and who would have thoughtIt all, and more than it all, would come to naught,And that dear words meant nothing?" But enough,For when we have blamed the wind we can blame love;Or, if there needs be more, be nothing saidThat would be harsh for children that have strayed.
Fragment Of A Sonnet. Farewell To North Devon.
Where man's profane and tainting handNature's primaeval loveliness has marred,And some few souls of the high bliss debarredWhich else obey her powerful command;...mountain pilesThat load in grandeur Cambria's emerald vales.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Youth And Death.
What hast thou done to this dear friend of mine,Thou cold, white, silent Stranger? From my handHer clasped hand slips to meet the grasp of thine;Here eyes that flamed with love, at thy commandStare stone-blank on blank air; her frozen heartForgets my presence. Teach me who thou art,Vague shadow sliding 'twixt my friend and me. I never saw thee till this sudden hour.What secret door gave entrance unto thee? What power in thine, o'ermastering Love's own power?
Emma Lazarus
The Lady Of Rathmore Hall.
Throughout the country for many a mileThere is not a nobler, statelier pile Than ivy crowned Rathmore Hall;And the giant oaks that shadow the wold,Though hollowed by time, are not as old As its Norman turrets tall.Let us follow that stream of sunset red,Crimsoning the portal overhead, Stealing through curtaining lace,Where sits in a spacious and lofty roomFull of gems of art - exotics in bloom - The Lady of the place.If Rathmore Hall is with praises named,Not less is its queen-like mistress famed For wondrous beauty and grace;And as she reclines there, calmly now,The sunset flush on her ivory brow, We marvel at form and face.Wondrously perfect, peerlessly fair,Are the mouth and the eyes and ...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Mariposa
Butterflies are white and blue In this field we wander through. Suffer me to take your hand. Death comes in a day or two. All the things we ever knew Will be ashes in that hour, Mark the transient butterfly, How he hangs upon the flower. Suffer me to take your hand. Suffer me to cherish you Till the dawn is in the sky. Whether I be false or true, Death comes in a day or two.
Edna St. Vincent Millay