Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 473 of 739
Previous
Next
The Princess
The princess looked down from her bower high,The youth blew his horn as he lingered thereby."Be quiet, O youth, will forever you blow?It hinders my thoughts, that would far away go, Now, when sets the sun."The princess looked down from her bower high,The youth ceased his blowing, his horn he laid by."Why are you so quiet? Now more shall you blow,It lifts all my thoughts, that would far away go, Now, when sets the sun."The princess looked down from her bower high,The youth blew again, as he lingered thereby.Then weeping, she whispered: "O God, let me knowThe name of this sorrow that burdens me so! - Now has set the sun."
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Wherefore
I would not see, yet must beholdThe truth they preach in church and hall;And question so, - Is death then all,And life an idle tale that's told?The myriad wonders art hath wroughtI deemed eternal as God's love:No more than shadows these shall prove,And insubstantial as a thought.And love and labor, who have gone,Hand in close hand, and civilizedThe wilderness, these shall be prizedNo more than if they had not done.Then wherefore strive? Why strain and bendBeneath a burden so unjust?Our works are builded out of dust,And dust their universal end.
Madison Julius Cawein
Fodder For Cannon
Bodies glad, erect,Beautiful with youth,Life's elect,Nature's truth,Marching host on host,Those bright, unblemished ones,Manhood's boast,Feed them to the guns.Hearts and brains that teemWith blessing for the race,Thought and dream,Vision, grace,Oh, love's best and most,Bridegrooms, brothers, sons,Host on hostFeed them to the guns.
Katharine Lee Bates
Haste Hurtful.
Haste is unhappy; what we rashly doIs both unlucky, aye, and foolish, too.Where war with rashness is attempted, thereThe soldiers leave the field with equal fear.
Robert Herrick
A Welcome From The "Johnson Club"
To William John Courthope, March 12, 1903When Pope came back from Trojan wars once more,He found a Bard, to meet him on the shore,And hail his advent with a strain as clearAs e'er was sung by BYRON or by FRERE.[1]You, SIR, have travelled from no distant clime,Yet would JOHN GAY could welcome you in rhyme;And by some fable not too coldly penned,Teach how with judgment one may praise a Friend.There is no need that I should tell in wordsYour prowess from The Paradise of Birds;[2]No need to show how surely you have tracedThe Life in Poetry, the Law in Taste;[3]Or mark with what unwearied strength you wearThe weight that WARTON found too great to bear.[4]There Is no need for this or that....
Henry Austin Dobson
The Young Knight: A Parable
A gay young knight in Burley stood,Beside him pawed his steed so good,His hands he wrung as he were wood With waiting for his love O!'Oh, will she come, or will she stay,Or will she waste the weary dayWith fools who wish her far away, And hate her for her love O?'But by there came a mighty boar,His jowl and tushes red with gore,And on his curled snout he bore A bracelet rich and rare O!The knight he shrieked, he ran, he flew,He searched the wild wood through and through,But found nought save a mantle blue, Low rolled within the brake O!He twined the wild briar, red and white,Upon his head the garland dight,The green leaves withered black as night, And burnt into his brain O!A ...
Charles Kingsley
Lone Mountain
This is that hill of aweThat Persian Sindbad saw,The mount magnetic;And on its seaward face,Scattered along its base,The wrecks prophetic.Here come the argosiesBlown by each idle breeze,To and fro shifting;Yet to the hill of FateAll drawing, soon or late,Day by day drifting;Drifting forever hereBarks that for many a yearBraved wind and weather;Shallops but yesterdayLaunched on yon shining bay,Drawn all together.This is the end of all:Sun thyself by the wall,O poorer Hindbad!Envy not Sindbads fame:Here come alike the sameHindbad and Sindbad.
Bret Harte
A Considerable Speck
A speck that would have been beneath my sightOn any but a paper sheet so whiteSet off across what I had written there.And I had idly poised my pen in airTo stop it with a period of inkWhen something strange about it made me think,This was no dust speck by my breathing blown,But unmistakably a living miteWith inclinations it could call its own.It paused as with suspicion of my pen,And then came racing wildly on againTo where my manuscript was not yet dry;Then paused again and either drank or smelt,With loathing, for again it turned to fly.Plainly with an intelligence I dealt.It seemed too tiny to have room for feet,Yet must have had a set of them completeTo express how much it didn't want to die.It ran with terror and with cunning cr...
Robert Lee Frost
Day
In day from some titanic past it seemsAs if a thread divine of memory runs;Born ere the Mighty One began his dreams, Or yet were stars and suns.But here an iron will has fixed the bars;Forgetfulness falls on earth's myriad races:No image of the proud and morning stars Looks at us from their faces.Yet yearning still to reach to those dim heights,Each dream remembered is a burning-glass,Where through to darkness from the Light of Lights Its rays in splendour pass.
George William Russell
The Ghost
Through the open door of dreamlandCame a ghost of long ago, long ago.When I wakened, all unheedingWas the phantom to my pleading;For he would not turn and go,But beside me all the day,In my work and in my play,Trod this ghost of long ago, long ago.Not a vague and pallid phantomWas this ghost that came to me, followed me:Though he rose from regions haunted,Though he came unbid, unwanted,He was very fair to see.Like the radiant sun in spaceWas the halo round the faceOf that ghost that came to me, followed me.And he wore no shroud or cere-clothAs he wandered at my side, close beside:He was clothed in royal splendourAnd his eyes were deep and tender,While he walked in stately pride;And he seemed like some g...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
In Due Season
If night should come and find me at my toil,When all Life's day I had, tho' faintly, wrought,And shallow furrows, cleft in stony soilWere all my labour: Shall I count it naughtIf only one poor gleaner, weak of hand,Shall pick a scanty sheaf where I have sown?"Nay, for of thee the Master doth demandThy work: the harvest rests with Him alone."
John McCrae
To Jane: The Recollection.
1.Now the last day of many days,All beautiful and bright as thou,The loveliest and the last, is dead,Rise, Memory, and write its praise!Up, - to thy wonted work! come, traceThe epitaph of glory fled, -For now the Earth has changed its face,A frown is on the Heaven's brow.2.We wandered to the Pine ForestThat skirts the Ocean's foam,The lightest wind was in its nest,The tempest in its home.The whispering waves were half asleep,The clouds were gone to play,And on the bosom of the deepThe smile of Heaven lay;It seemed as if the hour were oneSent from beyond the skies,Which scattered from above the sunA light of Paradise.3.We paused amid the pines that stoodThe giants of the waste,Tor...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Canonization Of Saint Butterworth.
"A Christian of the best edition."--RABELAIS.Canonize him!--yea, verily, we'll canonize him, Tho' Cant is his hobby and meddling his bliss,Tho' sages may pity and wits may despise him, He'll ne'er make a bit the worse Saint for all this.Descend, all ye Spirits, that ever yet spread The dominion of Humbug o'er land and o'er sea,Descend on our Butterworth's biblical head, Thrice-Great, Bibliopolist, Saint, and M. P.Come, shade of Joanna, come down from thy sphere. And bring little Shiloh--if 'tisn't too far--Such a sight will to Butterworth's bosom be dear, His conceptions and thine being much on a par.Nor blush, Saint Joanna, once more to behold A world thou hast honored by cheating so...
Thomas Moore
A Birthday-Wish
Who know thee, love: thy life be such That, ere the year be o'er,Each one who loves thee now so much, Even God, may love thee more!
George MacDonald
The Cheval-Glass
Why do you harbour that great cheval-glass Filling up your narrow room? You never preen or plume,Or look in a week at your full-length figure - Picture of bachelor gloom!"Well, when I dwelt in ancient England, Renting the valley farm, Thoughtless of all heart-harm,I used to gaze at the parson's daughter, A creature of nameless charm."Thither there came a lover and won her, Carried her off from my view. O it was then I knewMisery of a cast undreamt of - More than, indeed, my due!"Then far rumours of her ill-usage Came, like a chilling breath When a man languisheth;Followed by news that her mind lost balance, And, in a space, of her death."Soon sank her father; an...
Thomas Hardy
The Blood Of Christ.
Mentre m' attrista.Mid weariness and woe I find some cheer In thinking of the past, when I recall My weakness and my sins, and reckon all The vain expense of days that disappear:This cheers by making, ere I die, more clear The frailty of what men delight miscall; But saddens me to think how rarely fall God's grace and mercies in life's latest year.For though Thy promises our faith compel, Yet, Lord, what man shall venture to maintain That pity will condone our long neglect?Still from Thy blood poured forth we know full well How without measure was Thy martyr's pain, How measureless the gifts we dare expect.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
All We Had.
It worn't for her winnin ways,Nor for her bonny faceBut shoo wor th' only lass we had,An that quite alters th' case.We'd two fine lads as yo need see,An' weel we love 'em still;But shoo war th' only lass we had,An' we could spare her ill.We call'd her bi mi mother's name,It saanded sweet to me;We little thowt ha varry sooinAwr pet wod have to dee.Aw used to watch her ivery day,Just like a oppenin bud;An' if aw couldn't see her change,Aw fancied' at aw could.Throo morn to neet her little tongueWor allus on a stir;Awve heeard a deeal o' childer lisp,But nooan at lispt like her.Sho used to play all sooarts o' tricks,'At childer shouldn't play;But then, they wor soa nicely done,
John Hartley
Upon Love.
In a dream, Love bade me goTo the galleys there to row;In the vision I ask'd why?Love as briefly did reply,'Twas better there to toil, than proveThe turmoils they endure that love.I awoke, and then I knewWhat Love said was too-too true;Henceforth therefore I will be,As from love, from trouble free.None pities him that's in the snare,And, warned before, would not beware.