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The New Year
Be welcome, year! with corn and sickle come; Make poor the body, but make rich the heart:What man that bears his sheaves, gold-nodding, home, Will heed the paint rubbed from his groaning cart!Nor leave behind thy fears and holy shames, Thy sorrows on the horizon hanging low--Gray gathered fuel for the sunset-flames When joyous in death's harvest-home we go.
George MacDonald
The Lost Jewel.
I held a jewel in my fingersAnd went to sleep.The day was warm, and winds were prosy;I said: "'T will keep."I woke and chid my honest fingers, --The gem was gone;And now an amethyst remembranceIs all I own.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Forgiveness
At dusk the window panes grew grey;The wet world vanished in the gloom;The dim and silver end of dayScarce glimmered through the little room.And all my sins were told; I saidSuch things to her who knew not sin--The sharp ache throbbing in my head,The fever running high within.I touched with pain her purity;Sin's darker sense I could not bring:My soul was black as night to me:To her I was a wounded thing.I needed love no words could say;She drew me softly nigh her chair,My head upon her knees to lay,With cool hands that caressed my hair.She sat with hands as if to bless,And looked with grave, ethereal eyes;Ensouled by ancient quietness,A gentle priestess of the Wise.
George William Russell
Song
I peeled bits of straws and I got switches tooFrom the grey peeling willow as idlers do,And I switched at the flies as I sat all aloneTill my flesh, blood, and marrow was turned to dry bone.My illness was love, though I knew not the smart,But the beauty of love was the blood of my heart.Crowded places, I shunned them as noises too rudeAnd fled to the silence of sweet solitude.Where the flower in green darkness buds, blossoms, and fades,Unseen of all shepherds and flower-loving maids--The hermit bees find them but once and away.There I'll bury alive and in silence decay.I looked on the eyes of fair woman too long,Till silence and shame stole the use of my tongue:When I tried to speak to her I'd nothing to say,So I turned myself round and she wan...
John Clare
Two Sinners
There was a man, it was said one time,Who went astray in his youthful prime.Can the brain keep cool and the heart keep quietWhen the blood is a river that's running riot?And boys will be boys, the old folks say,And a man is the better who's had his dayThe sinner reformed; and the preacher toldOf the prodigal son who came back to the fold.And Christian people threw open the door,With a warmer welcome than ever before.Wealth and honour were his to command,And a spotless woman gave him her hand.And the world strewed their pathway with blossoms abloom,Crying, "God bless ladye, and God bless groom!"There was a maiden who went astray,In the golden dawn of her life's young day.She had more passion and heart than head,And she followed...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Autumn
Syren of sullen moods and fading hues,Yet haply not incapable of joy,Sweet Autumn! I thee hailWith welcome all unfeigned;And oft as morning from her lattice peepsTo beckon up the sun, I seek with theeTo drink the dewy breathOf fields left fragrant then,In solitudes, where no frequented pathsBut what thy own foot makes betray thy home,Stealing obtrusive thereTo meditate thy end:By overshadowed ponds, in woody nooks,With ramping sallows lined, and crowding sedge,Which woo the winds to play,And with them dance for joy;And meadow pools, torn wide by lawless floods,Where water-lilies spread their oily leaves,On which, as wont, the flyOft battens in the sun;Where leans the mossy willow half way oe...
To A. ------
1.Oh! did those eyes instead of fire,With bright, but mild affection shine,Though they might kindle less desire,Love, more than mortal, would be thine.2.For thou art form'd so heavenly fair,Howe'er those orbs may wildly beam,We must admire, but still despair,That fatal glance forbids esteem.3.When nature stamp'd thy beauteous birth,So much perfection in thee shone,She fear'd, that too divine for earth,The skies might claim thee for their own.4.Therefore to guard her dearest work,Lest angels might dispute the prize,She bade a secret lightning lurk,Within those once celestial eyes.5.These might the boldest Sylph appal,When gleaming with meridian blaze,...
George Gordon Byron
Invitation to Eternity
Say, wilt thou go with me, sweet maid,Say, maiden, wilt thou go with meThrough the valley-depths of shade,Of bright and dark obscurity;Where the path has lost its way,Where the sun forgets the day,Where there's nor light nor life to see,Sweet maiden, wilt thou go with me?Where stones will turn to flooding streams,Where plains will rise like ocean's waves,Where life will fade like visioned dreamsAnd darkness darken into caves,Say, maiden, wilt thou go with meThrough this sad non-identityWhere parents live and are forgot,And sisters live and know us not?Say, maiden, wilt thou go with meIn this strange death of life to be,To live in death and be the same,Without this life or home or name,At once to be and not to...
On the Downs
A faint sea without wind or sun;A sky like flameless vapour dun;A valley like an unsealed graveThat no man cares to weep upon,Bare, without boon to crave,Or flower to save.And on the lips edge of the down,Here where the bent-grass burns to brownIn the dry sea-wind, and the heathCrawls to the cliff-side and looks down,I watch, and hear beneathThe low tide breathe.Along the long lines of the cliff,Down the flat sea-line without skiffOr sail or back-blown fume for mark,Through wind-worn heads of heath and stiffStems blossomless and starkWith dry sprays dark,I send mine eyes out as for newsOf comfort that all these refuse,Tidings of light or living airFrom windward where the low clouds museAnd ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Quatrains.
The Sky Line.Like black fangs in a cruel ogre's jaw The grim piles lift against the sunset sky;Down drops the night, and shuts the horrid maw-- I listen, breathless, but there comes no cry.Defeat.He sits and looks into the west Where twilight gathers, wan and gray,A knight who quit the Golden Quest, And flung Excalibur away.To an Amazon.O! twain in spirit, we shall know Thy like no more, so fierce, so mild,One breast shorn clean to rest the bow, One milk-full for thy warrior child.The Old Mother.Life is like an old mother whom trouble and toilHave sufficed the best part of her nature to spoil,Whom her children, the Passions, so ...
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
Sea-Born
Afar in the turbulent city,In a hive where men make gold,He stood at his loom from dawn to dark,While the passing years were told.And when he knew it was summer-timeBy the grey dust on the street,By the lingering hours of daylight,And the sultry noon-tide heat -Oh! he longed as a captive sea-birdTo leave his cage and be free,For his heart like a shell kept singingThe old, old song of the sea.And amid the noise and confusionOf wheels that were never still,He heard the wind through the scented pinesOn a rough, storm-beaten hill;While, beyond a maze of painted threads,Where his tireless shuttle flew,In fancy he saw the sunlit wavesBeckon him out to the blue.
Virna Sheard
The Lily-Pond
On this little pool where the sunbeams lie,This tawny gold ring where the shadows die,God doth enamel the blue of His sky.Through the scented dark when the night wind sighs,He mirrors His stars where the ripples rise,Till they glitter like prisoned fireflies.'Tis here that the beryl-green leaves uncurl,And here the lilies uplift and unfurlTheir golden-lined goblets of carven pearl.When the grey of the eastern sky turns pink,Through the silver sedge at the pond's low brinkThe little lone field-mouse creeps down to drink.And creatures to whom only God is kind,The loveless small things, the slow, and the blind,Soft steal through the rushes, and comfort find.Oh, restless the river, restless the sea!Where the great ship...
Of Three Children Choosing - A Chaplet Of Verse
You and I and Burd so blithe-- Burd so blithe, and you, and I--The Mower he would whet his scythe Before the dew was dry.And he woke soon, but we woke soon And drew the nursery blind,All wondering at the waning moon With the small June roses twined:Low in her cradle swung the moon With an elfin dawn behind.In whispers, while our elders slept, We knelt and said our prayers,And dress'd us and on tiptoe crept Adown the creaking stairs.The world's possessors lay abed, And all the world was ours--"Nay, nay, but hark! the Mower's tread! And we must save the flowers!"The Mower knew not rest nor haste-- That old unweary man:But we were young. We paused and raced And ...
Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
Sonnets: Idea LV
My fair, if thou wilt register my love,A world of volumes shall thereof arise;Preserve my tears, and thou thyself shall proveA second flood down raining from mine eyes; Note but my sighs, and thine eyes shall beholdThe sunbeams smothered with immortal smoke;And if by thee my prayers may be enrolled,They heaven and earth to pity shall provoke. Look thou into my breast, and thou shalt seeChaste holy vows for my soul's sacrifice,That soul, sweet maid, which so hath honoured thee,Erecting trophies to thy sacred eyes, Those eyes to my heart shining ever bright, When darkness hath obscured each other light.
Michael Drayton
The Widows' Tears; Or, Dirge Of Dorcas
Come pity us, all ye who seeOur harps hung on the willow-tree;Come pity us, ye passers-by,Who see or hear poor widows' cry;Come pity us, and bring your earsAnd eyes to pity widows' tears.CHOR.And when you are come hither,Then we will keepA fast, and weepOur eyes out all together,For Tabitha; who dead lies here,Clean wash'd, and laid out for the bier.O modest matrons, weep and wail!For now the corn and wine must fail;The basket and the bin of bread,Wherewith so many souls were fed,CHOR.Stand empty here for ever;And ah!the poor,At thy worn door,Shall be relieved never.Woe worth the time, woe worth the day,That reft us of thee, Tabitha!For we have lost, with thee, the meal,The bits, the morsels...
Robert Herrick
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XVI.
Sì breve è 'l tempo e 'l pensier sì veloce.THE REMEMBRANCE OF HER CHASES SADNESS FROM HIS HEART. So brief the time, so fugitive the thoughtWhich Laura yields to me, though dead, again,Small medicine give they to my giant pain;Still, as I look on her, afflicts me nought.Love, on the rack who holds me as he brought,Fears when he sees her thus my soul retain,Where still the seraph face and sweet voice reign,Which first his tyranny and triumph wrought.As rules a mistress in her home of right,From my dark heavy heart her placid browDispels each anxious thought and omen drear.My soul, which bears but ill such dazzling light,Says with a sigh: "O blessed day! when thouDidst ope with those dear eyes thy passage here!"MA...
Francesco Petrarca
Virtue and Vice
She was so good, and he was so badA very pretty time they had!A pretty time, and it lasted long:Which of the two was more in the wrong?He befouled in the slough of sin;Or she whose piety pushed him in?He found her yet more cold and staidAs wedded wife than courted maid:She filled their home with freezing gloom;He felt it dismal as a tomb:Her steadfast mind disdained his toysOf worldly pleasures, carnal joys;Her heart firm-set on things aboveWas frigid to his earthly love.So he came staggering home at night;Where she sat chilling, chaste, and white:She smiled a scornful virtuous smile,He flung good books with curses vile.Fresh with the early morn she rose,While he yet lay in a feverish doze:She prayed for blessings ...
James Thomson
The Maiden's Sorrow.
Seven long years has the desert rainDropped on the clods that hide thy face;Seven long years of sorrow and painI have thought of thy burial-place.Thought of thy fate in the distant west,Dying with none that loved thee near;They who flung the earth on thy breastTurned from the spot williout a tear.There, I think, on that lonely grave,Violets spring in the soft May shower;There, in the summer breezes, waveCrimson phlox and moccasin flower.There the turtles alight, and thereFeeds with her fawn the timid doe;There, when the winter woods are bare,Walks the wolf on the crackling snow.Soon wilt thou wipe my tears away;All my task upon earth is done;My poor father, old and gray,Slumbers beneath the churchyard s...
William Cullen Bryant