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The Sin.
That haunting air had some far strain of it,That morning rose hath flung it back to metThe wind of spring, the ancient, awful sea. Bid me remember it.And looking back against the look of Love,I feel the old shame start again and sting;Such eyes are Love's they will not ask the thing, But I remember it!So this one dream of heaven I dare not dream :We two in your familiar ways and high.While you and God forget, and even I Cannot remember it!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Anima Mundi
Let all things vanish, if but you remain;For if you stay, beloved, what is gone?Yet, should you go, all permanence is vain,And all the piled abundance is as none.With you beside me in the desert sand,Your smile upon me, and on mine your hand,Oases green arise, and camel-bells;For in the long adventure of your eyesAre all the wandering ways to Paradise.Existence, in your being, comes and goes;What were the garden, love, without the rose?In vain were ears to hear,And eyes in vain,Lacking your ordered music, sphere to sphere,Blind, should your beauty blossom not again.The pulse that shakes the world with rhythmic beatIs but the passing of your little feet;And all the singing vast of all the seas,Down from the pole
Richard Le Gallienne
Song.
Where is the heart that would not give Years of drowsy days and nights,One little hour, like this, to live-- Full, to the brim, of life's delights? Look, look around, This fairy ground, With love-lights glittering o'er; While cups that shine With freight divine Go coasting round its shore.Hope is the dupe of future hours, Memory lives in those gone by;Neither can see the moment's flowers Springing up fresh beneath the eye, Wouldst thou, or thou, Forego what's now, For all that Hope may say? No--Joy's reply, From every eye, Is, "Live we while we may,"
Thomas Moore
America
IWhere the wings of a sunny Dome expandI saw a Banner in gladsome air--Starry, like Berenice's Hair--Afloat in broadened bravery there;With undulating long-drawn flow,As tolled Brazilian billows goVoluminously o'er the Line.The Land reposed in peace below;The children in their gleeWere folded to the exulting heartOf young Maternity.IILater, and it streamed in fightWhen tempest mingled with the fray,And over the spear-point of the shaftI saw the ambiguous lightning play.Valor with Valor strove, and died:Fierce was Despair, and cruel was Pride;And the lorn Mother speechless stood,Pale at the fury of her brood.IIIYet later, and the silk did windHer fair cold form;Little availed the shinin...
Herman Melville
Behind The Arras
I like the old house tolerably well,Where I must dwellLike a familiar gnome;And yet I never shall feel quite at home:I love to roam.Day after day I loiter and exploreFrom door to door;So many treasures lureThe curious mind. What histories obscureThey must immure!I hardly know which room I care for best;This fronting west,With the strange hills in view,Where the great sun goes,--where I may go too,When my lease is through,--Or this one for the morning and the east,Where a man may feastHis eyes on looming sails,And be the first to catch their foreign hailsOr spy their bales.Then the pale summer twilights towards the pole!It thrills my soulWith wonder and delight,When gold-green sha...
Bliss Carman
Presentiments
Presentiments! they judge not rightWho deem that ye from open lightRetire in fear of shame;All 'heaven-born' Instincts shun the touchOf vulgar sense, and, being such,Such privilege ye claim.The tear whose source I could not guess,The deep sigh that seemed fatherless,Were mine in early days;And now, unforced by time to partWith fancy, I obey my heart,And venture on your praise.What though some busy foes to good,Too potent over nerve and blood,Lurk near you, and combineTo taint the health which ye infuse;This hides not from the moral MuseYour origin divine.How oft from you, derided Powers!Comes Faith that in auspicious hoursBuilds castles, not of air:Bodings unsanctioned by the willFlow from y...
William Wordsworth
Winter-Store
Subtly conscious, all awake,Let us clear our eyes, and breakThrough the cloudy chrysalis,See the wonder as it is.Down a narrow alley, blind,Touch and vision, heart and mind;Turned sharply inward, still we plod,Till the calmly smiling godLeaves us, and our spirits growMore thin, more acrid, as we go.Creeping by the sullen wall,We forego the power to see,The threads that bind us to the All,God or the Immensity;Whereof on the eternal roadMan is but a passing mode.Too blind we are, too little seeOf the magic pageantry,Every minute, every hour,From the cloudflake to the flower,Forever old, forever strange,Issuing in perpetual changeFrom the rainbow gates of Time.But he who through this common air...
Archibald Lampman
A Dream.
I thought this heart enkindled lay On Cupid's burning shrine:I thought he stole thy heart away, And placed it near to mine.I saw thy heart begin to melt, Like ice before the sun;Till both a glow congenial felt, And mingled into one!
Imagination.
With the old gods thou walkest, 'mid the leafAnd bloom of ancient morning and of light;Thou die'st with Christ, and with the nailed thiefThat dies upon his left hand and his right.Yea, thou descendest into hell, and thenTo the last heaven dost take thy road sublime;Thine hostelries the secret souls of men,Thy servants all the fleeting things of time!
The Unseen Miracle
The Angel of the night when night was goneHigh upon Heaven's ramparts, cried, "The Dawn!"And wheeling worlds grew radiant with the oneAnd undiminished glory of the sun.And Angel, Seraph, Saint and CherubimRaised to the morning their exultant hymn.All Heaven thrilled anew to look uponThe great recurring miracle of dawn.And in the little worlds beneath them--menRose, yawned and ate and turned to toil again.
Theodosia Garrison
Divine Compassion
"Long since, a dream of heaven I had,And still the vision haunts me oft;I see the saints in white robes clad,The martyrs with their palms aloft;But hearing still, in middle song,The ceaseless dissonance of wrong;And shrinking, with hid faces, from the strainOf sad, beseeching eyes, full of remorse and pain.The glad song falters to a wail,The harping sinks to low lament;Before the still unlifted veilI see the crowned foreheads bent,Making more sweet the heavenly air,With breathings of unselfish prayer;And a Voice saith: "O Pity which is pain,O Love that weeps, fill up my sufferings which remain!"Shall souls redeemed by me refuseTo share my sorrow in their turn?Or, sin-forgiven, my gift abuseOf peace with selfish unc...
John Greenleaf Whittier
From Wonder World.
Out of Wonder World I think you come;For in your eyes the wonder comes with you.The stars are the windows of Heaven,And sometimes I think you peep through.Oh, little girl, tell us do the FlowersTell you secrets when they find you all alone?Or the Birds and Butterflies whisperOf things to us unknown?Or do angel voices speak to you so softly,When we only hear a little wind sigh;And the peaceful dew of Heaven fall upon youWhen we only see a white cloud passing by?
Kate Greenaway
Restlessness.*
Would I had waked this morn where Florence smiles,A-bloom with beauty, a white rose full-blown,Yet rich in sacred dust, in storied stone,Precious past all the wealth of Indian isles -From olive-hoary Fiesole to feedOn Brunelleschi's dome my hungry eye,And see against the lotus-colored sky,Spring the slim belfry graceful as a reed.To kneel upon the ground where Dante trod,To breathe the air of immortalityFrom Angelo and Raphael - TO BE -Each sense new-quickened by a demi-god.To hear the liquid Tuscan speech at whiles,From citizen and peasant, to beholdThe heaven of Leonardo washed with gold -Would I had waked this morn where Florence smile!
Emma Lazarus
The House Of Dust: Part 02: 09: Interlude
The days, the nights, flow one by one above us,The hours go silently over our lifted faces,We are like dreamers who walk beneath a sea.Beneath high walls we flow in the sun together.We sleep, we wake, we laugh, we pursue, we flee.We sit at tables and sip our morning coffee,We read the papers for tales of lust or crime.The door swings shut behind the latest comer.We set our watches, regard the time.What have we done? I close my eyes, rememberThe great machine whose sinister brain before meSmote and smote with a rhythmic beat.My hands have torn down walls, the stone and plaster.I dropped great beams to the dusty street.My eyes are worn with measuring cloths of purple,And golden cloths, and wavering cloths, and pale.I dream of a ...
Conrad Aiken
A Dream Of Death
I Dreamed that one had died in a strange placeNear no accustomed hand,And they had nailed the boards above her face,The peasants of that land,Wondering to lay her in that solitude,And raised above her moundA cross they had made out of two bits of wood,And planted cypress round;And left her to the indifferent stars aboveUntil I carved these words:I(She was more beautiful than thy first love,)I(But now lies under boards.)
William Butler Yeats
An Afternoon
I am stirred by the dream of an afternoonOf a perfect day - though it was not June;The lilt of winds, and the droning tune That a busy city was humming.And a bronze-brown head, and lips like wineLeaning out through the window-vineA-list for steps that were maybe mine - Eager steps that were coming.I can see it all, as a dreamer may -The tender smile on your lips that day,And the glow on your cheek as we rode away Into the golden weather.And a love-light shone in your eyes of brown -I swear there did! - as we drove downThe crowded avenue out of the town, Through shadowy lanes, together:Drove out into the sunset-skiesThat glowed with wonderful crimson dyes;And with soul and spirit, and heart and eye...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Angels Of Sleep
Asleep the child fell When night cast its spell; The angels came near With laughter and cheer.Her watch at its waking the mother was keeping:"How sweet, my dear child, was your smile now while sleeping!" To God mother went, From home it was rent; Asleep the child fell 'Neath tears' troublous spell.But soon it heard laughter and mother-words tender;The angels brought dreams full of childhood's rare splendor. It grew with the years, Till gone were the tears; Asleep the child fell, While thoughts cast their spell.But faithful the angels their vigils were keeping,The thoughts took and whispered: "Have peace now, while sleeping!"
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson