Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 482 of 739
Previous
Next
Could I But Will (Song)
(Verses 1, 3, Key Major; Verse 2, Key Minor)Could I but will,Will to my bent,I'd have afar ones near me still,And music of rare ravishment,In strains that move the toes and heels!And when the sweethearts sat for restThe unbetrothed should foot with zestEcstatic reels.Could I be head,Head-god, "Come, now,Dear girl," I'd say, "whose flame is fled,Who liest with linen-banded brow,Stirred but by shakes from Earth's deep core "I'd say to her: "Unshroud and meetThat Love who kissed and called thee Sweet! -Yea, come once more!"Even half-god powerIn spinning doomsHad I, this frozen scene should flower,And sand-swept plains and Arctic gloomsShould green them gay with waving leaves,Mid whi...
Thomas Hardy
To One Unsatisfied
When, with all the loved around thee, Still thy heart says, "I am lonely,"It is well; the truth hath found thee: Rest is with the Father only.
George MacDonald
The Patchwork Bonnet
Across the room my silent love I throw, Where you sit sewing in bed by candlelight, Your young stern profile and industrious fingersDisplayed against the blind in a shadow-show, To Dinda's grave delight.The needle dips and pokes, the cheerful thread Runs after, follow-my-leader down the seam: The patchwork pieces cry for joy together,O soon to sit as a crown on Dinda's head, Fulfilment of their dream.Snippets and odd ends folded by, forgotten, With camphor on a top shelf, hard to find, Now wake to this most happy resurrection,To Dinda playing toss with a reel of cotton And staring at the blind.Dinda in sing-song stretching out one hand Calls for the playthings; mother does not hear:
Robert von Ranke Graves
Dear Fanny.
"She has beauty, but still you must keep your heart cool; "She has wit, but you mustn't be caught, so;"Thus Reason advises, but Reason's a fool, And 'tis not the first time I have thought so, Dear Fanny. 'Tis not the first time I have thought so."She is lovely; then love her, nor let the bliss fly; "'Tis the charm of youth's vanishing season;"Thus Love has advised me and who will deny That Love reasons much better than Reason, Dear Fanny? Love reasons much better than Reason.
Thomas Moore
A Song Of Love
Love reckons not by time - its May days of delightAre swifter than the falling stars that pass beyond our sight.Love reckons not by time - its moments of despairAre years that march like prisoners, who drag the chains they wear.Love counts not by the sun - it hath no night or day -'Tis only light when love is near - 'tis dark with love away.Love hath no measurements of height, or depth, or space,But yet within a little grave it oft hath found a place.Love is its own best law - its wrongs seek no redress;Love is forgiveness - and it only knoweth how to bless.
Virna Sheard
The Bartholdi Statue
The land, that, from the rule of kings,In freeing us, itself made free,Our Old World Sister, to us bringsHer sculptured Dream of Liberty,Unlike the shapes on Egypt's sandsUplifted by the toil-worn slave,On Freedom's soil with freemen's handsWe rear the symbol free hands gave.O France, the beautiful! to theeOnce more a debt of love we oweIn peace beneath thy Colors Three,We hail a later Rochambeau!Rise, stately Symbol! holding forthThy light and hope to all who sitIn chains and darkness! Belt the earthWith watch-fires from thy torch uplit!Reveal the primal mandate stillWhich Chaos heard and ceased to be,Trace on mid-air th' Eternal WillIn signs of fire: "Let man be free!"Shine far, shine free...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Sea-Wife
There dwells a wife by the Northern Gate,And a wealthy wife is she;She breeds a breed o' rovin' menAnd casts them over sea.And some are drowned in deep water,And some in sight o' shore,And word goes back to the weary wifeAnd ever she sends more.For since that wife had gate or gear,Or hearth or garth or bield,She willed her sons to the white harvest,And that is a bitter yield.She wills her sons to the wet ploughing,To ride the horse of tree,And syne her sons come back againFar-spent from out the sea.The good wife's sons come home againWith little into their hands,But the lore of men that ha' dealt with menIn the new and naked lands;But the faith of men that ha' brothered menBy more than...
Rudyard
A Parable.
I Picked a rustic nosegay lately,And bore it homewards, musing greatly;When, heated by my hand, I foundThe heads all drooping tow'rd the ground.I plac'd them in a well-cool'd glass,And what a wonder came to passThe heads soon raised themselves once more.The stalks were blooming as before,And all were in as good a caseAs when they left their native place.* * * *So felt I, when I wond'ring heardMy song to foreign tongues transferr'd.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Oberon's Chapel
A way enhanced with glass and beadsThere is, that to the Chapel leads;Whose structure, for his holy rest,Is here the Halcyon's curious nest;Into the which who looks, shall seeHis Temple of Idolatry;Where he of god-heads has such store,As Rome's Pantheon had not more.His house of Rimmon this he calls,Girt with small bones, instead of walls.First in a niche, more black than jet,His idol-cricket there is set;Then in a polish'd oval byThere stands his idol-beetle-fly;Next, in an arch, akin to this,His idol-canker seated is.Then in a round, is placed by theseHis golden god, Cantharides.So that where'er ye look, ye seeNo capital, no cornice free,Or frieze, from this fine frippery.Now this the Fairies would have known,
Robert Herrick
Fragments Written For Hellas.
1.Fairest of the Destinies,Disarray thy dazzling eyes:Keener far thy lightnings areThan the winged [bolts] thou bearest,And the smile thou wearestWraps thee as a starIs wrapped in light.2.Could Arethuse to her forsaken urnFrom Alpheus and the bitter Doris run,Or could the morning shafts of purest lightAgain into the quivers of the SunBe gathered - could one thought from its wild flightReturn into the temple of the brainWithout a change, without a stain, -Could aught that is, ever againBe what it once has ceased to be,Greece might again be free!3.A star has fallen upon the earthMid the benighted nations,A quenchless atom of immortal light,A living spark of Night,A cresset shaken from th...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
There Are Fairies
Elfins of the Autumn night,Gather! gather! work's to do:Th re's the toadstool, plump and white,To be lifted into view:And the ghost-flower, like a light,To be dight,And washed white with moon and dew;While the frog,From the bog,Watchmans us with"All is right."Ouphes, come help the spider spin,Stretch his webs for mist and moon;Rim with rounded rain, or, thin,Curve into a frosty lune:Lift the mushroom's rosy chin,Help it winThrough the leaves that lie aboon;While the cricketIn the thicketMakes its fairy fiddle din."Lift the Mushroom's rosy chin."Brim the lichen-cups with rain;Blow to feather the goldenrods;Help the touchmenots, a-strainTo explode their ripened pods,Sow their patte...
Madison Julius Cawein
Thoras Song - (Ashtaroth)
We severed in autumn early,Ere the earth was torn by the plough;The wheat and the oats and the barleyAre ripe for the harvest now.We sunderd one misty morning,Ere the hills were dimmd by the rain,Through the flowers those hills adorning,Thou comest not back again.My heart is heavy and wearyWith the weight of a weary soul;The mid-day glare grows dreary,And dreary the midnight scroll.The corn-stalks sigh for the sickle,Neath the load of the golden grain;I sigh for a mate more fickle,Thou comest not back again.The warm sun riseth and setteth,The night bringeth moistning dew,But the soul that longeth forgettethThe warmth and the moisture, too;In the hot sun rising and settingThere is naught save feveris...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The Vision In The Wood.
The husht September afternoon was sweet With rich and peaceful light. I could not hear On either side the sound of moving feet Although the hidden road was very near. The laden wood had powdered sun in it, Slipped through the leaves, a quiet messenger To tell me of the golden world outside Where fields of stubble stretched through counties wide. And yet I did not move. My head reposed Upon a tuft of dry and scented grass And, with half-seeing eyes, through eyelids closed, I watched the languid chain of shadows pass, Light as the slowly moving shade imposed By summer clouds upon a sea of glass, And strove to banish or to make more clear The elusive and persistent drea...
Edward Shanks
Vpon The Death Of The Lady Olive Stanhope
Canst thou depart and be forgotten so,STANHOPE thou canst not, no deare STANHOPE, no:But in despight of death the world shall see,That Muse which so much graced was by theeCan black Obliuion vtterly out-braue,And set thee vp aboue thy silent Graue.I meruail'd much the Derbian Nimphes were dumbe,Or of those Muses, what should be become,That of all those, the mountaines there among,Not one this while thy Epicediumsung;But so it is, when they of thee were reft,They all those hills, and all those Riuers left,And sullen growne, their former seates remoue,Both from cleare Darwin, and from siluer Doue,And for thy losse, they greeued are so sore,That they haue vow'd they will come there no more;But leaue thy losse to me, that I should rue thee,Vn...
Michael Drayton
The Voices Of The People
Oh! I hear the people calling through the day time and the night time,They are calling, they are crying for the coming of the right time.It behooves you, men and women, it behooves you to be heeding,For there lurks a note of menace underneath their plaintive pleading.Let the land usurpers listen, let the greedy-hearted ponder,On the meaning of the murmur, rising here and swelling yonder,Swelling louder, waxing stronger, like a storm-fed stream that coursesThrough the valleys, down abysses, growing, gaining with new forces.Day by day the river widens, that great river of opinion,And its torrent beats and plunges at the base of greed's dominion.Though you dam it by oppression and fling golden bridges o'er it,Yet the day and hour advances when in fright you'll flee...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
International Ode - Our Fathers' Land
God bless our Fathers' Land!Keep her in heart and handOne with our own!From all her foes defend,Be her brave People's Friend,On all her realms descend,Protect her Throne!Father, with loving careGuard Thou her kingdom's Heir,Guide all his waysThine arm his shelter be,From him by land and seaBid storm and danger flee,Prolong his days!Lord, let War's tempest cease,Fold the whole Earth in peaceUnder thy wingsMake all thy nations one,All hearts beneath the sun,Till Thou shalt reign alone,Great King of kings!
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Flesh And Spirit.
Ben posson gli occhi.Well may these eyes of mine both near and far Behold the beams that from thy beauty flow; But, lady, feet must halt where sight may go: We see, but cannot climb to clasp a star.The pure ethereal soul surmounts that bar Of flesh, and soars to where thy splendours glow, Free through the eyes; while prisoned here below, Though fired with fervent love, our bodies are.Clogged with mortality and wingless, we Cannot pursue an angel in her flight: Only to gaze exhausts our utmost might.Yet, if but heaven like earth incline to thee, Let my whole body be one eye to see, That not one part of me may miss thy sight!
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
Lines Written At Brighton.
From Mirth's bright circle, from the giddy throng,How sweet it is to steal away at eve,To listen to the homeward fisher's song,Whilst dark the waters of the ocean heave; -And on the sloping beach to bear the sprayDash 'gainst some hoary vessel's broken side;Whilst, far illumin'd by the parting ray,The distant sail is faintly seen to glide.Yes, 'tis Reflection's chosen hour; for then,With pensive pleasure mingling o'er the scene,Th' erratic mind treads over life again,And gazes on the past with eye serene.Those stormy passions which bedimm'd the soul,That oft have bid the joys it treasur'd fly,Now, like th' unruffled waves of Ocean, rollWith gentle lapse - their only sound a sigh.The galling wrong no longer knits the brow...
John Carr