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Astrophel's Song of Phyllida and Corydon
Fair in a morn (O fairest morn!), Was never morn so fair,There shone a sun, though not the sun That shineth in the air.For the earth, and from the earth, (Was never such a creature!)Did come this face (was never face That carried such a feature).Upon a hill (O blessèd hill! Was never hill so blessèd),There stood a man (was never man For woman so distressed):This man beheld a heavenly view, Which did such virtue giveAs clears the blind, and helps the lame, And makes the dead man live.This man had hap (O happy man! More happy none than he);For he had hap to see the hap That none had hap to see.This silly swain (and silly swains Are men of meanest grace):Had yet the grace (O grac...
Nicholas Breton
In Uncertainty To A Lady
I am not one of those who sip,Like a quotidian bock,Cheap idylls from a languid lipPrepared to yawn or mock.I wait the indubitable word,The great Unconscious Cue.Has it been spoken and unheard?Spoken, perhaps, by you ...?
Aldous Leonard Huxley
A Conceit.
The Grey-beard Winter sat alone and still, Locking his treasures in the flinty earth;And like a miser comfortless and chill, Frown'd upon pleasure and rejected mirth;But Spring came, gentle Spring, the young, the fair, And with her smiles subdued his frosty heart,So that for very joy to see her there, His soul, relenting, play'd the lover's part;And nought could bring too lovely or too sweet, To lavish on the bright Evangel's head;No flowers too radiant for her tender feet; No joys too blissful o'er her life to shed.And thus the land became a Paradise, A new-made Eden, redolent of joy,Where beauty blossom'd under sunny skies, And peaceful pleasure reign'd without alloy.
Walter R. Cassels
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet XCVII
Dian, that faine would cheare her friend the Night,Shewes her oft, at the full, her fairest face,Bringing with her those starry Nymphs, whose chaceFrom heau'nly standing hits each mortall wight.But ah, poore Night, in loue with Phoebus light,And endlesly dispairing of his grace,Her selfe, to shewe no other ioy hath place;Sylent and sad, in mourning weedes doth dight.Euen so (alas) a lady, Dians peere,With choise delights and rarest companyWould faine driue cloudes from out my heauy cheere;But, wo is me, though Ioy her selfe were she,Shee could not shew my blind braine waies of ioy,While I despaire my sunnes sight to enioy.
Philip Sidney
Song Of The Wise Children
When the darkened Fifties dip to the North,And frost and the fog divide the air,And the day is dead at his breaking-forth,Sirs, it is bitter beneath the Bear!Far to Southward they wheel and glance,The million molten spears of morn,The spears of our deliveranceThat shine on the house where we were born.Flying-fish about our bows,Flying sea-fires in our wake:This is the road to our Father's House,Whither we go for our souls' sake!We have forfeited our birthright,We have forsaken all things meet;We have forgotten the look of light,We have forgotten the scent of heart.They that walk with shaded brows,Year by year in a shining land,They be men of our Father's House,They shall receive us and understand....
Rudyard
On Seeing A Needlecase In The Form Of A Harp - The Work Of E.M.S.
Frowns are on every Muse's face,Reproaches from their lips are sent,That mimicry should thus disgraceThe noble Instrument.A very Harp in all but size!Needles for strings in apt gradation!Minerva's self would stigmatizeThe unclassic profanation.Even her 'own' needle that subduedArachne's rival spirit,Though wrought in Vulcan's happiest mood,Such honour could not merit.And this, too, from the Laureate's Child,A living lord of melody!How will her Sire be reconciledTo the refined indignity?I spake, when whispered a low voice,"Bard! moderate your ire;Spirits of all degrees rejoiceIn presence of the lyre.The Minstrels of Pygmean bands,Dwarf Genii, moonlight-loving Fays,Have shells to f...
William Wordsworth
What They Saw
Sad man, Sad man, tell me, pray,What did you see to-day?I saw the unloved and unhappy old, waiting for slow delinquent death to come.Pale little children toiling for the rich, in rooms where sunlight is ashamed to go.The awful alms-house, where the living dead rot slowly in their hideous open graves.And there were shameful things;Soldiers and forts, and industries of death, and devil ships, and loud-winged devil birds,All bent on slaughter and destruction. These and yet more shameful things mine eyes beheld.Old men upon lascivious conquest bent, and young men living with no thought of God;And half clothed women puffing at a weed, aping the vices of the underworld -Engrossed in shallow pleasures and intent on being barren wives.These things I saw.(How God must...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Illuminaire
Elfin & gold bug, genie in the twilight of a cave. Virgin On The Rocks - Da Vinci's painting - aura light seeping toward sun-lit crack of day, the Master's Mona Lisa in the Louvre raptured, luminescence amid aging pigment steeping about rapt multitude. Betwixt pit & pendulum, another canvas - Da Vinci in a beatific pose (warm light of the room), gentle finger pointing upward, a puzzled crowd with nowhere to see.
Paul Cameron Brown
Satire Against Reason And Mankind
Were I (who to my cost already amOne of those strange, prodigious creatures, man)A spirit free to choose, for my own share,What case of flesh and blood I pleased to wear,I'd be a dog, a monkey or a bear,Or anything but that vain animalWho is so proud of being rational.The senses are too gross, and he'll contriveA sixth, to contradict the other five,And before certain instinct, will preferReason, which fifty times for one does err;Reason, an ignis fatuus in the mind,Which, leaving light of nature, sense, behind,Pathless and dangerous wandering ways it takesThrough error's fenny bogs and thorny brakes;Whilst the misguided follower climbs with painMountains of whimseys, heaped in his own brain;Stumbling from thought to thought, falls h...
John Wilmot
Aedh Pleads With The Elemental Powers
The powers whose name and shape no living creature knowsHave pulled the Immortal Rose;And though the Seven Lights bowed in their dance and wept,The Polar Dragon slept,His heavy rings uncoiled from glimmering deep to deep:When will he wake from sleep?Great Powers of falling wave and wind and windy fire,With your harmonious choirEncircle her I love and sing her into peace,That my old care may cease;Unfold your flaming wings and cover out of sightThe nets of day and night.Dim Powers of drowsy thought, let her no longer beLike the pale cup of the sea,When winds have gathered and sun and moon burned dimAbove its cloudy rim;But let a gentle silence wrought with music flowWhither her footsteps go.
William Butler Yeats
Chanukah Thoughts
Not always as you see us now, Have we been used to weep and sigh,We too have grasped the sword, I trow, And seen astonished foemen fly!We too have rushed into the fray, For our Belief the battle braved,And through the spears have fought our way, And high the flag of vict'ry waved.But generations go and come, And suns arise and set in tears,And we are weakened now and dumb, Foregone the might of ancient years.In exile where the wicked reign,Our courage and our pride expired,But e'en today each throbbing vein With Asmonean blood is fired.Tho' cruel hands with mighty flail Have threshed us, yet we have not blenched:The sea of blood could naught prevail, That fire is burning, stil...
Morris Rosenfeld
The Night-Watches.
The laurel withers on your brow,victor, weary of the race!And you, who sit in mighty place,How heavy is your scepter now!Flushed with the kiss your lips have known,"Woman, this is your hour to wake.And know that flesh and heart may breakWhen love hath entered on its own.And you, who knew where angels trod.And marked the path for duller eyes.In this lone hour are you still wise?Do you not quail before your God?God, to whom the dark is day.Forget not these, the strong, the right.The happy souls, for. Lord, at nightThey tremble in their tents of clay!
Margaret Steele Anderson
One And Two.
I.If you to me be cold,Or I be false to you,The world will go on, I think,Just as it used to do;The clouds will flirt with the moon,The sun will kiss the sea,The wind to the trees will whisper,And laugh at you and me;But the sun will not shine so bright,The clouds will not seem so white,To one, as they will to two;So I think you had better be kind,And I had best be true,And let the old love go on,Just as it used to do.II.If the whole of a page be read,If a book be finished through,Still the world may read on, I think,Just as it used to do;For other lovers will conThe pages that we have passed,And the treacherous gold of the bindingWill glitter unto the last.But lids have a lonely look,...
Will Carleton
An Epistle To Robert Lloyd, Esq.
Tis not that I design to robThee of thy birthright, gentle Bob,For thou art born sole heir, and single,Of dear Mat Priors easy jingle;Not that I mean, while thus I knitMy threadbare sentiments together,To show my genius or my wit,When God and you know I have neither;Or such as might be better shownBy letting poetry alone.Tis not with either of these viewsThat I presumed to address the muse:But to divert a fierce banditti(Sworn foes to every thing thats witty!)That, with a black, infernal train,Make cruel inroads in my brain,And daily threaten to drive thenceMy little garrison of sense;The fierce banditti which I meanAre gloomy thoughts led on by spleen.Then theres another reason yet,Which is, that I may fairly...
William Cowper
A Lay Of The Links
It's up and away from our work to-day,For the breeze sweeps over the down;And it's hey for a game where the gorse blossoms flame,And the bracken is bronzing to brown.With the turf 'neath our tread and the blue overhead,And the song of the lark in the whin;There's the flag and the green, with the bunkers between -Now will you be over or in?The doctor may come, and we'll teach him to knowA tee where no tannin can lurk;The soldier may come, and we'll promise to showSome hazards a soldier may shirk;The statesman may joke, as he tops every stroke,That at last he is high in his aims;And the clubman will stand with a club in his handThat is worth every club in St. James'.The palm and the leather come rarely together,Gripping the driv...
Arthur Conan Doyle
Epithalamium. Another Version Of 'A Bridal Song'.
Night, with all thine eyes look down!Darkness shed its holiest dew!When ever smiled the inconstant moonOn a pair so true?Hence, coy hour! and quench thy light,Lest eyes see their own delight!Hence, swift hour! and thy loved flightOft renew.BOYS:O joy! O fear! what may be doneIn the absence of the sun?Come along!The golden gates of sleep unbar!When strength and beauty meet together,Kindles their image like a starIn a sea of glassy weather.Hence, coy hour! and quench thy light,Lest eyes see their own delight!Hence, swift hour! and thy loved flightOft renew.GIRLS:O joy! O fear! what may be doneIn the absence of the sun?Come along!Fairies! sprites! and angels, keep her!Holiest powers...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Science Club
Hurrah for the Science Club! Join it, ye fourth year men;Join it, thou smooth-cheeked scrub, Whose years scarce number tenJoin it, divines most grave; Science, as all men know,As a friend the Church may save, But may damage her as a foe.(And in any case it is well, If attacking insidious doubt,Or devoting H--- to H---, To know what you're talking about.)Hurrah for the lang-nebbit word! Hurrah for the erudite phrase,That in Dura Den shall be heard, That shall echo on Kinkell Braes!Hurrah for the spoils of the links (The golf-ball as well as the daisy)!Hurrah for explosions and stinks To set half the landladies crazy!Hurrah for the fragments of boulders, ...
Robert Fuller Murray
The Poet And The Brook.
A TALE OF TRANSFORMATIONS.A little Brook, that babbled under grass,Once saw a Poet pass--A Poet with long hair and saddened eyes,Who went his weary way with woeful sighs.And on another time,This Brook did hear that Poet read his rueful rhyme.Now in the poem that he read,This Poet said--"Oh! little Brook that babblest under grass!(Ah me! Alack! Ah, well-a-day! Alas!)Say, are you what you seem?Or is your life, like other lives, a dream?What time your babbling mocks my mortal moods,Fair Naïad of the stream!And are you, in good sooth,Could purblind poesy perceive the truth,A water-sprite,Who sometimes, for man's dangerous delight,Puts on a human form and face,To wear them with a superhuman grace?
Juliana Horatia Ewing