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The Two Wives
Smoker's Club-StoryI waited at home all the while they were boating together -My wife and my near neighbour's wife:Till there entered a woman I loved more than life,And we sat and sat on, and beheld the uprising dark weather,With a sense that some mischief was rife.Tidings came that the boat had capsized, and that one of the ladiesWas drowned which of them was unknown:And I marvelled my friend's wife? or was it my ownWho had gone in such wise to the land where the sun as the shade is?We learnt it was HIS had so gone.Then I cried in unrest: "He is free! But no good is releasingTo him as it would be to me!"" But it is," said the woman I loved, quietly."How?" I asked her. " Because he has long loved me too without ceasing,And it'...
Thomas Hardy
A Deposition From Love
I was foretold, your rebell sex,Nor love, nor pitty knew;And with what scorn you use to vexPoor hearts that humbly sue;Yet I believd, to crown our pain,Could we the fortress win,The happy Lover sure should gainA Paradise within:I thought Loves plagues, like Dragons sate,Only to fright us at the gate.But I did enter, and enjoyWhat happy Lovers prove;For I could kiss, and sport, and toy,And taste those sweets of love;Which had they but a lasting state,Or if in Celias brestThe force of love might not abate,Jove were too mean a guest.But now her breach of faith, farre moreAfflicts, than did her scorn before.Hard fate! to have been once possest,As victor, of a heartAtchievd with labour, and unrest,<...
Thomas Carew
A Lost Opportunity
One dark, dark night--it was long ago, The air was heavy and still and warm--It fell to me and a man I know, To see two girls to their father's farm.There was little seeing, that I recall: We seemed to grope in a cave profound.They might have come by a painful fall, Had we not helped them over the ground.The girls were sisters. Both were fair, But mine was the fairer (so I say).The dark soon severed us, pair from pair, And not long after we lost our way.We wandered over the country-side, And we frightened most of the sheep about,And I do not think that we greatly tried, Having lost our way, to find it out.The night being fine, it was not worth while. We strayed through furrow and corn ...
Robert Fuller Murray
Odes From Horace. - To Nea[=E]ra. Book The Fifth, Epode The Fifteenth.
'T was night - the moon, upon her sapphire throne,High o'er the waning stars serenely shone,When thou, false Nymph, determin'd to prophaneThem, and each Power that rules the earth, and main,As thy soft, snowy arms about me twin'd,Close as round oaks the clasping ivies wind,Swore, while the gaunt wolf shall infest the lea,And red Orion vex the wintry sea,While gales shall fan Apollo's floating locks,That shed their golden light o'er hills and rocks,So long thy breast should burn with purest fires,With mutual hopes, and with unchang'd desires. Perjur'd Nea[=e]ra! thou shalt one day proveThe worth, the vengeance of my slighted love;For O! if Manhood steels, if Honor warms,Horace shall fly, shall scorn thy faithless charms;Seek some bright...
Anna Seward
Fareweel, ye bughts
Fareweel, ye bughts, an' all your ewes,An' fields whare bIoomin' heather grows;Nae mair the sportin' lambs I'll seeSince my true love's forsaken me.CHORUS.Nae mair I'll hear wi' pleasure singThe cheerfu' lav'rock in the Spring,But sad in grief now I maun mourn,Far, far frae her, o'er Logan-burn.Alas! nae mair we'll meetings keepAt bughts, whan herds ca' in their sheep;Nae mair amang the threshes greenWe'll row, where we hae aften been.CHORUSNae mair for me , ye vi'lets blaw,Or lilies whiter than the snaw;Nae mair your pleasures I can bear,While I am absent frae my dear.CHORUSI ken the cause of my hard fate;In courtin' her I was too blate;I never kiss'd my las...
James Thomson
An Elegy
Though beauty be the mark of praise,And yours of whom I sing be suchAs not the world can praise too much,Yet tis your Virtue now I raise.A virtue, like allay so goneThroughout your form as, though that moveAnd draw and conquer all mens love,This subjects you to love of one.Wherein you triumph yet becauseTis of your flesh, and that you useThe noblest freedom, not to chooseAgainst or faith or honours laws.But who should less expect from you?In whom alone Love lives again:By whom he is restored to men,And kept and bred and brought up true.His falling temples you have reard,The witherd garlands taen away;His altars kept from that decayThat envy wishd, and nature feard:And on them burn s...
Ben Jonson
Memorials Of A Tour In Scotland 1814 - Iv. Yarrow Visited - September 1814
And is this, Yarrow? 'This' the StreamOf which my fancy cherished,So faithfully, a waking dream?An image that hath perished!O that some Minstrel's harp were near,To utter notes of gladness,And chase this silence from the air,That fills my heart with sadness!Yet why? a silvery current flowsWith uncontrolled meanderings;Nor have these eyes by greener hillsBeen soothed, in all my wanderings.And, through her depths, Saint Mary's LakeIs visibly delighted;For not a feature of those hillsIs in the mirror slighted.A blue sky bends o'er Yarrow vale,Save where that pearly whitenessIs round the rising sun diffused,A tender hazy brightness;Mild dawn of promise! that excludesAll profitless dejection;Though not...
William Wordsworth
Bashfulness.
Of all our parts, the eyes expressThe sweetest kind of bashfulness.
Robert Herrick
Sonnet LXXXVII. To A Young Lady, Addressed By A Gentleman Celebrated For His Poetic Talents.
Round Cleon's brow the Delphic laurels twine, And lo! the laurel decks Amanda's breast! Charm'd shall he mark its glossy branches shine On that contrasting snow; shall see express'dLove's better omens, in the green hues dress'd Of this selected foliage. - Nymph, 't is thine The warning story on its leaves to find, Proud Daphne's fate, imprison'd in its rind,And with its umbrage veil'd, great Phoebus' power Scorning, and bent, with feet of wind, to foil His swift pursuit, till on Thessalian shoreShot into boughs, and rooted to the soil. - Thus warn'd, fair Maid, Apollo's ire to shun, Soon may his Spray's and VOTARY's lot be one.
To A Dead Friend
It is as if a silver chordWere suddenly grown mute,And life's song with its rhythm warredAgainst a silver lute.It is as if a silence fellWhere bides the garnered sheaf,And voices murmuring, "It is well,"Are stifled by our grief.It is as if the gloom of nightHad hid a summer's day,And willows, sighing at their plight,Bent low beside the way.For he was part of all the bestThat Nature loves and gives,And ever more on Memory's breastHe lies and laughs and lives.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
You Never Can Tell
You never can tell when you send a word, Like an arrow shot from a bowBy an archer blind, be it cruel or kind, Just where it may chance to go!It may pierce the breast of your dearest friend, Tipped with its poison or balm;To a stranger's heart in life's great mart, It may carry its pain or its calm.You never can tell when you do an act Just what the result will be;But with every deed you are sowing a seed, Though the harvest you may not see.Each kindly act is an acorn dropped In God's productive soil.You may not know, but the tree shall grow, With shelter for those who toil.You never can tell what your thoughts will do, In bringing you hate or love;For thoughts are things, and their airy wings<...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Mist and Sunshine.
I looked, and the mist had hidden Streamlet and gorge and mountain,Mansion and church had vanished away, No trace of tree or fountain.Mist, on the roof where birdlings wake The strains of old love stories,Mist, like tears on the roses' cheek, In cups of the morning glories."Ah, like life, 'said my heart to me,' Only a world of sorrow,The lips you love, the hands you clasp, Are cold and strange to-morrow.Mists on the stream of by-gone days, Where are your childhood bowers?Mists on the path of coming years. Where are your household flowers?"I looked again; a sunbeam bright Had shot through the heavy mist;It drew the rose to its glowing breast, And the morning glories kissed.T...
Harriet Annie Wilkins
A Reminiscence
I saw the wild honey-bee kissing a rose A wee one, that growsDown low on the bush, where her sisters above Cannot see all that's done As the moments roll on.Nor hear all the whispers and murmurs of love.They flaunt out their beautiful leaves in the sun, And they flirt, every one,With the wild bees who pass, and the gay butterflies. And that wee thing in pink - Why, they never once thinkThat she's won a lover right under their eyes.It reminded me, Kate, of a time - you know when! You were so petite then,Your dresses were short, and your feet were so small. Your sisters, Maud-Belle And Madeline - well,They BOTH set their caps for me, after that ball.How the blue eyes and black eyes smiled u...
My God! O Let Me Call Thee Mine!
My God! O let me call Thee mine!Weak wretched sinner though I be,My trembling soul would fain be Thine,My feeble faith still clings to Thee,My feeble faith still clings to Thee.Not only for the past I grieve,The future fills me with dismay;Unless Thou hasten to relieve,I know my heart will fall away,I know my heart will fall away.I cannot say my faith is strong,I dare not hope my love is great;But strength and love to Thee belong,O, do not leave me desolate!O, do not leave me desolate!I know I owe my all to Thee,O, take this heart I cannot give.Do Thou my Strength my Saviour be;And make me to Thy glory live!And make me to Thy glory live!
Anne Bronte
Let Us Give Thanks
For the courage which comes when we call,While troubles like hailstones fall;For the help that is somehow nigh,In the deepest night when we cry;For the path that is certainly shownWhen we pray in the dark alone, Let us give thanks.For the knowledge we gain if we waitAnd bear all the buffets of fate;For the vision that beautifies sightIf we look under wrong for the right;For the gleam of the ultimate goalThat shines on each reverent soul: Let us give thanks.For the consciousness stirring in creedsThat love is the thing the world needs;For the cry of the travailing earthThat is giving a new faith birth;For the God we are learning to findIn the heart and the soul and the mind: Let us give thanks.<...
The Soldier's Death.
The day was o'er, and in their tent the weaned victors met,In wine and social gaiety the carnage to forget.The merry laugh and sparkling jest, the pleasant tale were there -Each heart was free and gladsome then, each brow devoid of care.Yet one was absent from the board who ever was the firstIn every joyous, festive scene, in every mirthful burst;He also was the first to dare each perilous command,To rush on danger - yet was he the youngest of the band.Upon the battle-field he lay a damp and fearful grave;His right hand grasped the cherished flag - the flag he died to save;While the cold stars shone calmly down on heaps of fallen dead,And their pale light a halo cast round that fair sleeper's head.Say, was there none o'er that young chief to shed one...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Eyes
A winter sky of pale blue and pale gold,Bare trees, a wind that made the wood-path cold,And one slow-moving figure, gray and old.We met where the soft path falls from the woodDown to the village. As I came near she stoodAnd answered when I spoke, drawing the hoodBack from her face. I saw only her eyes,Large and sad. I could not bear those eyes.They were like new graves. I could not bear her eyes.But what we said as each passed on is gone.We looked and spoke and passed like strangers on,I to the high wood, she towards the paling sun.And there, where the clear-heavened small pool lies,And the tallest beeches brush the bending skies,In pool and tree I saw again her eyes.
John Frederick Freeman
August.
God in His own right hand doth take each day - Each sun-filled day - each rare and radiant night, And drop it softly on the earth and say: "Touch earth with heaven's own beauty and delight."
Jean Blewett