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The Destruction Of Babylon.
An awful vision floats before my sight,Black as the storm and fearful as the night:Thy fall, oh Babylon!--the awful doomPronounced by Heaven to hurl thee to the tomb,Peals in prophetic thunder in mine ear--The voice of God foretelling ruin near! Hark! what strange murmurs from the hills arise,Like rushing torrents from the bursting skies!Loud as the billows of the restless tide,In strange confusion flowing far and wide,Ring the deep tones of horror and dismay,The shriek--the shout--the battle's stern array--The gathering cry of nations from afar--The tramp of steeds--the tumult of the war--Burst on mine ear, and o'er thy fated towersHovers despair, and fierce destruction lowers;Within the fire--without the vengeful sword;Who lead...
Susanna Moodie
James Lionel Michael
Be his rest the rest he sought:Calm and deep.Let no wayward word or thoughtVex his sleep.Peace the peace that no man knowsNow remainsWhere the wasted woodwind blows,Wakes and wanes.Latter leaves, in Autumns breath,White and sere,Sanctify the scholars death,Lying here.Soft surprises of the sunSwift, sereneOer the mute grave-grasses run,Cold and green.Wet and cold the hillwinds moan;Let them rave!Love that takes a tender toneLights his grave.He who knew the friendless faceSorrows shew,Often sought this quiet placeYears ago.One, too apt to faint and fail,Loved to strayHere where water-shallows wailDay by day.Care that lays her heavy...
Henry Kendall
Where The Battle Passed
One blossoming rose-tree, like a beautiful thoughtNursed in a broken mind, that waits and schemes,Survives, though shattered, and about it caught,The strangling dodder streams.Gaunt weeds: and here a bayonet or pouch,Rusty and rotting where men fought and slew:Bald, trampled paths that seem with fear to crouch,Feeling a bloody dew.Here nothing that was beauty's once remains.War left the garden to its dead alone:And Life and Love, who toiled here, for their painsHave nothing once their own.Death leans upon the battered door, at gazeThe house is silent where there once was stirOf husbandry, that led laborious days,With Love for comforter.Now in Love's place, Death, old and halt and blind,Gropes, searching everywhere ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Fragment: 'Alas! This Is Not What I Thought Life Was'.
Alas! this is not what I thought life was.I knew that there were crimes and evil men,Misery and hate; nor did I hope to passUntouched by suffering, through the rugged glen.In mine own heart I saw as in a glassThe hearts of others ... And whenI went among my kind, with triple brassOf calm endurance my weak breast I armed,To bear scorn, fear, and hate, a woful mass!
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Separation
Stop Not to me, at this bitter departing,Speak of the sure consolations of Time.Fresh be the wound, still-renewd be its smarting,So but thy image endure in its prime.But, if the stedfast commandment of NatureWills that remembrance should always decay;If the lovd form and the deep-cherishd featureMust, when unseen, from the soul fade awayMe let no half-effacd memories cumber!Fled, fled at once, be all vestige of theeDeep be the darkness, and still be the slumberDead be the Past and its phantoms to me!Then, when we meet, and thy look strays towards me,Scanning my face and the changes wrought there,Who, let me say, is this Stranger regards me,With the grey eyes, and the lovely brown hair?
Matthew Arnold
Death
Out of the shadows of sadness,Into the sunshine of gladness,Into the light of the blest;Out of a land very dreary,Out of a world very weary,Into the rapture of rest.Out of to-day's sin and sorrow,Into a blissful to-morrow,Into a day without gloom;Out of a land filled with sighing,Land of the dead and the dying,Into a land without tomb.Out of a life of commotion,Tempest-swept oft as the ocean,Dark with the wrecks drifting o'er;Into a land calm and quiet,Never a storm cometh nigh it,Never a wreck on its shore.Out of a land in whose bowersPerish and fade all the flowers:Out of the land of decay,Into the Eden where fairestOf flowerets, and sweetest and rarest,Never shall wither away....
Abram Joseph Ryan
Parentage
"When Augustus Caesar legislated against the unmarried citizens of Rome, he declared them to be, in some sort, slayers of the people." Ah no, not these!These, who were childless, are not they who gaveSo many dead unto the journeying wave,The helpless nurslings of the cradling seas;Not they who doomed by infallible decreesUnnumbered man to the innumerable grave. But those who slayAre fathers. Theirs are armies. Death is theirs,The death of innocences and despairs;The dying of the golden and the grey.The sentence, when these speak it, has no Nay.And she who slays is she who bears, who bears.
Alice Meynell
The Musician's[1] Grave.
Thou'rt gone like the meteor that blazed in the sky,And the spot thou hast smiled upon knows thee no more,Is there no one that heaves o'er thy ashes a sigh?Is there none to regret? Is there none to deplore?Thy note--it is silent, thy song--it is hushed,No more shall thy music entrance or enthral,The music that like the blue rivulet gushed,A finger of terror has silenced it all.When far through the cloisters the anthem was stealing,Thy heart was ablaze with a heavenly ray--When thy organ was softly and tenderly pealing,Or the bass of thy bourdon was rolling away.Thy vespers were sweet and thy exquisite numbersSwelled gently and hung on the tremulous air,And, light as the prayer before infancy's slumbers,Ascended on high--thou hast fo...
Lennox Amott
The Dying Gipsy Smuggler
Wasted, weary, wherefore stay,Wrestling thus with earth and clay?From the body pass away;Hark! the mass is singing.From thee doff thy mortal weed,Mary Mother be thy speed,Saints to help thee at thy need;Hark! the knell is ringing.Fear not snow-drift driving fast,Sleet, or hail, or levin blast;Soon the shroud shall lap thee fast,And the sleep be on thee castThat shall ne'er know waking.Haste thee, haste thee, to be gone,Earth flits fast, and time draws on,Gasp thy gasp, and groan thy groan,Day is near the breaking.
Walter Scott
The Child's Appeal.
An Incident Of The French Revolution And Reign Of Robespierre.Day dawned above a city's mart,Yet not 'mid peace and prayer:The shouts of frenzied multitudesWere on the thrilling air.A guiltless man to death was led,Through crowded streets and wide,And a fairy child, with waving curls,Was clinging to his side.The father's brow with pride was calm,But, trusting and serene,The child's was like the Holy One'sIn Raphael's paintings seen.She shrank not from the heartless throng,Nor from the scaffold high;But now and then, with beaming smile,Addressed her parent's eye.Athwart the golden flood of mornWas poised the wing of Death,As 'neath the fearful guillotineThe doomed one drew his breath.
Mary Gardiner Horsford
Curfew
I.Solemnly, mournfully, Dealing its dole,The Curfew Bell Is beginning to toll.Cover the embers, And put out the light;Toil comes with the morning, And rest with the night.Dark grow the windows, And quenched is the fire;Sound fades into silence,-- All footsteps retire.No voice in the chambers, No sound in the hall!Sleep and oblivion Reign over all!II.The book is completed, And closed, like the day;And the hand that has written it Lays it away.Dim grow its fancies; Forgotten they lie;Like coals in the ashes, They darken and die.Song sinks into silence, The story is told,The windows ar...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Deadliest Sin
There are not many sins when once we sift them.In actions of evolving human soulsStriving to reach high goalsAnd falling backward into dust and mire,Some element we find that seems to lift themAbove our condemnation - even higherInto the realm of pity and compassion.So beauteous a thing as love itself can fashionA chain of sins; descending to desire,It wanders into dangerous paths, and leadsTo most unholy deeds,And light-struck, walks in madness toward the night.Wrong oft-times is an over-ripened right,A rank weed grown from some neglected flower,The lightning uncontrolled: flames meant for joyAnd beauty, used to ravage and destroy.For sins like these repentance can atone.There is one sin aloneWhich seems all unforgivable, ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Lament.
1.O world! O life! O time!On whose last steps I climb,Trembling at that where I had stood before;When will return the glory of your prime?No more - Oh, never more!2.Out of the day and nightA joy has taken flight;Fresh spring, and summer, and winter hoar,Move my faint heart with grief, but with delightNo more - Oh, never more!
The Dungeoned Anarchist.
He crouches, voiceless, in his tomb-like cell, Forgot of all things save his jailer's hate That turns the daylight from his iron grateTo make his prison more and more a hell;For him no coming day or hour shall spell Deliverance, or bid his soul await The hand of Mercy at his dungeon gate:He would not know even though a kingdom fell!The black night hides his hand before his eyes,-- That grim, clenched hand still burning with the stingOf royal blood; he holds it like a prize, Waiting the hour when he at last shall flingThe stain in God's face, shrieking as he dies: "Behold the unconquered arm that slew a king!"
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
The Only Son
O Bitter wind toward the sunset blowing, What of the dales to-night?In yonder gray old hall what fires are glowing, What ring of festal light? "In the great window as the day was dwindling I saw an old man stand; His head was proudly held and his eyes kindling, But the list shook in his hand."O wind of twilight, was there no word uttered, No sound of joy or wail?"'A great fight and a good death,' he muttered; 'Trust him, he would not fail.'"What of the chamber dark where she was lying; For whom all life is done?"Within her heart she rocks a dead child, crying 'My son, my ltttle son.'"
Henry John Newbolt
The City In The Sea
Lo! Death has reared himself a throneIn a strange city lying aloneFar down within the dim West,Where the good and the bad and the worst and the bestHave gone to their eternal rest.There shrines and palaces and towers(Time-eaten towers and tremble not!)Resemble nothing that is ours.Around, by lifting winds forgot,Resignedly beneath the skyThe melancholy waters lie.No rays from the holy Heaven come downOn the long night-time of that town;But light from out the lurid seaStreams up the turrets silentlyGleams up the pinnacles far and freeUp domes up spires up kingly hallsUp fanes up Babylon-like wallsUp shadowy long-forgotten bowersOf sculptured ivy and stone flowersUp many and many a marvellous shrineWhose wreath...
Edgar Allan Poe
A Lamentation
I.Who hath known the ways of timeOr trodden behind his feet?There is no such man among men.For chance overcomes him, or crimeChanges; for all things sweetIn time wax bitter again.Who shall give sorrow enough,Or who the abundance of tears?Mine eyes are heavy with loveAnd a sword gone thorough mine ears,A sound like a sword and fire,For pity, for great desire;Who shall ensure me thereof,Lest I die, being full of my fears?Who hath known the ways and the wrath,The sleepless spirit, the rootAnd blossom of evil will,The divine device of a god?Who shall behold it or hath?The twice-tongued prophets are mute,The many speakers are still;No foot has travelled or trod,No hand has meted, his path.Mans f...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Sweet Death
The sweetest blossoms die. And so it was that, going day by day Unto the church to praise and pray,And crossing the green churchyard thoughtfully, I saw how on the graves the flowers Shed their fresh leaves in showers,And how their perfume rose up to the sky Before it passed away.The youngest blossoms die. They die, and fall and nourish the rich earth From which they lately had their birth;Sweet life, but sweeter death that passeth by And is as though it had not been: - All colors turn to green:The bright hues vanish, and the odours fly, The grass hath lasting worth.And youth and beauty die. So be it, O my God, Thou God of truth: Better than beauty and than youthAre Saints and An...
Christina Georgina Rossetti