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His Dancing Days
Never did I find me mate for charmin' an' delightin',Never one that had me bate for courtin' an' for fightin';--(A white moon at the crossroads then, and Denny with the fiddle;The parish round admirin', when I danced down the middle.)Up the earth and down again, me like you'd not discover;Arrah! for the times before me dancin' days were over!Never was a moon so low it didn't find me courtin',Never blade I couldn't show a wilder way of sportin'.(Is it at the fair I'd be, the gentry'd troop to talk with me;Leapin' with delight was she,--the girl I'd choose to walk with me.)'Twas I could win the pick of them from any lad or lover;Arrah! for the times before me dancin' days were over!What's come to all the lads to-day,--these mournful ways they're keepin',
Theodosia Garrison
A Litany
FIRST ANTIPHONE.All the bright lights of heavenI will make dark over thee;One night shall be as sevenThat its skirts may cover thee;I will send on thy strong men a sword,On thy remnant a rod;Ye shall know that I am the Lord,Saith the Lord God.SECOND ANTIPHONE.All the bright lights of heavenThou hast made dark over us;One night has been as sevenThat its skirt might cover us;Thou hast sent on our strong men a sword,On our remnant a rod;We know that thou art the Lord,O Lord our God.THIRD ANTIPHONE.As the tresses and wings of the windAre scattered and shaken,I will scatter all them that have sinned,There shall none be taken;As a sower that scattereth seed,So will I scatter them;As on...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
A Legacy.
Ah, Postumus, we all must go:This keen North-Easter nips my shoulder;My strength begins to fail; I knowYou find me older;I've made my Will. Dear, faithful friend--My Muse's friend and not my purse's!Who still would hear and still commendMy tedious verses,How will you live--of these deprived?I've learned your candid soul. The venal,--The sordid friend had scarce survivedA test so penal;But you--Nay, nay, 'tis so. The restAre not as you: you hide your merit;You, more than all, deserve the bestTrue friends inherit;--Not gold,--that hearts like yours despise;Not "spacious dirt" (your own expression),No; but the rarer, dearer prize--The Life's Confession!You catch my thought? What! Can't you gues...
Henry Austin Dobson
Arms And The Man. - The Continentals.
In hunting shirts, or faded blue and buff,And many clad in simple, rustic stuff,Their ensigns torn but held by Freedom's hand,In long-drawn lines the Continentals stand.To them precision, if not martial grace;Each heart triumphant but composed each face;Well taught in military arts by brave Steuben,With port of soldiers, majesty of men,All fathers of their Country like a wallThey stand at rest to see the curtain fall.Well-taught were they by one who learned War's tradeFrom Frederick, whom not Ruin's self dismayed; -Well-taught by one who never lost the heatCaught on an anvil where all Europe beat; -Beat in a storm of blows, with might and main,But on that Prussian anvil beat in vain!And to the gallant race of Steuben's nameThat long has h...
James Barron Hope
The Pine Tree
Lift again the stately emblem on the Bay State's rusted shield,Give to Northern winds the Pine-Tree on our banner's tattered field.Sons of men who sat in council with their Bibles round the board,Answering England's royal missive with a firm, "Thus saith the Lord!"Rise again for home and freedom! set the battle in array!What the fathers did of old time we their sons must do to-day.Tell us not of banks and tariffs, cease your paltry pedler cries;Shall the good State sink her honor that your gambling stocks may rise?Would ye barter man for cotton? That your gains may sum up higher,Must we kiss the feet of Moloch, pass our children through the fire?Is the dollar only real? God and truth and right a dream?Weighed against your lying ledgers must our manhood kick the beam?O...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Unto What End, I Ask
Unto what end, I ask, unto what endIs all this effort, this unrest and toil?Work that avails not? strife and mad turmoil?Ambitions vain that rack our hearts and rend?Did labor but avail! did it defendThe soul from its despair, who would recoilFrom sweet endeavor then? work that were oilTo still the storms that in the heart contend!But still to see all effort valueless!To toil in vain year after weary yearAt Song! beholding every other ArtConsidered more than Song's high holiness,The difficult, the beautiful and dear!Doth break my heart, ah God! doth break my heart!
Madison Julius Cawein
The Old House In The Wood
Weeds and dead leaves, and leaves the Autumn stainsWith hues of rust and rose whence moisture weeps;Gnarl'd thorns, from which the knotted haw-fruit rainsOn paths the gray moss heaps.One golden flower, like a dreamy thoughtIn the sad mind of Age, makes bright the wood;And near it, like a fancy Childhood-fraught,The toadstool's jaunty hood.Webs, in whose snares the nimble spiders crouch,Waiting the prey that comes, moon-winged, with night:Slugs and the snail which trails the mushroom's pouch,That marks the wood with white.An old gaunt house, round which the trees decay,Its porches fallen and its windows gone,Starts out at you as if to bar the way,Or bid you hurry on.A picket fence, grim as a skeleton arm,Is flung ar...
The Widows' Tears; Or, Dirge Of Dorcas
Come pity us, all ye who seeOur harps hung on the willow-tree;Come pity us, ye passers-by,Who see or hear poor widows' cry;Come pity us, and bring your earsAnd eyes to pity widows' tears.CHOR.And when you are come hither,Then we will keepA fast, and weepOur eyes out all together,For Tabitha; who dead lies here,Clean wash'd, and laid out for the bier.O modest matrons, weep and wail!For now the corn and wine must fail;The basket and the bin of bread,Wherewith so many souls were fed,CHOR.Stand empty here for ever;And ah!the poor,At thy worn door,Shall be relieved never.Woe worth the time, woe worth the day,That reft us of thee, Tabitha!For we have lost, with thee, the meal,The bits, the morsels...
Robert Herrick
Battle Hymn.
Almighty Power! Who through the past Our Nation's course has safely led;Behold again the sky o'ercast, Again is heard the martial tread! Our stay in each contingency, Our Father's God, we turn to thee!For lo! The bugle note of war Is wafted from a southern strand!O Lord of Battles! we implore The guidance of Thy mighty hand, While as of yore, the hero draws His sword in Freedom's sacred cause!And when at last the oaken wreath Shall crown afresh the victor's brow;And Peace the conquering sword resheath, Be with us then, as well as now! Our stay in each contingency, In peace or war, we turn to Thee!
Alfred Castner King
A Grub-Street Elegy
ON THE SUPPOSED DEATH OF PARTRIDGE THE ALMANACK MAKER.[1] 1708Well; 'tis as Bickerstaff has guest,Though we all took it for a jest:Partridge is dead; nay more, he dy'd,Ere he could prove the good 'squire ly'd.Strange, an astrologer should dieWithout one wonder in the sky;Not one of all his crony starsTo pay their duty at his hearse!No meteor, no eclipse appear'd!No comet with a flaming beard!The sun hath rose and gone to bed,Just as if Partridge were not dead;Nor hid himself behind the moonTo make a dreadful night at noon.He at fit periods walks through Aries,Howe'er our earthly motion varies;And twice a-year he'll cut th' Equator,As if there had been no such matter. Some wits have wonder'd what analogyThe...
Jonathan Swift
A Hymn To The Graces
When I love, as some have toldLove I shall, when I am old,O ye Graces!make me fitFor the welcoming of it!Clean my rooms, as temples be,To entertain that deity;Give me words wherewith to woo,Suppling and successful too;Winning postures; and withal,Manners each way musical;Sweetness to allay my sourAnd unsmooth behaviour:For I know you have the skillVines to prune, though not to kill;And of any wood ye see,You can make a Mercury.
The Sicilian's Tale - The Wayside Inn - Part Second
THE BELL OF ATRIAt Atri in Abruzzo, a small townOf ancient Roman date, but scant renown,One of those little places that have runHalf up the hill, beneath a blazing sun,And then sat down to rest, as if to say,"I climb no farther upward, come what may,"--The Re Giovanni, now unknown to fame,So many monarchs since have borne the name,Had a great bell hung in the market-placeBeneath a roof, projecting some small space,By way of shelter from the sun and rain.Then rode he through the streets with all his train,And, with the blast of trumpets loud and long,Made proclamation, that whenever wrongWas done to any man, he should but ringThe great bell in the square, and he, the King,Would cause the Syndic to decide thereon.Such was the pr...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Edwin Morris
O me, my pleasant rambles by the lake,My sweet, wild, fresh three-quarters of a year,My one Oasis in the dust and drouthOf city life! I was a sketcher then:See here, my doing: curves of mountain, bridge,Boat, island, ruins of a castle, builtWhen men knew how to build, upon a rock,With turrets lichen-gilded like a rock:And here, new-comers in an ancient hold,New-comers from the Mersey, millionaires,Here lived the Hillsa Tudor-chimnied bulkOf mellow brickwork on an isle of bowers.O me, my pleasant rambles by the lakeWith Edwin Morris and with Edward BullThe curate; he was fatter than his cure.But Edwin Morris, he that knew the names,Long-learned names of agaric, moss and fern,Who forged a thousand theories of the rocks,Who taug...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Good Craft Snow Bird
Strenuous need that head-wind beFrom purposed voyage that drives at lastThe ship, sharp-braced and dogged still,Beating up against the blast.Brigs that figs for market gather,Homeward-bound upon the stretch,Encounter oft this uglier weatherYet in end their port they fetch.Mark yon craft from sunny SmyrnaGlazed with ice in Boston Bay;Out they toss the fig-drums cheerly,Livelier for the frosty ray.What if sleet off-shore assailed her,What though ice yet plate her yards;In wintry port not less she rendersSummer's gift with warm regards!And, look, the underwriters' man,Timely, when the stevedore's done,Puts on his specs to pry and scan,And sets her down--A, No. 1.Bravo, master! Bra...
Herman Melville
The Free
They bathed in the fire-flooded fountains; Life girdled them round and about;They slept in the clefts of the mountains: The stars called them forth with a shout.They prayed, but their worship was only The wonder at nights and at days,As still as the lips of the lonely Though burning with dumbness of praise.No sadness of earth ever captured Their spirits who bowed at the shrine;They fled to the Lonely enraptured And hid in the Darkness Divine.At twilight as children may gather They met at the doorway of death,The smile of the dark hidden Father The Mother with magical breath.Untold of in song or in story, In days long forgotten of men,Their eyes were yet blind with a glory T...
George William Russell
Players
And after all, and after all,Our passionate prayers, and sighs, and tears,Is life a reckless carnival?And are they lost, our golden years?Ah, no; ah, no; for, long ago,Ere time could sear, or care could fret,There was a youth called Romeo,There was a maid named Juliet.The players of the past are gone;The races rise; the races pass;And softly over all is drawnThe quiet Curtain of the Grass.But when the world went wild with Spring,What days we had! Do you forget?When I of all the world was King,And you were my Queen Juliet?The things that are; the things that seem,Who shall distinguish shape from show?The great processional, splendid dreamOf life is all I wish to know.The gods their faces turn...
Victor James Daley
A Poor Torn Heart, A Tattered Heart,
A poor torn heart, a tattered heart,That sat it down to rest,Nor noticed that the ebbing dayFlowed silver to the west,Nor noticed night did soft descendNor constellation burn,Intent upon the visionOf latitudes unknown.The angels, happening that way,This dusty heart espied;Tenderly took it up from toilAnd carried it to God.There, -- sandals for the barefoot;There, -- gathered from the gales,Do the blue havens by the handLead the wandering sails.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Magnetism.
By the impulse of my will, By the red flame in my blood,By me nerves' electric thrill, By the passion of my mood,My concentrated desire, My undying, desperate love,I ignore Fate, I defy her, Iron-hearted Death I move.When the town lies numb with sleep, Here, round-eyed I sit; my breathQuickly stirred, my flesh a-creep, And I force the gates of death.I nor move nor speak - you'd deem From my quiet face and hands,I were tranced - but in her dream, SHE responds, she understands.I have power on what is not, Or on what has ceased to be,From that deep, earth-hollowed spot, I can lift her up to me.And, or ere I am aware Through the closed and curtained door,Comes my lady white and fa...
Emma Lazarus