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Love's Argument With Reason.
La ragion meco si lamenta.Reason laments and grieves full sore with me, The while I hope by loving to be blest; With precepts sound and true philosophy My shame she quickens thus within my breast:'What else but death will that sun deal to thee-- Nor like the phoenix in her flaming nest?' Yet nought avails this wise morality; No hand can save a suicide confessed.I know my doom; the truth I apprehend: But on the other side my traitorous heart Slays me whene'er to wisdom's words I bend.Between two deaths my lady stands apart: This death I dread; that none can comprehend. In this suspense body and soul must part.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
Does It Pay
If one poor burdened toiler o'er life's road, Who meets us by the way,Goes on less conscious of his galling load, Then life indeed, does pay.If we can show one troubled heart the gain, That lies alway in loss,Why then, we too, are paid for all the pain Of bearing life's hard cross.If some despondent soul to hope is stirred, Some sad lip made to smile,By any act of ours, or any word, Then, life has been worth while.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To A Bird At Dawn
O bird that somewhere yonder sings, In the dim hour 'twixt dreams and dawn,Lone in the hush of sleeping things, In some sky sanctuary withdrawn;Your perfect song is too like pain,And will not let me sleep again.I think you must be more than bird, A little creature of soft wings,Not yours this deep and thrilling word - Some morning planet 'tis that sings;Surely from no small feathered throat Wells that august, eternal note.As some old language of the dead, In one resounding syllable,Says Rome and Greece and all is said - A simple word a child may spell;So in your liquid note impearledSings the long epic of the world.Unfathomed sweetness of your song, With ancient anguish at its core,
Richard Le Gallienne
Magdalen
My father took me by the handAnd led me home again;(He brought me in from sorrowAs you'd bring a child from rain).The child's place at the hearth-stone,The child's place at the board,And the picture at the bed's headOf wee ones wi' the Lord.It's just a child come home he seesTo nestle at his arm;(He brought me in from sorrowAs you'd bring a child from harm).And of the two of us who sitBy hearth and candle-light,There's just one hears a woman's heartBreak--breaking in the night.
Theodosia Garrison
On Ne Badine Pas Avec La Mort
1The dew was full of sun that morn(Oh I heard the doves in the ladyricks coop!)As he crossed the meadows beyond the corn,Watching his falcon in the blue.How could he hear my song so far,The song of the blood where the pulses are!Straight through the fields he came to me,(Oh I saw his soul as I saw the dew!)But I hid my joy that he might not see,I hid it deep within my breast,As the starling hides in the maize her nest.2Back through the corn he turned again,(Oh little he cared where his falcon flew!)And my heart lay still in the hand of pain,As in winter's hand the rivers do.How could he hear its secret cry,The cry of the dove when the cummers die!Thrice in the maize he turned to me,...
Arthur Sherburne Hardy
Links Of Love, The
My heart is like a driver-club, That heaves the pellet hard and straight,That carries every let and rub, The whole performance really great;My heart is like a bulger-head, That whiffles on the wily tee,Because my love has kindly said She'll halve the round of life with me.My heart is also like a cleek, Resembling most the mashie sort,That spanks the object, so to speak, Across the sandy bar to port;And hers is like a putting-green, The haven where I boast to be,For she assures me she is keen To halve the round of life with me.Raise me a bunker, if you can, That beetles o'er a deadly ditch,Where any but the bogey-man Is practically bound to pitch;Plant me beneath a hedge of thorn,...
Owen Seaman
Error And Loss.
Upon an eve I sat me down and wept,Because the world to me seemed nowise good;Still autumn was it, & the meadows slept,The misty hills dreamed, and the silent woodSeemed listening to the sorrow of my mood:I knew not if the earth with me did grieve,Or if it mocked my grief that bitter eve.Then 'twixt my tears a maiden did I see,Who drew anigh me on the leaf-strewn grass,Then stood and gazed upon me pitifullyWith grief-worn eyes, until my woe did passFrom me to her, and tearless now I was,And she mid tears was asking me of oneShe long had sought unaided and alone.I knew not of him, and she turned awayInto the dark wood, and my own great painStill held me there, till dark had slain the day,And perished at the grey dawn's hand...
William Morris
The Jessamine And The Morning-Glory.
I.On a sheet of silver the morning-star layFresh, white as a baby child,And laughed and leaped in his lissome way,On my parterre of flowers smiled.For a morning-glory's spiral budOf shell-coned tallness slimStood ready to burst her delicate hoodAnd bloom on the dawning dim:A princess royal in purple bornTo beauty and pride in the balmy morn. II.And she shook her locks at the morning-starAnd her raiment scattered wide;Low laughed at a hollyhock's scimetar,Its jewels of buds to deride.The pomegranate near, with fingers of flame,The hot-faced geraniums nigh,Their proud heads bowed to the queenly dameFor they knew her state was high:The fuchsia like a bead of bloodBashfully blushe...
Madison Julius Cawein
In May
I.When you and I in the hills went Maying,You and I in the bright May weather,The birds, that sang on the boughs together,There in the green of the woods, kept sayingAll that my heart was saying low,"I love you! love you!" soft and low,And did you know?When you and I in the hills went Maying.II.There where the brook on its rocks went winking,There by its banks where the May had led us,Flowers, that bloomed in the woods and meadows,Azure and gold at our feet, kept thinkingAll that my soul was thinking there,"I love you! love you!" softly thereAnd did you care?There where the brook on its rocks went winking.III.Whatever befalls through fate's compelling,Should our paths unite or our pathways s...
At Nineveh
Written for my friend Walter S. Mathews.There was a princess once, who loved the slaveOf an Assyrian king, her father; knownAt Nineveh as Hadria; o'er whose graveThe sands of centuries have long been blown;Yet sooner shall the night forget its starsThan love her story: - How, unto his throne,One day she came, where, with his warriors,The king sat in the hall of audience,'Mid pillared trophies of barbaric wars,And, kneeling to him, asked, "O father, whenceComes love and why?" - He, smiling on her, said, -"O Hadria, love is of the gods, and henceDivine, is only soul-interpreted.But why love is, ah, child, we do not know,Unless 'tis love that gives us life when dead." -And then his daughter, with a face aglowWith all the love tha...
Neæras Wreath
Neæra crowns me with a purple wreathThat she with her own dainty hands did twine;Gold-hearted blossoms and blue buds in sheath,Mingled with veined green leaves of the wild vine.Then, bending down her bright head, ah, too nigh!She asks me for a song: the daylight dies:The song is still unwritten: still I lieWatching the purple twilight of her eyes.I am her laureate; therefore heart of graceI take to kiss her. Where was song like this?Love is best sung of in a loveless place,For who would care to sing where he might kiss?
Victor James Daley
High Noon
Time's finger on the dial of my lifePoints to high noon! and yet the half-spent dayLeaves less than half remaining, for the dark,Bleak shadows of the grave engulf the end.To those who burn the candle to the stick,The sputtering socket yields but little light.Long life is sadder than an early death.We cannot count on ravelled threads of ageWhereof to weave a fabric. We must useThe warp and woof the ready present yieldsAnd toil while daylight lasts. When I bethinkHow brief the past, the future, still more briefCalls on to action, action! Not for meIs time for retrospection or for dreams,Not time for self-laudation or remorse.Have I done nobly? Then I must not letDead yesterday unborn to-morrow shame.Have I done wrong? Well, l...
God's Measure
God measures souls by their capacityFor entertaining his best Angel, Love.Who loveth most is nearest kin to God,Who is all Love, or Nothing. He who sitsAnd looks out on the palpitating world,And feels his heart swell in him large enoughTo hold all men within it, he is nearHis great Creator's standard, though he dwellsOutside the pale of churches, and knows notA feast-day from a fast-day, or a lineOf Scripture even. What God wants of usIs that outreaching bigness that ignoresAll littleness of aims, or loves, or creeds,And clasps all Earth and Heaven in its embrace.
To Thaddeus.[1]
Farewell! loved youth, for still I hold thee dear,Though thou hast left me friendless and alone;Still, still thy name recals the heartfelt tear,That hastes MATILDA to her wish'd-for home.Why leave the wretch thy perfidy hath made,To journey cheerless through the world's wide waste?Say, why so soon does all thy kindness fade,And doom me, thus, affliction's cup to taste?Ungen'rous deed! to fly the faithful maidWho, for thy arms, abandon'd every friend;Oh! cruel thought, that virtue, thus betray'd,Should feel a pang that death alone can end.Yet I'll not chide thee--And when hence you roam,Should my sad fate one tear of pity move,Ah! then return! this bosom's still thy home,And all thy failings I'll repay with love.Believe m...
Thomas Gent
Freedom
I.O thou so fair in summers gone,While yet thy fresh and virgin soulInformd the pillard Parthenon,The glittering Capitol;II.So fair in southern sunshine bathed,But scarce of such majestic mienAs here with forehead vapor-swathedIn meadows ever green;III.For thouwhen Athens reignd and Rome,Thy glorious eyes were dimmd with painTo mark in many a freemans homeThe slave, the scourge, the chain;IV.O follower of the Vision, stillIn motion to the distant gleamHoweer blind force and brainless willMay jar thy golden dreamV.Of Knowledge fusing class with class,Of civic Hate no more to be,Of Love to leaven a...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Ball-Room Belle. (Music by horn.)
The moon and all her starry train Were fading from the morning sky,When home the ball-room belle againReturned, with throbbing pulse and brain, Flushed cheek and tearful eye.The plume that danced above her brow, The gem that sparkled in her zone,The scarf of spangled leaf and bough,Were laid aside--they mocked her now, When desolate and lone.That night how many hearts she won! The reigning belle, she could not stir,But, like the planets round the sun,Her suitors followed--all but one-- One all the world to her!And she had lost him!--Marvel not That lady's eyes with tears were wet!Though love by man is soon forgot,It never yet was woman's lot To love and to forget.
George Pope Morris
Sunday Night.
The holy Sabbath day has fled; And has it been well spent?Have I remembered what was said, And why the day was sent?May I be better all the week, For what to-day has taught;May I God's love and favor seek, And do the things I ought!
H. P. Nichols
Man And His Makers.
1. I am one of the wind's stories, I am a fancy of the rain, - A memory of the high noon's glories, The hint the sunset had of pain. 2. They dreamed me as they dreamed all other; Hawthorn and I, I and the grass, With sister shade and phantom brother Across their slumber glide and pass. 3. Twilight is in my blood, my being Mingles with trees and ferns and stones; Thunder and stars my lips are freeing, And there is sea-rack in my bones. 4. Those that have dreamed me shall out-wake me, But I go hence with flowers and weeds; I am no more to those who make me Than other drifting fruit and seeds. 5. An...
Muriel Stuart