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History
History has to live with what was here,clutching and close to fumbling all we had,it is so dull and gruesome how we die,unlike writing, life never finishes.Abel was finished; death is not remote,a flash-in-the-pan electrifies the skeptic,his cows crowding like skulls against high-voltage wire,his baby crying all night like a new machine.As in our Bibles, white-faced, predatory,the beautiful, mist-drunken hunter's moon ascends,a child could give it a face: two holes, two holes,my eyes, my mouth, between them a skull's no-nose,O there's a terrifying innocence in my facedrenched with the silver salvage of the mornfrost.
Robert Lowell
The Victim
I.A plague upon the people fell,A famine after laid them low;Then thorpe and byre arose in fire,For on them brake the sudden foe;So thick they died the people cried,The Gods are moved against the land.The Priest in horror about his altarTo Thor and Odin lifted a hand:Help us from famineAnd plague and strife!What would you have of us?Human life?Were it our nearest,Were it our dearest,Answer, O answer!We give you his life.II.But still the foeman spoild and burnd,And cattle died, and deer in wood,And bird in air, and fishes turndAnd whitend all the rolling flood;And dead men lay all over the way,Or down in a furrow scathed with flame;And ever and aye the Priesthood m...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
If Death Is Kind
Perhaps if Death is kind, and there can be returning,We will come back to earth some fragrant night,And take these lanes to find the sea, and bendingBreathe the same honeysuckle, low and white.We will come down at night to these resounding beachesAnd the long gentle thunder of the sea,Here for a single hour in the wide starlightWe shall be happy, for the dead are free.
Sara Teasdale
Beyond The Barn
I rose up with the sunAnd climbed the hill.I saw the white mists runAnd shadows runDown into hollow woods.I went with the white cloudsThat swept the hill.A wind struck the low hedge treesAnd clustering trees,And rocked in each tall elm.The long afternoon was calmWhen down the hillI came, and felt the air cool,The shadows cool;And I walked on footsore,Saying, "But two hours more,Then, the last hill....Surely this road I know,These hills I know,All the unknown is known,"And that barn, black and lone,High on the hill--There the long road ends,The long day ends,And travelling is over." ...Nor thought nor travelling's over.Here on the hillThe black barn i...
John Frederick Freeman
Absence
In this fair strangers eyes of greyThine eyes, my love, I see.I shudder: for the passing dayHad borne me far from thee.This is the curse of life: that notA nobler calmer trainOf wiser thoughts and feelings blotOur passions from our brain;But each day brings its petty dustOur soon-chokd souls to fill,And we forget because we must,And not because we will.I struggle towards the light; and ye,Once-longd-for storms of love!If with the light ye cannot be,I bear that ye remove.I struggle towards the light; but oh,While yet the night is chill,Upon Times barren, stormy flow,Stay with me, Marguerite, still!
Matthew Arnold
Early Love
Who says I wrong thee, my half-opened rose?Little he knows of thee or me, or love. -I am so tender of thy fragile youth,Yea, in my hours of wildest ecstasy,Keeping close-bitted each careering sense.Only I give mine eyes unmeasured lawTo feed them where they will, and their delightWas curbed at first, until thy tender shameDied in the bearing of thy first born joy.I am not cruel, my half-opened rose,Though in the sunshine of my own desireI have uncurled thy petals to the lightAnd fed the tendrils of thy dawning senseWith delicate caresses, till they leaveThee tremulous with the newness of thy joy,Sharing thy lover's fire with innocent flame.Others will wrong thee, that I well foresee,Being a man, knowing my fellow men,
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
The Charm
In darkness the loud sea makes moan;And earth is shaken, and all evils creepAbout her ways.Oh, now to know you sleep!Out of the whirling blinding moil, alone,Out of the slow grim fight,One thought to wing, to you, asleep,In some cool room that's open to the nightLying half-forward, breathing quietly,One white hand on the whiteUnrumpled sheet, and the ever-moving hairQuiet and still at length! . . .Your magic and your beauty and your strength,Like hills at noon or sunlight on a tree,Sleeping prevail in earth and air.In the sweet gloom above the brown and whiteNight benedictions hover; and the winds of nightMove gently round the room, and watch you there.And through the dreadful hoursThe trees and waters and the hill...
Rupert Brooke
Stay, Mother, Stay!
"Stay, mother, stay, for the storm is abroad,And the tempest is very wild;It's a fearful night with no ray of light,Oh stay with your little child!" "Hush darling!" the mother, with white lips said -"Lie still till I come again,God's angels blest will watch o'er thy restWhile I am abroad in the rain! Thy father, child? - oh, I quake with fearWhen I think where he may be,And I dare not stay till the dawn of day -I must hasten forth to see!" Then the young child buried her tangled curlsIn the ragged counterpane,While the half-clad mother went forth aloneIn the blinding wind and rain. Down many a narrow, slippery lane,Down many a long, dark street,Went that shivering form thro' the pelting stormO...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Desideria
Surprised by joy, impatient as the WindI turned to share the transport O! with whomBut Thee, deep buried in the silent tomb,That spot which no vicissitude can find?Love, faithful love, recalld thee to my mindBut how could I forget thee? Through what power,Even for the least division of an hour,Have I been so beguiled as to be blindTo my most grievous loss? That thoughts returnWas the worst pang that sorrow ever bore,Save one, one only, when I stood forlorn,Knowing my hearts best treasure was no more;That neither present time, nor years unbornCould to my sight that heavenly face restore.
William Wordsworth
A Servant When He Reigneth
Three things make earth unquietAnd four she cannot brookThe godly Agur counted themAnd put them in a book,Those Four Tremendous CursesWith which mankind is cursed;But a Servant when He ReignethOld Agur entered first.An Handmaid that is MistressWe need not call upon.A Fool when he is full of MeatWill fall asleep anon.An Odious Woman MarriedMay bear a babe and mend;But a Servant when He ReignethIs Confusion to the end.His feet are swift to tumult,His hands are slow to toil,His ears are deaf to reason,His lips are loud in broil.He knows no use for powerExcept to show his might.He gives no heed to judgmentUnless it prove him right.Because he served a masterBefore his Kingship came,
Rudyard
There Are Faeries
IThere are faeries, bright of eye,Who the wildflowers' warders are:Ouphes, that chase the firefly;Elves, that ride the shooting-star:Fays, who in a cobweb lie,Swinging on a moonbeam bar;Or who harness bumblebees,Grumbling on the clover leas,To a blossom or a breeze -That's their faery car.If you care, you too may seeThere are faeries. - Verily,There are faeries.IIThere are faeries. I could swearI have seen them busy, whereRoses loose their scented hair,In the moonlight weaving, weaving,Out of starlight and the dew,Glinting gown and shimmering shoe;Or, within a glowworm lair,From the dark earth slowly heavingMushrooms whiter than the moon,On whose tops they sit and croon,
Madison Julius Cawein
Keep Innocency
Like an old battle, youth is wildWith bugle and spear, and counter cry,Fanfare and drummery, yet a childDreaming of that sweet chivalry,The piercing terror cannot see.He, with a mild and serious eyeAlong the azure of the years,Sees the sweet pomp sweep hurtling by;But he sees not death's blood and tears,Sees not the plunging of the spears.And all the strident horror ofHorse and rider, in red defeat,Is only music fine enoughTo lull him into slumber sweetIn fields where ewe and lambkin bleat.O, if with such simplicityHimself take arms and suffer war;With beams his targe shall gilded be,Though in the thickening gloom be farThe steadfast light of any star!Though hoarse War's eagle on him perch,Q...
Walter De La Mare
The Pastor's Daughter.
An ivy-mantled cottage smiled, Deep-wooded near a streamlet's side,Where dwelt the village-pastor's child, In all her maiden bloom and pride.Proud suitors paid their court and dutyTo this romantic sylvan beauty:Yet none of all the swains who sought her,Was worthy of the pastor's daughter.The town-gallants crossed hill and plain, To seek the groves of her retreat;And many followed in her train, To lay their riches at her feet.But still, for all their arts so wary,From home they could not lure the fairy.A maid without a heart they thought her,And so they left the pastor's daughter.One balmy eve in dewy spring A bard became her father's guest:He struck his harp, and every string To love vibrated in h...
George Pope Morris
Odes From Horace. - To Licinius Murena[1]. Book The Second, Ode The Tenth.
Not always, dear Licinius, is it wiseOn the main Sea to ply the daring Oar;Nor is it safe, from dread of angry Skies,Closely to press on the insidious Shore.To no excess discerning Spirits lean,They feel the blessings of the golden mean;They will not grovel in the squalid cell,Nor seek in princely domes, with envied pomp, to dwell.The pine, that lifts so high her stately boughs,Writhes in the storms, and bends beneath their might,Innoxious while the loudest tempest blowsO'er trees, that boast a less-aspiring height.As the wild fury of the whirlwind pours,With direst ruin fall the loftiest towers;And 't is the mountain's summit that, oblique,From the dense, lurid clouds, the baleful lightnings strike.A mind well disciplin'd, w...
Anna Seward
Others' Burdens
My greatest grief is not my own;That often proves a blessing,For in my grief God's care is shown,And as I am not left alone,It never proves distressing;But when my brother's grief I bearThe weight then seems excessive;His heavy load I inly share,And loaded down by double care,My burden feels oppressive.Yet I remember Him who boreThe world's great load of sorrow,And know that He on me will pourThe needed grace to bear the more,To-day and on the morrow.
Joseph Horatio Chant
At The Gill-Nets
Tug at the net,Haul at the net,Strip off the quivering fish;Hid in the mistThe winds whist,Is like my heart's wish.What is your wish,Your heart's wish?Is it for home on the hills?Strip off the fish,The silver fish,Caught by their rosy gills.How can I know,I love you so,Each little thought I getIs held so,It dies you know,Caught in your heart's net.Tug at your net,Your heart's net,Strip off my silver fancies;Keep them in rhyme,For a dull time,Fragile as frost pansies.
Duncan Campbell Scott
Why, My Heart, Do We Love Her So?
Why, my heart, do we love her so?(Geraldine, Geraldine!)Why does the great sea ebb and flow? -Why does the round world spin?Geraldine, Geraldine,Bid me my life renew:What is it worth unless I win,Love - love and you?Why, my heart, when we speak her name(Geraldine, Geraldine!)Throbs the word like a flinging flame? -Why does the Spring begin?Geraldine, Geraldine,Bid me indeed to be:Open your heart, and take us in,Love - love and me.
William Ernest Henley
To Cara, On The Dawning Of A New Year's Day.
When midnight came to close the year, We sighed to think it thus should takeThe hours it gave us--hours as dear As sympathy and love could makeTheir blessed moments,--every sunSaw us, my love, more closely one.But, Cara, when the dawn was nigh Which came a new year's light to shed,That smile we caught from eye to eye Told us, those moments were not fled:Oh, no,--we felt, some future sunShould see us still more closely one.Thus may we ever, side by side,From happy years to happier glide;And still thus may the passing sigh We give to hours, that vanish o'er us,Be followed by the smiling eye, That Hope shall shed on scenes before us!
Thomas Moore