Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 506 of 739
Previous
Next
Triumph.
The sky, grown dull through many waiting days,Flashed into crimson with the sunrise charm,So all my love, aroused to vague alarm,Flushed into fire and burned with eager blaze.I saw thee not as suppliant, with still gazeOf pleading, but as victor, - and thine armGathered me fast into embraces warm,And I was taught the light of Love's dear ways.This day of triumph is no longer thine,Oh conqueror, in calm exclusive power. -As evermore, through storm, and shade, and shine, Your woe my pain, your joy my ecstasy,We breathe together, - so this blessed hour Of self-surrender makes my jubilee!
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
The Sower.
Sitting in a porchway cool,Fades the ruddy sunlight fast,Twilight hastens on to rule -Working hours are wellnigh pastShadows shoot across the lands;But one sower lingers still,Old, in rags, he patient stands, -Looking on, I feel a thrill.Black and high his silhouetteDominates the furrows deep!Now to sow the task is set,Soon shall come a time to reap.Marches he along the plain,To and fro, and scatters wideFrom his hands the precious grain;Moody, I, to see him stride.Darkness deepens. Gone the light.Now his gestures to mine eyesAre august; and strange - his heightSeems to touch the starry skies.TORU DUTT.
Victor-Marie Hugo
The Four Points
Ere stopping or turning, to put foorth a handeIs a charm that thy daies may be long in the land.Though seventy-times-seven thee Fortune befriend,O'ertaking at corners is Death in the end.Sith main-roads for side-roads care nothing, have careBoth to slow and to blow when thou enterest there.Drink as thou canst hold it, but after is best;For Drink with men's Driving makes Crowners to Quest.
Rudyard
Dreams
While on my lonely couch I lie,I seldom feel myself alone,For fancy fills my dreaming eyeWith scenes and pleasures of its own.Then I may cherish at my breastAn infant's form beloved and fair,May smile and soothe it into restWith all a Mother's fondest care.How sweet to feel its helpless formDepending thus on me alone!And while I hold it safe and warmWhat bliss to think it is my own!And glances then may meet my eyesThat daylight never showed to me;What raptures in my bosom rise,Those earnest looks of love to see,To feel my hand so kindly prest,To know myself beloved at last,To think my heart has found a rest,My life of solitude is past!But then to wake and find it flown,The dream of hap...
Anne Bronte
Olive
IWho may praise her?Eyes where midnight shames the sun,Hair of night and sunshine spun,Woven of dawn's or twilight's loom,Radiant darkness, lustrous gloom,Godlike childhood's flowerlike bloom,None may praise aright, nor singHalf the grace wherewith like springLove arrays her.IILove untoldSings in silence, speaks in lightShed from each fair feature, brightStill from heaven, whence toward us, nowNine years since, she deigned to bowDown the brightness of her brow,Deigned to pass through mortal birth:Reverence calls her, here on earth,Nine years old.IIILove's deep duty,Even when love transfigured growsWorship, all too surely knowsHow, though love may cast out fear,Yet the debt divine...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Lone Founts
Though fast youth's glorious fable flies,View not the world with worldling's eyes;Nor turn with weather of the time.Foreclose the coming of surprise:Stand where Posterity shall stand;Stand where the Ancients stood before,And, dipping in lone founts thy hand,Drink of the never-varying lore:Wise once, and wise thence evermore.
Herman Melville
The Heart Of The Wood
My hope and my love, we will go for a while into the wood, scattering the dew, where we will see the trout, we will see the blackbird on its nest; the deer and the buck calling, the little bird that is sweetest singing on the branches; the cuckoo on the top of the fresh green; and death will never come near us for ever in the sweet wood.
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
A Hymn Of Welcome After The Recess.
"animas sapientiores fieri quiescendo."And now-cross-buns and pancakes o'er--Hail, Lords and Gentlemen, once more! Thrice hail and welcome, Houses Twain!The short eclipse of April-DayHaving (God grant it!) past away, Collective Wisdom, shine again!Come, Ayes and Noes, thro' thick and thin,--With Paddy Holmes for whipper-in,-- Whate'er the job, prepared to back it;Come, voters of Supplies--bestowersOf jackets upon trumpet-blowers, At eighty mortal pounds the jacket![1]Come--free, at length, from Joint-Stock cares--Ye Senators of many Shares, Whose dreams of premium knew no boundary;So fond of aught like Company,That you would even have taken tea (Had yo...
Thomas Moore
Not To The Staring Day
To A. C.Not to the staring Day,For all the importunate questionings he pursuesIn his big, violent voice,Shall those mild things of bulk and multitude,The Trees - God's sentinelsOver His gift of live, life-giving air,Yield of their huge, unutterable selves.Midsummer-manifold, each oneVoluminous, a labyrinth of life,They keep their greenest musings, and the dim dreamsThat haunt their leafier privacies,Dissembled, baffling the random gapeseed stillWith blank full-faces, or the innocent guileOf laughter flickering back from shine to shade,And disappearances of homing birds,And frolicsome freaksOf little boughs that frisk with little boughs.But at the wordOf the ancient, sacerdotal Night,Night of the m...
William Ernest Henley
The Roll Of The Kettledrum; or, The Lay Of The Last Charger
You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet,Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone?Of two such lessons, why forgetThe nobler and the manlier one?- Byron.One line of swart profiles and bearded lips dressing,One ridge of bright helmets, one crest of fair plumes,One streak of blue sword-blades all bared for the fleshing,One row of red nostrils that scent battle-fumes.Forward! the trumpets were sounding the charge,The roll of the kettledrum rapidly ran,That music, like wild-fire spreading at large,Maddend the war-horse as well as the man.Forward! still forward! we thunderd along,Steadily yet, for our strength we were nursing;Tall Ewart, our sergeant, was humming a song,Lance-corporal Black Will was blaspheming and cursing.
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Recessional In Time Of War
Medical Unit -Even as I see, and share with you in seeing,The altar flame of your love's sacrifice;And even as I bear before the hour the vision,Your little hands in hospital and prisonLaid upon broken bodies, dying eyes,So do I suffer for splendor of your beingWhich leads you from me, and in separationLays on my breast the pain of memory.Over your hands I bendIn silent adoration,Dumb for a fear of sorrow without end,Asking for consolationOut of the sacrament of our separation,And for some faithful word acceptable and true,That I may know and keep the mystery:That in this separation I go forth with youAnd you to the world's end remain with me. * * * * *How may I justify the ...
Edgar Lee Masters
To William Shelley.
1.The billows on the beach are leaping around it,The bark is weak and frail,The sea looks black, and the clouds that bound itDarkly strew the gale.Come with me, thou delightful child,Come with me, though the wave is wild,And the winds are loose, we must not stay,Or the slaves of the law may rend thee away.2.They have taken thy brother and sister dear,They have made them unfit for thee;They have withered the smile and dried the tearWhich should have been sacred to me.To a blighting faith and a cause of crimeThey have bound them slaves in youthly prime,And they will curse my name and theeBecause we fearless are and free.3.Come thou, beloved as thou art;Another sleepeth stillNear thy sweet mother's anxious...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
New Year Resolve
As the dead year is clasped by a dead December, So let your dead sins with your dead days lie.A new life is yours and a new hope. Remember We build our own ladders to climb to the sky.Stand out in the sunlight of promise, forgetting Whatever the past held of sorrow and wrong.We waste half our strength in a useless regretting; We sit by old tombs in the dark too long.Have you missed in your aim? Well, the mark is still shining. Did you faint in the race? Well, take breath for the next.Did the clouds drive you back? But see yonder their lining. Were you tempted and fell? Let it serve for a text.As each year hurries by, let it join that procession Of skeleton shapes that march down to the past,While you ta...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
For All The Grief
For all the grief I have given with wordsMay now a few clear flowers blow,In the dust, and the heat, and the silence of birds, Where the lonely go.For the thing unsaid that heart asked of meBe a dark, cool water calling - callingTo the footsore, benighted, solitary, When the shadows are falling.O, be beauty for all my blindness,A moon in the air where the weary wend,And dews burdened with loving-kindness In the dark of the end.
Walter De La Mare
The Holy Of Holies
'Elder father, though thine eyesShine with hoary mysteries,Canst thou tell what in the heartOf a cowslip blossom lies?'Smaller than all lives that be,Secret as the deepest sea,Stands a little house of seeds,Like an elfin's granary,'Speller of the stones and weeds,Skilled in Nature's crafts and creeds,Tell me what is in the heartOf the smallest of the seeds.''God Almighty, and with HimCherubim and Seraphim,Filling all eternity--Adonai Elohim.'
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
On The River
The faint stars wake and wonder, Fade and find heart anew; Above us and far under Sphereth the watchful blue. Silent she sits, outbending, A wild pathetic grace, A beauty strange, heart-rending, Upon her hair and face. O spirit cries that sever The cricket's level drone! O to give o'er endeavor And let love have its own! Within the mirrored bushes There wakes a little stir; The white-throat moves, and hushes Her nestlings under her. Beneath, the lustrous river, The watchful sky o'erhead. God, God, that Thou should'st ever Poison thy children's bread!
William Vaughn Moody
When The Sad Word. By Paul, The Silentiary.
When the sad word, "Adieu," from my lip is nigh falling, And with it, Hope passes away,Ere the tongue hath half breathed it, my fond heart recalling That fatal farewell, bids me stay,For oh! 'tis a penance so weary One hour from thy presence to be,That death to this soul were less dreary, Less dark than long absence from thee.Thy beauty, like Day, o'er the dull world breaking. Brings life to the heart it shines o'er,And, in mine, a new feeling of happiness waking, Made light what was darkness before.But mute is the Day's sunny glory,While thine hath a voice, on whose breath, More sweet than the Syren's sweet story,My hopes hang, through life and through death!
This World Is Not Conclusion;
This world is not conclusion;A sequel stands beyond,Invisible, as music,But positive, as sound.It beckons and it baffles;Philosophies don't know,And through a riddle, at the last,Sagacity must go.To guess it puzzles scholars;To gain it, men have shownContempt of generations,And crucifixion known.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson