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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
Tabernacles
The little tents the wildflowers raiseAre tabernacles where Love praysAnd Beauty preaches all the days.I walk the woodland through and through,And everywhere I see their blueAnd gold where I may worship too.All hearts unto their inmost shrineOf fragrance they invite; and mineEnters and sees the All Divine.I hark; and with some inward earSoft words of praise and prayer I hear,And bow my head and have no fear.For God is present as I seeIn them; and gazes out at meKneeling to His divinity.Oh, holiness that Nature knows,That dwells within each thing that grows,Vestured with dreams as is the rose.With perfume! whereof all things preachThe birds, the brooks, the leaves, that reachOur hearts ...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Doom Of Beauty.
Spirto ben nato.Choice soul, in whom, as in a glass, we see, Mirrored in thy pure form and delicate, What beauties heaven and nature can create, The paragon of all their works to be!Fair soul, in whom love, pity, piety, Have found a home, as from thy outward state We clearly read, and are so rare and great That they adorn none other like to thee!Love takes me captive; beauty binds my soul; Pity and mercy with their gentle eyes Wake in my heart a hope that cannot cheat.What law, what destiny, what fell control, What cruelty, or late or soon, denies That death should spare perfection so complete?
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
What Little Things!
From "One Day and Another"What little things are thoseThat hold our happiness!A smile, a glance, a roseDropped from her hair or dress;A word, a look, a touch,These are so much, so much.An air we can't forget;A sunset's gold that gleams;A spray of mignonette,Will fill the soul with dreamsMore than all history says,Or romance of old days.For of the human heart,Not brain, is memory;These things it makes a partOf its own entity;The joys, the pains whereofAre the very food of love.
Fragments Of Ancient Poetry, Fragment X
It is night; and I am alone, forlornon the hill of storms. The wind isheard in the mountain. The torrentshrieks down the rock. No hut receivesme from the rain; forlorn on the hill ofwinds.Rise, moon! from behind thyclouds; stars of the night, appear!Lead me, some light, to the place wheremy love rests from the toil of the chase!his bow near him, unstrung; his dogspanting around him. But here I mustsit alone, by the rock of the mossystream. The stream and the windroar; nor can I hear the voice of mylove.Why delayeth my Shalgar, why theson of the hill, his promise? Here isthe rock; and the tree; and here theroaring stream. Thou promisedst withnight to be here. Ah! whither is myShalgar gone? With thee I wo...
James Macpherson
Love's Lantern
(For Aline)Because the road was steep and long And through a dark and lonely land,God set upon my lips a song And put a lantern in my hand.Through miles on weary miles of night That stretch relentless in my wayMy lantern burns serene and white, An unexhausted cup of day.O golden lights and lights like wine, How dim your boasted splendors are.Behold this little lamp of mine; It is more starlike than a star!
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
Lalage.
What were sweet life without herWho maketh all things sweetWith smiles that dream about her,With dreams that come and fleet!Soft moods that end in languor;Soft words that end in sighs;Curved frownings as of anger;Cold silence of her eyes.Sweet eyes born but for slaying,Deep violet-dark and lostIn dreams of whilom MayingIn climes unstung of frost.Wild eyes shot through with fireGod's light in godless years,Brimmed wine-dark with desire,A birth for dreams and tears.Dear tears as sweet as laughter,Low laughter sweet as loveUnwound in ripples afterSad tears we knew not of.What if the day be lawless,What if the heart be dead,Such tears would make it flawless,Such laughter make it red....
Epode. "On The Ranges, Queensland."
Beyond the night, down o'er the labouring East,I see light's harbinger of dawn released:Upon the false gleam of the ante-dawn,Lo, the fair heaven of day-pursuing morn!Beyond the lampless sleep and perishing deathThat hold my heart, I feel my new life's breath,I see the face my spirit-shape shall haveWhen this frail clay and dust have fled the grave.Beyond the night, the death of doubt, defeat,Rise dawn and morn, and life with light doth meet,For the great Cause, too, - sure as the sun yon rayShoots up to strike the threatening clouds and say;"I come, and with me comes the victorious Day!" * * * * *When I was young, the muse I wors...
Francis William Lauderdale Adams
The Lesson Of The Patriot Dead.
("O caresse sublime.")[April, 1871.]Upon the grave's cold mouth there ever have caresses clungFor those who died ideally good and grand and pure and young;Under the scorn of all who clamor: "There is nothing just!"And bow to dread inquisitor and worship lords of dust;Let sophists give the lie, hearts droop, and courtiers play the worm,Our martyrs of Democracy the Truth sublime affirm!And when all seems inert upon this seething, troublous round,And when the rashest knows not best to flee ar stand his ground,When not a single war-cry from the sombre mass will rush,When o'er the universe is spread by Doubting utter hush,Then he who searches well within the walls that close immureOur teachers, leaders, heroes slain because they lived too pur...
Victor-Marie Hugo
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
Gray Fog
A fog drifts in, the heavy ladenCold white ghost of the seaOne by one the hills go out,The road and the pepper-tree.I watch the fog float in at the windowWith the whole world gone blind,Everything, even my longing, drowses,Even the thoughts in my mind.I put my head on my hands before me,There is nothing left to be done or said,There is nothing to hope for, I am tired,And heavy as the dead.
Sara Teasdale
Zira: In Captivity
Love me a little, Lord, or let me go,I am so weary walking to and froThrough all your lonely halls that were so sweetDid they but echo to your coming feet.When by the flowered scrolls of lace-like stoneOur women's windows - I am left alone,Across the yellow Desert, looking forth,I see the purple hills towards the north.Behind those jagged Mountains' lilac crestOnce lay the captive bird's small rifled nest.There was my brother slain, my sister bound;His blood, her tears, drunk by the thirsty ground.Then, while the burning village smoked on high,And desecrated all the peaceful sky,They took us captive, us, born frank and free,On fleet, strong camels through the sandy sea.Yet, when we rested, night-times, on the sandB...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
I Shall Know Why, When Time Is Over,
I shall know why, when time is over,And I have ceased to wonder why;Christ will explain each separate anguishIn the fair schoolroom of the sky.He will tell me what Peter promised,And I, for wonder at his woe,I shall forget the drop of anguishThat scalds me now, that scalds me now.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
May Janet
(BRETON.)Stand up, stand up, thou May Janet,And go to the wars with me.Hes drawn her by both handsWith her face against the sea.He that strews red shall gather white,He that sows white reap red,Before your face and my daughtersMeet in a marriage-bed.Gold coin shall grow in the yellow field,Green corn in the green sea-water,And red fruit grow of the roses red,Ere your fruit grow in her.But I shall have her by land, he said,Or I shall have her by sea,Or I shall have her by strong treasonAnd no grace go with me.Her fathers drawn her by both hands,Hes rent her gown from her,Hes taen the smock round her body,Cast in the sea-water.The captains drawn her by...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Yorktown
YorktownFrom Yorktown's ruins, ranked and still,Two lines stretch far o'er vale and hill:Who curbs his steed at head of one?Hark! the low murmur: Washington!Who bends his keen, approving glance,Where down the gorgeous line of FranceShine knightly star and plume of snow?Thou too art victor, Rochambeau!The earth which bears this calm arrayShook with the war-charge yesterday,Ploughed deep with hurrying hoof and wheel,Shot-sown and bladed thick with steel;October's clear and noonday sunPaled in the breath-smoke of the gun,And down night's double blackness fell,Like a dropped star, the blazing shell.Now all is hushed: the gleaming linesStand moveless as the neighboring pines;While through them, sullen, grim, and slow,<...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Midsummer Holiday:- IV. The Mill Garden
Stately stand the sunflowers, glowing down the garden-side,Ranged in royal rank arow along the warm grey wall,Whence their deep disks burn at rich midnoon afire with pride,Even as though their beams indeed were sunbeams, and the tallSceptral stems bore stars whose reign endures, not flowers that fall.Lowlier laughs and basks the kindlier flower of homelier fame,Held by love the sweeter that it blooms in Shakespeares name,Fragrant yet as though his hand had touched and made it thrill,Like the whole worlds heart, with warm new life and gladdening flame.Fair befall the fair green close that lies below the mill!Softlier here the flower-soft feet of refluent seasons glide,Lightlier breathes the long low note of changes gentler call.Wind and storm and landslip feed the l...
On The Death Of Elizabeth Fry And Sir T. F. Buxton.
Ye have met, ye have met, disencumbered of pain,Of sorrow, and sickness, and care;And the slave and the prisoner, now freed from their chain,Have rejoicingly welcomed you there.The true light now shines and the darkness is past,For that which is perfect is come,And your pure loving spirits are gathered at last,In their only congenial home.May the balm of your memory steal through the soul,Like a gale from Arabia the blest,Exert o'er the feelings a sacred control,And hush every murmur to rest!In the world we shall seek your resemblance in vain,Your places shall know you no more;Yet who by a wish would recall you again?For the days of your mourning are o'er.The King in His beauty your eyes now behold,He has sweetly d...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney