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The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto XVIII
The teacher ended, and his high discourseConcluding, earnest in my looks inquir'dIf I appear'd content; and I, whom stillUnsated thirst to hear him urg'd, was mute,Mute outwardly, yet inwardly I said:"Perchance my too much questioning offends"But he, true father, mark'd the secret wishBy diffidence restrain'd, and speaking, gaveMe boldness thus to speak: 'Master, my SightGathers so lively virtue from thy beams,That all, thy words convey, distinct is seen.Wherefore I pray thee, father, whom this heartHolds dearest! thou wouldst deign by proof t' unfoldThat love, from which as from their source thou bring'stAll good deeds and their opposite.'" He then:"To what I now disclose be thy clear kenDirected, and thou plainly shalt beholdHow much th...
Dante Alighieri
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - November
1. THOU art of this world, Christ. Thou know'st it all; Thou know'st our evens, our morns, our red and gray; How moons, and hearts, and seasons rise and fall; How we grow weary plodding on the way; Of future joy how present pain bereaves, Rounding us with a dark of mere decay, Tossed with a drift Of summer-fallen leaves. 2. Thou knowest all our weeping, fainting, striving; Thou know'st how very hard it is to be; How hard to rouse faint will not yet reviving; To do the pure thing, trusting all to thee; To hold thou art there, for all no face we see; How hard to think, through cold and dark and dearth, That thou art nearer ...
George MacDonald
The Return Of The Year
Again the warm bare earth, the noonThat hangs upon her healing scars,The midnight round, the great red moon,The mother with her brood of stars,The mist-rack and the wakening rainBlown soft in many a forest way,The yellowing elm-trees, and againThe blood-root in its sheath of gray.The vesper-sparrow's song, the stressOf yearning notes that gush and stream,The lyric joy, the tenderness,And once again the dream! the dream!A touch of far-off joy and power,A something it is life to learn,Comes back to earth, and one short hourThe glamours of the gods return.This life's old mood and cult of careFalls smitten by an older truth,And the gray world wins back to herThe rapture of her vanished youth.Dea...
Archibald Lampman
The Dreamer
Even as a child he loved to thrid the bowers,And mark the loafing sunlight's lazy laugh;Or, on each season, spell the epitaphOf its dead months repeated in their flowers;Or list the music of the strolling showers,Whose vagabond notes strummed through a twinkling staff,Or read the day's delivered monographThrough all the chapters of its dædal hours.Still with the same child-faith and child regardHe looks on Nature, hearing at her heart,The Beautiful beat out the time and place,Through which no lesson of this life is hard,No struggle vain of science or of art,That dies with failure written on its face.
Madison Julius Cawein
Transformation
She waited in a rose-hued room; A wanton-hearted creature she, But beautiful and bright to seeAs some great orchid just in bloom.Upon wide cushions stretched at ease She lolled in garments filmy fine, Which but enhanced each rounded line;A living picture, framed to please.A bold electric eye of light Leered through its ruddy screen of lace And feasted on her form and faceAs some wine-crimsoned roué might.From wall and niche, nude nymph beguiled Fair goddesses of world-wide fame, But Psyche's self was put to shameBy one who from the cushions smiled.Exotic blossoms from a vase Their sweet narcotic breath exhaled; The lights, the objects round her paled -She lost the sense of ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Baby Mary
TO LITTLE M. E. C. G.Deep in baby Mary's eyes,Baby Mary's sweet blue eyes,Dwell the golden memoriesOf the music once her earsHeard in far-off Paradise;So she has no time for tears,Baby Mary,Listening to the songs she hears.Soft in baby Mary's face,Baby Mary's lovely face,If you watch, you, too, may traceDreams her spirit-self hath seenIn some far-off Eden-place,Whence her soul she can not wean,Baby Mary,Dreaming in a world between.
Her Vesper Song.
The Summer lightning comes and goesIn one pale cloud above the hill,As if within its soft reposeA burning heart were never still -As in my bosom pulses beatBefore the coming of his feet.All drugged with odorous sleep, the roseBreathes dewy balm about the place,As if the dreams the garden knowsTook immaterial form and face -As in my heart sweet thoughts ariseBeneath the ardour of his eyes.The moon above the darkness showsAn orb of silvery snow and fire,As if the night would now discloseTo heav'n her one divine desire -As in the rapture of his kissAll of my soul is drawn to his.The cloud, it knows not that it glows;The rose knows nothing of its scent;Nor knows the moon that it bestowsLight on...
The Limnad
I.The lake she haunts gleams dreamily'Twixt sleepy boughs of melody,Set 'mid the hills beside the sea,In tangled bush and brier;Where the ghostly sunsets writeWondrous things in golden light;And above the pine-crowned height,Clouds of twilight, rosy white,Build their towers of fire.II.'Mid the rushes there that swing,Flowering flags where voices singWhen low winds are murmuring,Murmuring to stars that glitter;Blossom-white, with purple locks,Underneath the stars' still flocks,In the dusky waves she rocks,Rocks, and all the landscape mocksWith a song most sweet and bitter.III.Soft it sounds, at first, as dreamsFilled with tears that fall in streams;Then it soars, until it se...
A Shadow.
The world to-day is radiant, as I ne'erCould picture it in wildest dreaming, whenFor long, long hours I lay in flowery glenOr wooded copse, and tried in vain to tearThe glamour from my eyes, and face the glareAnd tumult of the busy world of men.I staked my all, and won! and ne'er againCan my blest spirit know a heart's despair.And yet - and yet - why should it be that now,When all my heart has longed for is at last Within my grasp, and I should be at rest,A ghostly Something rising in the glow Of Love's own fire, an uninvited guest,Taunts me with just one memory of the past!
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Elysium
I have found a place of lonelinessLonelier than LyonesseLovelier than Paradise;Full of sweet stillnessThat no noise can transgressNever a lamp distress.The full moon sank in state.I saw her stand and waitFor her watchers to shut the gate.Then I found myself in a wonderlandAll of shadow and of blandSilence hard to understand.I waited therefore; then I knewThe presence of the flowers that grewNoiseless, their wonder noiseless blew.And flashing kingfishers that flewIn sightless beauty, and the fewShadows the passing wild-beast threw.And Eve approaching over the groundUnheard and subtle, never a soundTo let me know that I was found.Invisible the hands of EveUpon me travel...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
The Return
I have been where the roses blow, Where the orange ripens its gold,And the mountains stand with their peaks of snow, To fence away the cold,Where the lime and the myrtle lent Their fragrance to the air,To make the land of my banishment More exquisitely fair.And I heard the ring dove call To his mate in the blossoming trees,And I saw the white waves heave and fall. Far away over southern seas.I listened along the beach, By the shore of the shifting sea,To the waves, till I knew their murmured speech, And the message they bore to me.And I watched the great sails furled. Like the wings of some ocean bird,That brought me, out of another world, A warning, and a word;For still beside m...
Kate Seymour Maclean
A Lament
Over thy head, in joyful wanderingsThrough heaven's wide spaces, free,Birds fly with music in their wings;And from the blue, rough seaThe fishes flash and leap;There is a life of loveliest thingsO'er thee, so fast asleep.In the deep West the heavens grow heavenlier,Eve after eve; and stillThe glorious stars remember to appear;The roses on the hillAre fragrant as before:Only thy face, of all that's dear,I shall see nevermore!
Manmohan Ghose
The Bohemian Dreams
Because my overcoat's in pawn,I choose to take my glassWithin a little bistro onThe rue du Montparnasse;The dusty bins with bottles shine,The counter's lined with zinc,And there I sit and drink my wine,And think and think and think.I think of hoary old Stamboul,Of Moslem and of Greek,Of Persian in coat of wool,Of Kurd and Arab sheikh;Of all the types of weal and woe,And as I raise my glass,Across Galata bridge I knowThey pass and pass and pass.I think of citron-trees aglow,Of fan-palms shading down,Of sailors dancing heel and toeWith wenches black and brown;And though it's all an ocean farFrom Yucatan to France,I'll bet beside the old bazaarThey dance and dance and dance.I...
Robert William Service
Proem. To Sonnets.
Alice, I need not tell you that the ArtThat copies Nature, even at its best,Is but the echo of a splendid tone,Or like the answer of a little childTo the deep question of some frosted sage.For Nature in her grand magnificence,Compared to Art, must ever raise her headBeyond the cognizance of human minds:This is the spirit merely; that, the soul.We watch her passing, like some gentle dream,And catch sweet glimpses of her perfect face;We see the flashing of her gorgeous robes,And, if her mantle ever falls at all,How few Elishas wear it sacredly,As if it were a valued gift from heaven.God has created; we but re-create,According to the temper of our minds;According to the grace He has bequeathed;According to the uses we have madeOf...
Charles Sangster
Fleeing Away
My thoughts soar not as they ought to soar, Higher and higher on soul-lent wings;But ever and often, and more and more They are dragged down earthward by little things,By little troubles and little needs,As a lark might be tangled among the weeds.My purpose is not what it ought to be, Steady and fixed, like a star on high,But more like a fisherman's light at sea; Hither and thither it seems to fly -Sometimes feeble, and sometimes bright,Then suddenly lost in the gloom of night.My life is far from my dream of life - Calmly contented, serenely glad;But, vexed and worried by daily strife, It is always troubled, and ofttimes sad -And the heights I had thought I should reach one dayGrow dimmer and dimmer, and fart...
The Final Mystery
This myth, of Egyptian origin, formed part of the instruction given to those initiated in the Orphic mysteries, and written versions of it were buried with the dead. Hear now, O Soul, the last command of all-- When thou hast left thine every mortal mark, And by the road that lies beyond recall Won through the desert of the Burning Dark, Thou shalt behold within a garden bright A well, beside a cypress ivory-white. Still is that well, and in its waters cool White, white and windless, sleeps that cypress tree: Who drinks but once from out her shadowy pool Shall thirst no more to all eternity. Forgetting all, by all forgotten clean, His soul shall be with that which hath not been. But thou, though thou ...
Henry John Newbolt
The Hanging Of The Crane
IThe lights are out, and gone are all the guestsThat thronging came with merriment and jests To celebrate the Hanging of the CraneIn the new house,--into the night are gone;But still the fire upon the hearth burns on, And I alone remain. O fortunate, O happy day, When a new household finds its place Among the myriad homes of earth, Like a new star just sprung to birth, And rolled on its harmonious way Into the boundless realms of space!So said the guests in speech and song,As in the chimney, burning bright,We hung the iron crane to-night,And merry was the feast and long.IIAnd now I sit and muse on what may be,And in my vision see, or seem to see, Throug...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Remembrance.
'Tis done! - I saw it in my dreams:No more with Hope the future beams;My days of happiness are few:Chill'd by Misfortune's wintry blast,My dawn of Life is overcast;Love, Hope, and Joy, alike adieu!Would I could add Remembrance too!
George Gordon Byron