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Friendship
O thou most holy Friendship! wheresoeerThy dwelling befor in the courts of manBut seldom thine all-heavenly voice we hear,Sweetning the moments of our narrow span;And seldom thy bright foot-steps do we scanAlong the weary waste of life unblest,For faithless is its frail and wayward plan,And perfidy is mans eternal guest,With dark suspicion linkd and shameless interest!Tis thine, when life has reachd its final goal,Ere the last sigh that frees the mind be givn,To speak sweet solace to the parting soul,And pave the bitter path that leads to heavn:Tis thine, wheneer the heart is rackd and rivnBy the hot shafts of baleful calumny,When the dark spirit to despair is drivn,To teach its lonely grief to lean on thee,And ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Choice
(See Note 33)April for me I choose!In it the old things tumble,In it things new refresh us;It makes a mighty rumble, -But peace is not so preciousAs that his will man shows.April for me I choose,Because it storms and scourges,Because it smiles and blesses,Because its power purges,Because it strength possesses, -In it the summer grows.
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
To M. C. N.
Thou hast no wealth, nor any pride of power,Thy life is offered on affection's altar.Small sacrifices claim thee, hour by hour,Yet on the tedious path thou dost not falter.To the unknowing, well thy days might seemCircled by solitude and tireless duty,Yet is thy soul made radiant by a dreamOf delicate and rainbow-coloured beauty.Never a flower trembles in the wind,Never a sunset lingers on the sea,But something of its fragrance joins thy mind,Some sparkle of its light remains with thee.Thus when thy spirit enters on its rest,Thy lips shall say, "I too have known the best!"
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
To Isabel.
I often thought to write to thee, what timeI almost fancied heaven-born, genius mine,And fondly hoped my island harp to wake,To some new strain sung for my country's sake.'Twas a vain hope and yet its presence smiledUpon my day dreams when I was a child,And only faded when my heart grew cold,For head and heart alike are getting old.Had I been gifted, some bright lay would be,With touching melody, poured forth for thee.Now, what I think the best I wish for thee. * * *May you never be a stranger; Ever living with your own,With the same eyes beaming round you, That on your childhood shone.Friendship knitting true hearts to you, From youth to kindly age;And affection brightenin...
Nora Pembroke
Translations. - Pentecost. (Luther's Song-Book.)
I.Come, God, Creator, Holy Ghost,Visit the heart of all thy men;Fill them with grace the way thou know'st:What was thine, make so again;Our Comforter to soothe or chide;The blessed gift of highest God!A ghostly chrism to us applied,Live streams--fire--love spread abroad!O kindle in our minds a light;Give in our hearts love's glowing gift;Our weak flesh, known to thee aright,With thy strength and grace uplift.In giving gifts thou art sevenfold--The finger thou on God's right hand!His word by thee right soon is toldWith clov'n tongues in every land.Drive far the cunning of the foe;Thy grace bring peace and make us whole,That we glad after thee may go,And shun that which hurts the soul.
George MacDonald
The Needed One.
'Twas not rare versatility, Nor gift of poesy or art,Nor piquant, sparkling jeux d'esprit Which at the call of fancy come, That touched the universal heart, And won the world's encomium.It was not beauty's potent charm; For admiration followed herUnmindful of the rounded arm, The fair complexion's brilliancy, If form and features shapely were Or lacked the grace of symmetry.So not by marked, especial power She grew endeared to human thought,But just because, in trial's hour, Was loving service to be done Or sympathy and counsel sought, She made herself the needed one. Oh, great the blessedness must be Of heart and hand and brain alert In projects wise ...
Hattie Howard
Sonnet LXXX.
Lasso! ben so che dolorose prede.THOUGH FOR FOURTEEN YEARS HE HAS STRUGGLED UNSUCCESSFULLY, HE STILL HOPES TO CONQUER HIS PASSION. Alas! well know I what sad havoc makesDeath of our kind, how Fate no mortal spares!How soon the world whom once it loved forsakes,How short the faith it to the friendless bears!Much languishment, I see, small mercy wakes;For the last day though now my heart prepares,Love not a whit my cruel prison breaks,And still my cheek grief's wonted tribute wears.I mark the days, the moments, and the hoursBear the full years along, nor find deceit,Bow'd 'neath a greater force than magic spell.For fourteen years have fought with varying powersDesire and Reason: and the best shall beat;If mortal spirits here...
Francesco Petrarca
Beyond.
Beyond yon dim old mountain's shadowy height, The restless sun droops low his grand old face;While downward sweeps the trembling veil of night, To hide the earth; the frost king's filmy laceRests on the mountain's hoary snow-crowned head, And adds to it a softened grace; the lightWhich dies afar in faint and fading red In purple shadows circles near. The flightOf birds across the vast and silent plains Awakes the echoes of the sleeping earth;Of all the summer beauty naught remains, There come no tidings of the spring's glad birth.Beyond the valley and far-off height The birds in wandering do take their way;Ah, whither is their strange and trackless flight Amid the dying embers of the day;
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Fairest! Put On Awhile.
Fairest! put on awhile These pinions of light I bring thee,And o'er thy own green isle In fancy let me wing thee.Never did Ariel's plume, At golden sunset hoverO'er scenes so full of bloom, As I shall waft thee over.Fields, where the Spring delays And fearlessly meets the ardorOf the warm Summer's gaze, With only her tears to guard her.Rocks, thro' myrtle boughs In grace majestic frowning;Like some bold warrior's brows That Love hath just been crowning.Islets, so freshly fair, That never hath bird come nigh them,But from his course thro' air He hath been won down by them;--[1]Types, sweet maid, of thee, Whose look, whose blush inviting,Never did Love yet...
Thomas Moore
Rake-Hell Muses
Yes; since she knows not need,Nor walks in blindness,I may without unkindnessA true thing tell:Which would be truth, indeed,Though worse in speaking,Were her poor footsteps seekingA pauper's cell.I judge, then, better farShe now have sorrow,Than gladness that to-morrowMight know its knell. -It may be men there areCould make of unionA lifelong sweet communion -A passioned spell;But I, to save her nameAnd bring salvationBy altar-affirmationAnd bridal bell;I, by whose rash unshameThese tears come to her:-My faith would more undo herThan my farewell!Chained to me, year by yearMy moody madnessWould wither her old gladnessLike famine fell.
Thomas Hardy
Bushnell Park.
Sweet resting place! that long hath beenA boon Elysian 'mid the din Of city life, 'mid city smoke;Where weary ones who toil and spinHave turned aside as to an inn Whose swinging sign a welcome spoke;Where misanthropes find medicineIn peals of laughter that begin With ancient, resurrected joke,Or ready wit of harlequin;Where children, free from discipline, Take on Diversion's easy yoke.Fair oasis! to view arightIts charming paths, its sloping height, Its beautiful and broad expanse,Must one approach in witching nightWhen, like abodes of airy sprite Revealed unto the wondering glance,O'erflooded with electric lightThan Luna's beams more dazzling bright, Illumined nooks the scene enhance;Whi...
Dies Irae--Dies Pacis
(As earnestly as any I crave the victory of Right over this madness of Insensate Might against which we are contending. As certainly as any I would, if that were conceivably possible, have adequate punishment meted out to those who have brought this horror upon the world. But I see, as all save the utterly earth-blinded must see--that when the Day of Settlement comes, and we and our allies are in a position to impose terms, unless we go into the Council-Chamber with hearts set inflexibly on the Common Weal of the World--in a word, unless we invite Christ to a seat at the Board--the end may be even worse than the beginning;--this which we have hoped and prayed night be the final war may prove but the beginning of strifes incredible.)"Only through Me!" ... The clear, high call comes pealing,Above the thunder...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Heaven - Haven A nun takes the veil
I have desired to goWhere springs not fail,To fields where flies no sharp and sided hailAnd a few lilies blow.And I have asked to beWhere no storms come,Where the green swell is in the havens dumb,And out of the swing of the sea.
Gerard Manley Hopkins
Prevision Or Provision.
That prince takes soon enough the victor's roomWho first provides not to be overcome.
Robert Herrick
Fortune Favours.
Fortune did never favour oneFully, without exception;Though free she be, there's something yetStill wanting to her favourite.
Within The Gate
L. M. C.We sat together, last May-day, and talkedOf the dear friends who walkedBeside us, sharers of the hopes and fearsOf five and forty years,Since first we met in Freedom's hope forlorn,And heard her battle-hornSound through the valleys of the sleeping North,Calling her children forth,And youth pressed forward with hope-lighted eyes,And age, with forecast wiseOf the long strife before the triumph won,Girded his armor on.Sadly, ass name by name we called the roll,We heard the dead-bells tollFor the unanswering many, and we knewThe living were the few.And we, who waited our own call beforeThe inevitable door,Listened and looked, as all have done, to winSome token from within.
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Heart Courageous
Who hath a heart courageousWill fight with right good cheer;For well may he his foes out-faceWho owns no foe called Fear!Who hath a heart courageousWill fight as knight of oldFor that which he doth count his own -Against the world to hold.Who hath a heart courageousWill fight both night and day,Against the Host Invisible -That holds his soul at bay,Who hath a heart courageousRests with tranquillity,For Time he counts not as his foe,Nor Death his enemy.
Virna Sheard
A Friend Indeed.
If every friend who meditates In soft, unspoken thoughtWith winning courtesy and tactThe doing of a kindly act To cheer some lonely lot,Were like the friend of whom I dream,Then hardship but a myth would seem.If sympathy were always thus Oblivious of space,And, like the tendrils of the vine,Could just as lovingly incline To one in distant place,'Twould draw the world together soMight none the name of stranger know.If every throb responsive that My ardent spirit thrillsCould, like the skylark's ecstasy,Be vocal in sweet melody, Beyond dividing hillsIn octaves of the atmosphereWere music wafted to his ear.If every friendship were like one, So helpful and so true,To o...