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Nursery Rhyme. CXXIV. Scholastic.
I love my love with an A, because he's Agreeable. I hate him because he's Avaricious. He took me to the Sign of the Acorn, And treated me with Apples. His name's Andrew, And he lives at Arlington.
Unknown
Vision
The wintry sun was pale On hill and hedge; The wind smote with its flail The seeded sedge; High up above the world, New taught to fly, The withered leaves were hurled About the sky; And there, through death and dearth, It went and came,-- The Glory of the earth That hath no name. I know not what it is; I only know It quivers in the bliss Where roses blow, That on the winter's breath It broods in space, And o'er the face of death I see its face, And start and stand between Delight and dole, As though m...
John Charles McNeill
Helen Of Tyre
What phantom is this that appearsThrough the purple mist of the years, Itself but a mist like these?A woman of cloud and of fire;It is she; it is Helen of Tyre, The town in the midst of the seas.O Tyre! in thy crowded streetsThe phantom appears and retreats, And the Israelites that sellThy lilies and lions of brass,Look up as they see her pass, And murmur "Jezebel!"Then another phantom is seenAt her side, in a gray gabardine, With beard that floats to his waist;It is Simon Magus, the Seer;He speaks, and she pauses to hear The words he utters in haste.He says: "From this evil fame,From this life of sorrow and shame, I will lift thee and make thee mine;Thou hast been Queen Canda...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Song For A Babe.
Little babe, while burns the west,Warm thee, warm thee in my breast;While the moon doth shine her best, And the dews distil not.All the land so sad, so fair -Sweet its toils are, blest its care.Child, we may not enter there! Some there are that will not.Fain would I thy margins know,Land of work, and land of snow;Land of life, whose rivers flow On, and on, and stay not.Fain would I thy small limbs fold,While the weary hours are told,Little babe in cradle cold. Some there are that may not.
Jean Ingelow
An Old Wife's Song.
And what will ye hear, my daughters dear? - Oh, what will ye hear this night?Shall I sing you a song of the yuletide cheer, Or of lovers and ladies bright?"Thou shalt sing," they say (for we dwell far away From the land where fain would we be),"Thou shalt sing us again some old-world strain That is sung in our own countrie."Thou shalt mind us so of the times long ago, When we walked on the upland lea,While the old harbor light waxed faint in the white, Long rays shooting out from the sea;"While lambs were yet asleep, and the dew lay deep On the grass, and their fleeces clean and fair.Never grass was seen so thick nor so green As the grass that grew up there!"In the town was no smoke, for none ther...
Song.
My love's unchanged - though time, alas!Turns silver-gilt the golden massOf flowing hair, and pales, I wis,The rose that deepened with that kiss -The first - before our marriage was.And though the fields of corn and grass,So radiant then, as summers passLose something of their look of bliss, My love's unchanged.Our tiny girl's a sturdy lass;Our boy's shrill pipe descends to bass;New friends appear, the old we miss;My Love grows old ... in spite of this My love's unchanged.
Thomas Runciman
Sonnet.
Though thou return unto the former things,Fields, woods, and gardens, where thy feet have strayedIn other days, and not a bough, branch, bladeOf tree, or meadow, but the same appearsAs when thou lovedst them in former years,They shall not seem the same; the spirit bringsChange from the inward, though the outward beE'en as it was, when thou didst weep to seeIt last, and spak'st that prophecy of pain,"Farewell! I shall not look on ye again!"And so thou never didst - no, though e'en now Thine eyes behold all they so loved of yore, The Thou that did behold them then, no moreLives in this world, it is another Thou.
Frances Anne Kemble
The Old Homestead
Jest as atween the awk'ard lines a hand we love has penn'dAppears a meanin' hid from other eyes,So, in your simple, homespun art, old honest Yankee friend,A power o' tearful, sweet seggestion lies.We see it all--the pictur' that our mem'ries hold so dear--The homestead in New England far away,An' the vision is so nat'ral-like we almost seem to hearThe voices that were heshed but yesterday.Ah, who'd ha' thought the music of that distant childhood timeWould sleep through all the changeful, bitter yearsTo waken into melodies like Chris'mas bells a-chimeAn' to claim the ready tribute of our tears!Why, the robins in the maples an' the blackbirds round the pond,The crickets an' the locusts in the leaves,The brook that chased the trout adown the hillside ju...
Eugene Field
Madelaine.
("Ecoute-moi, Madeline.")[IX., September, 1825.]List to me, O Madelaine!Now the snows have left the plain,Which they warmly cloaked.Come into the forest groves,Where the notes that Echo lovesAre from horns evoked.Come! where Springtide, Madelaine,Brings a sultry breath from Spain,Giving buds their hue;And, last night, to glad your eye,Laid the floral marquetry,Red and gold and blue.Would I were, O Madelaine,As the lamb whose wool you trainThrough your tender hands.Would I were the bird that whirlsRound, and comes to peck your curls,Happy in such bands.Were I e'en, O Madelaine,Hermit whom the herd disdainIn his pious cell,When your purest lips unfoldSins w...
Victor-Marie Hugo
The Village Street
In these rapid, restless shadows,Once I walked at eventide,When a gentle, silent maiden,Walked in beauty at my side.She alone there walked beside meAll in beauty, like a bride.Pallidly the moon was shiningOn the dewy meadows nigh;On the silvery, silent rivers,On the mountains far and high,,On the oceans star-lit waters,Where the winds a-weary die.Slowly, silently we wanderedFrom the open cottage door,Underneath the elms long branchesTo the pavement bending oer;Underneath the mossy willowAnd the dying sycamore.With the myriad stars in beautyAll bedight, the heavens were seen,Radiant hopes were bright around me,Like the light of stars serene;Like the mellow midnight splendorOf the Nig...
Edgar Allan Poe
Autumn.
Autumn, thy rushing blast Sweeps in wild eddies by,Whirling the sear leaves past, Beneath my feet, to die.Nature her requiem sings In many a plaintive tone,As to the wind she flings Sad music, all her own.The murmur of the rill Is hoarse and sullen now,And the voice of joy is still In grove and leafy bough.There's not a single wreath, Of all Spring's thousand flowers,To strew her bier in death, Or deck her faded bowers.I hear a spirit sigh Where the meeting pines resound,Which tells me all must die, As the leaf dies on the ground.The brightest hopes we cherish, Which own a mortal trust,But bloom awhile to perish And moulder in the dust.Sweep on...
Susanna Moodie
The Cruise of the In Memoriam
The wan light of a stormy dawnGleamed on a tossing ship:It was the In MemoriamUpon a mourning trip.Wild waves were on the windward bow,And breakers on the lee;And through her sides the women heardThe seething of the sea.O Captain! cried a widow fair,Her plump white hands clasped she,Thinkst thou, if drowned in this dread storm,That savèd we shall be?You speak in riddles, lady dear,How savèd can we beIf we are drowned? Alas, I meanIn Paradise! said she.O Ive sailed North, and Ive sailed South(He was a godless wight),But boy or man, since my days began,That shore I neer did sight!The Captain told the First Mate boldWhat that fair lady said;The First Mate sneered in h...
Victor James Daley
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXII.
Vidi fra mille donne una già tale.BEAUTY SHOWED ITSELF IN, AND DISAPPEARED WITH, LAURA. 'Mid many fair one such by me was seenThat amorous fears my heart did instant seize,Beholding her--nor false the images--Equal to angels in her heavenly mien.Nothing in her was mortal or terrene,As one whom nothing short of heaven can please;My soul well train'd for her to burn and freezeSought in her wake to mount the blue serene.But ah! too high for earthly wings to riseHer pitch, and soon she wholly pass'd from sight:The very thought still makes me cold and numb;O beautiful and high and lustrous eyes,Where Death, who fills the world with grief and fright,Found entrance in so fair a form to come.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
A Phantom II: The Perfume
Reader, have you ever breathed deeply,with slow savour and intoxicated sense,a churchs saturating grain of incense,or the long-lasting musk in a sachet?Profound magical spell where weare drunk on the past restored in the present.So lovers on an adored body scentthe exquisite flower of memory.From her pliant and heavy hair,living sachet, censer of the alcoves,a fragrance, wild and savage, rose,and from her clothes, velvet or muslin, there,impregnated with her pure years,emanated a perfume of furs.
Charles Baudelaire
Memory
Remembrance of the past will joy impartIf in that past the conscience was supreme;But if the soul be made an auction mart,And thoughts and deeds be sold for what you deemThe price of virtue, then the called-up pastWill be like hooks of steel to hold thee fast.Or like the stings those nettles left behindWhich I so fondly handled in my play;I deemed the friend who warned me true and kind,And in great haste I threw the weeds away,But soon the burning flesh reminded me'Twere safer far from all such weeds to flee.The cloud that flitted o'er the saintly browWhich now a crown of life so well adorns,When you by ways and means you know not now,Did what your soul with holy horror scorns,Will stay with you long as you live on earth,And b...
Joseph Horatio Chant
The Future
A wanderer is man from his birth.He was born in a shipOn the breast of the river of Time;Brimming with wonder and joyHe spreads out his arms to the light,Rivets his gaze on the banks of the stream.As what he sees is, so have his thoughts been.Whether he wakes,Where the snowy mountainous pass,Echoing the screams of the eagles,Hems in its gorges the bedOf the new-born clear-flowing stream;Whether he first sees lightWhere the river in gleaming ringsSluggishly winds through the plain;Whether in sound of the swallowing seaAs is the world on the banks,So is the mind of the man.Vainly does each, as he glides,Fable and dreamOf the lands which the river of TimeHad left ere he woke on its breast,Or shall re...
Matthew Arnold
A Song
I am as weary as a childThat weeps upon its mother's breastFor joy of comforting. But IHave no such place to rest.I am as weary as a birdBlown by wild winds far out to seaWhen it regains its nest. But, Oh,There waits no nest for me.What think you may sustain the birdThat finds no housing after flight?And what the little child consoleWho weeps alone at night?
Theodosia Garrison
A Sonnet, To The Noble Lady, The Lady Mary Wroth
I that have been a lover, and could show it,Though not in these, in rhymes not wholly dumb,Since I exscribe your sonnets, am becomeA better lover, and much better poet.Nor is my Muse, or I ashamed to owe itTo those true numerous graces; whereof someBut charm the senses, others overcomeBoth brains and hearts; and mine now best do know it:For in your verse all Cupid's armory,His flames, his shafts, his quiver, and his bow,His very eyes are yours to overthrow.But then his mother's sweets you so apply,Her joys, her smiles, her loves, as readers takeFor Venus' ceston, every line you make.
Ben Jonson