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Virtue.
Each must in virtue strive for to excel;That man lives twice that lives the first life well.
Robert Herrick
Stanzas To ----
Well, some may hate, and some may scorn,And some may quite forget thy name;But my sad heart must ever mournThy ruined hopes, thy blighted fame!'Twas thus I thought, an hour ago,Even weeping o'er that wretch's woe;One word turned back my gushing tears,And lit my altered eye with sneers.Then "Bless the friendly dust," I said,"That hides thy unlamented head!Vain as thou wert, and weak as vain,The slave of Falsehood, Pride, and PainMy heart has nought akin to thine;Thy soul is powerless over mine."But these were thoughts that vanished too;Unwise, unholy, and untrue:Do I despise the timid deer,Because his limbs are fleet with fear?Or, would I mock the wolf's death-howl,Because his form is gaunt and foul?Or, hear with joy the ...
Emily Bronte
Appeal
Oh, I am very weary,Though tears no longer flow;My eyes are tires of weeping,My heart is sick of woe;My life is very lonely,My days pass heavily,I'm wearing of repining,Wilt thou not come to me?Oh, didst thou know my longingsFor thee, from day to day,My hopes, so often blighted,Thou wouldst not thus delay!
Anne Bronte
Time
There was a young woman named Sue,Who wanted to catch the 2:02; Said the trainman, "Don't hurry Or flurry or worry;It's a minute or two to 2:02."
Unknown
The Tournament.
Joust First.I.Bright shone the lists, blue bent the skies,And the knights still hurried amainTo the tournament under the ladies' eyes,Where the jousters were Heart and Brain.II.Flourished the trumpets: entered Heart,A youth in crimson and gold.Flourished again: Brain stood apart,Steel-armored, dark and cold.III.Heart's palfrey caracoled gayly round,Heart tra-li-ra'd merrily;But Brain sat still, with never a sound,So cynical-calm was he.IV.Heart's helmet-crest bore favors threeFrom his lady's white hand caught;While Brain wore a plumeless casque; not heOr favor gave or sought.V.The herald blew; Heart shot a glanceTo find his lady's eye,
Sidney Lanier
A Man Young And Old:- His Memories
We should be hidden from their eyes,Being but holy showsAnd bodies broken like a thornWhereon the bleak north blows,To think of buried HectorAnd that none living knows.The women take so little stockIn what I do or sayTheyd sooner leave their cossetingTo hear a jackass bray;My arms are like the twisted thornAnd yet there beauty lay;The first of all the tribe lay thereAnd did such pleasure take,She who had brought great Hector downAnd put all Troy to wreck,That she cried into this ear,Strike me if I shriek.
William Butler Yeats
Meeting In Winter.
Winter in the world it is,Round about the unhoped kissWhose dream I long have sorrowed o'er;Round about the longing sore,That the touch of thee shall turnInto joy too deep to burn.Round thine eyes and round thy mouthPasseth no murmur of the south,When my lips a little whileLeave thy quivering tender smile,As we twain, hand holding hand,Once again together stand.Sweet is that, as all is sweet;For the white drift shalt thou meet,Kind and cold-cheeked and mine own,Wrapped about with deep-furred gownIn the broad-wheeled chariot:Then the north shall spare us not;The wide-reaching waste of snowWilder, lonelier yet shall growAs the reddened sun falls down.But the warders of the town,When they flash...
William Morris
Gunnar's Howe Above The House At Lithend.
Ye who have come o'er the seato behold this grey minster of lands,Whose floor is the tomb of time past,and whose walls by the toil of dead handsShow pictures amidst of the ruinof deeds that have overpast death,Stay by this tomb in a tombto ask of who lieth beneath.Ah! the world changeth too soon,that ye stand there with unbated breath,As I name him that Gunnar of old,who erst in the haymaking tideFelt all the land fragrant and fresh,as amidst of the edges he died.Too swiftly fame fadeth away,if ye tremble not lest once againThe grey mound should open and show himglad-eyed without grudging or pain.Little labour methinks to behold himbut the tale-teller laboured in vain.Little labour for ears that may hearkento...
To My Mother
Chiming a dream by the wayWith ocean's rapture and roar,I met a maiden to-dayWalking alone on the shore:Walking in maiden wise,Modest and kind and fair,The freshness of spring in her eyesAnd the fulness of spring in her hair.Cloud-shadow and scudding sun-burstWere swift on the floor of the sea,And a mad wind was romping its worst,But what was their magic to me?Or the charm of the midsummer skies?I only saw she was there,A dream of the sea in her eyesAnd the kiss of the sea in her hair.I watched her vanish in space;She came where I walked no more;But something had passed of her graceTo the spell of the wave and the shore;And now, as the glad stars rise,She comes to me, rosy and rare,The delight of ...
William Ernest Henley
Verses Written In Westminster Abbey. [1]
Whoe'er thou art, approach, and, with a sigh,Mark where the small remains of Greatness lie.[2]There sleeps the dust of Him for ever gone;How near the Scene where once his Glory shone!And, tho' no more ascends the voice of Prayer,Tho' the last footsteps cease to linger there,Still, like an awful Dream that comes again,Alas, at best, as transient and as vain,Still do I see (while thro' the vaults of nightThe funeral-song once more proclaims the rite)The moving Pomp along the shadowy Isle,That, like a Darkness, fill'd the solemn Pile;The illustrious line, that in long order led,Of those that lov'd Him living, mourn'd Him dead;Of those, the Few, that for their Country stoodRound Him who dar'd be singularly good;All, of all ranks, that claim'd Him f...
Samuel Rogers
The House Of Dust: Part 02: 07: Two Lovers: Overtones
Two lovers, here at the corner, by the steeple,Two lovers blow together like music blowing:And the crowd dissolves about them like a sea.Recurring waves of sound break vaguely about them,They drift from wall to wall, from tree to tree.Well, am I late? Upward they look and laugh,They look at the great clocks golden hands,They laugh and talk, not knowing what they say:Only, their words like music seem to play;And seeming to walk, they tread strange sarabands.I brought you this . . . the soft words float like starsDown the smooth heaven of her memory.She stands again by a garden wall,The peach tree is in bloom, pink blossoms fall,Water sings from an opened tap, the beesGlisten and murmur among the trees.Someone calls from the house. Sh...
Conrad Aiken
At the Cannon's Mouth.
Destruction of the Ram Albermarle by the Torpedo-Launch.(October, 1864.)Palely intent, he urged his keelFull on the guns, and touched the spring;Himself involved in the bolt he droveTimed with the armed hull's shot that stoveHis shallop - die or do!Into the flood his life he threw,Yet lives - unscathed - a breathing thingTo marvel at.He has his fame;But that mad dash at death, how name?Had Earth no charm to stay the BoyFrom the martyr-passion? Could he dareDisdain the Paradise of opening joyWhich beckons the fresh heart every where?Life has more lures than any girlFor youth and strength; puts forth a shareOf beauty, hinting of yet rarer store;And ever with unfathomable eyes,Which baffingly entice,...
Herman Melville
Sonnet XVIII. An Evening In November, Which Had Been Stormy, Gradually Clearing Up, In A Mountainous Country.
Ceas'd is the rain; but heavy drops yet fall From the drench'd roof; - yet murmurs the sunk wind Round the dim hills; can yet a passage find Whistling thro' yon cleft rock, and ruin'd wall.The swoln and angry torrents heard, appal, Tho' distant. - A few stars, emerging kind, Shed their green, trembling beams. - With lustre small, The moon, her swiftly-passing clouds behind,Glides o'er that shaded hill. - Now blasts remove The shadowing clouds, and on the mountain's brow, Full-orb'd, she shines. - Half sunk within its coveHeaves the lone boat, with gulphing sound; - and lo! Bright rolls the settling lake, and brimming rove The vale's blue rills, and glitter as they flow.
Anna Seward
The Contretemps
A forward rush by the lamp in the gloom,And we clasped, and almost kissed;But she was not the woman whomI had promised to meet in the thawing brumeOn that harbour-bridge; nor was I he of her tryst.So loosening from me swift she said:"O why, why feign to beThe one I had meant! to whom I have spedTo fly with, being so sorrily wed!"- 'Twas thus and thus that she upbraided me.My assignation had struck uponSome others' like it, I found.And her lover rose on the night anon;And then her husband entered onThe lamplit, snowflaked, sloppiness around."Take her and welcome, man!" he cried:"I wash my hands of her.I'll find me twice as good a bride!"All this to me, whom he had eyed,Plainly, as his wife's planned deliverer....
Thomas Hardy
A Letter To Monsieur Boileau Despreaux, Occasioned By The Victory At Blenheim
Since hired for life, thy servile Muse must singSuccessive conquests and a glorious King;Must of a man immortal vainly boast,And bring him laurels whatsoe'er they cost,What turn wilt thou employ, what colours lay,On the event of that superior day,In which one English subject's prosperous hand(So Jove did will, so Anna did command)Broke the proud column of thy master's praise,Which sixty winters had conspired to raise?From the lost field a hundred standards broughtMust be the work of Chance, and Fortune's fault.Bavaria's stars must be accused, which shone,That fatal day the mighty work was done,With rays oblique upon the Gallic sun.Some demon envying France misled the sight,And Mars mistook, though Louis order'd right.When thy young Muse i...
Matthew Prior
Lines.
Day gradual fades, in evening gray,Its last faint beam hath fled,And sinks the sun's declining rayIn ocean's wavy bed.So o'er the loves and joys of youthThy waves, Indifference, roll;So mantles round our days of truthThat death-pool of the soul.Spreads o'er the heavens the shadowy nightHer dim and shapeless form,So human pleasures, frail and light,Are lost in passion's storm.So fades the sunshine of the breast,So passion's dreamings fall,So friendship's fervours sink to rest,Oblivion shrouds them all.
Joseph Rodman Drake
Come, Tell Me Some Olden Story.
I.Come tell me some olden story Of Knight or Paladin,Whose sword on the field of glory Bright laurel wreaths did win:Tell me of the heart of fire His courage rare did prove;Speak on - oh! I will not tire - But never talk of love.II.Or, if thou wilt, I shall hearken Some magic legend rare -How the Wizard's power did darken The sunny summer air:Thou'lt tell of Banshee's midnight wail, Or corpse-light's ghastly gleam -It matters not how wild the tale So love be not thy theme.III.Or, perhaps thou may'st have travelled On distant, foreign strand,Strange secrets have unravelled In many a far-off land;Describe each castle hoary, E...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
The Expert
Youth that trafficked long with Death,And to second life returns,Squanders little time or breathOn his fellow man's concerns.Earned peace is all he asksTo fulfill his broken tasks.Yet, if he find war at home(Waspish and importunate),He hath means to overcomeAny warrior at his gate;For the past he buried bringsBack unburiable things.Nights that he lay out to spy,Whence and when the raid might start;Or prepared in secrecySudden blows to break its heart,All the lore of No-Man's LandSteels his soul and arms his hand.So, if conflict vex his lifeWhere he thought all conflict done,He, resuming ancient strife,Springs his mine or trains his gun;And, in mirth more dread than wrath,Wipes the nuis...
Rudyard