Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 521 of 525
Previous
Next
To A Bed Of Tulips.
Bright tulips, we do knowYou had your coming hither,And fading-time does showThat ye must quickly wither.Your sisterhoods may stay,And smile here for your hour;But die ye must away,Even as the meanest flower.Come, virgins, then, and seeYour frailties, and bemoan ye;For, lost like these, 'twill beAs time had never known ye.
Robert Herrick
Youth To The Poet
(TO OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES)Strange spell of youth for age, and age for youth,Affinity between two forms of truth! -As if the dawn and sunset watched each other,Like and unlike as children of one motherAnd wondering at the likeness. Ardent eyesOf young men see the prophecy ariseOf what their lives shall be when all is told;And, in the far-off glow of years called old,Those other eyes look back to catch a traceOf what was once their own unshadowed grace.But here in our dear poet both are blended -Ripe age begun, yet golden youth not ended; -Even as his song the willowy scent of springDoth blend with autumn's tender mellowing,And mixes praise with satire, tears with fun,In strains that ever delicately run;So musical and wise, page...
George Parsons Lathrop
The Solitary
I have been lonely all my days on earth, Living a life within my secret soul,With mine own springs of sorrow and of mirth, Beyond the world's control.Though sometimes with vain longing I have sought To walk the paths where other mortals tread,To wear the clothes for other mortals wrought, And eat the selfsame bread--Yet have I ever found, when thus I strove To mould my life upon the common plan,That I was furthest from all truth and love, And least a living man.Truth frowned upon my poor hypocrisy, Life left my soul, and dwelt but in my sense;No man could love me, for all men could see The hollow vain pretence.Their clothes sat on me with outlandish air, Up...
Robert Fuller Murray
Blondine.
I wandered through a careless world Deceived when not deceiving,And never gave an idle heart The rapture of believing.The smiles, the sighs, the glancing eyes, Of many hundred comersSwept by me, light as rose-leaves blown From long-forgotten summers.But never eyes so deep and bright And loyal in their seeming,And never smiles so full of light Have shone upon my dreaming.The looks and lips so gay and wise, The thousand charms that wreathe them,- Almost I dare believe that truth Is safely shrined beneath them.Ah! do they shine, those eyes of thine, But for our own misleading?The fresh young smile, so pure and fine, Does it but mock our reading?Then faith is fled, and trust is dead,...
John Hay
To Mother Venus
O mother Venus, quit, I pray,Your violent assailing!The arts, forsooth, that fired my youthAt last are unavailing;My blood runs cold, I'm getting old,And all my powers are failing.Speed thou upon thy white swans' wings,And elsewhere deign to mellowWith thy soft arts the anguished heartsOf swains that writhe and bellow;And right away seek out, I pray,Young Paullus,--he's your fellow!You'll find young Paullus passing fair,Modest, refined, and tony;Go, now, incite the favored wight!With Venus for a cronyHe'll outshine all at feast and ballAnd conversazione!Then shall that godlike nose of thineWith perfumes be requited,And then shall prance in Salian danceThe girls and boys delighted,And while t...
Eugene Field
Lines In Memory Of The Late Ven. Archdeacon Elwood, A.M.
When men of gentle lives depart,They leave behind no brilliant storyOf fam'd exploits, to make men startIn wonder at their dazzling glory.The scholar's light, religion's beams,Tho' fill'd with great, commanding pow'r,In modest greatness throw their gleams,In quiet rays, from hour to hour.The greatest battles oft are fought,Unseen by any earthly eye;The victors all alone have wrought,And, unapplauded, live or die.'Twas thus with thee, thou rev'rend man;In peaceful, holy work thy lifeWas spent, until th' allotted spanWas cut by Time's relentless knife.Far from the keen and heartless train,Who daily feel Ambition's sting,Thy life, remov'd, felt not the pain,Which goads each one beneath her wing.
Thomas Frederick Young
Let th' Lasses Alooan!
What a lot ov advice ther is wasted; -What praichin is all thrown away; -Young fowk lang for pleasures untasted,An its little they'll heed what yo say.Old fowk may have wisdom i' plenty,But they're apt to forget just one thing;What suits sixty will hardly fit twenty,An youth ivver will have its fling.Old Jenny sat silently freeatin, -Sed Alec, "Pray lass, what's to do?"But his old wife went on wi her knittin,As if shoo'd a task to get throo.Then shoo tuk off her specs, and sed sadly,"Awm capt ha blind some fowk can be;Ther's reason for me lukkin badly,But nowt maks a difference to thee."Ther's awr Reuben, he's hardly turned twenty,An awr Jim isn't nineteen wol May; -Aw provide for em gooid things i plenty,
John Hartley
Cyclamen
I had a plant which would not thrive, Although I watered it with care, I could not save the blossoms fair,Nor even keep the leaves alive.I strove till it was vain to strive. I gave it light, I gave it air, I sought from skill and counsel rareThe means to make it yet survive.A lady sent it me, to prove She held my friendship in esteem; I would not have it as she said,I wanted it to be for love; And now not even friends we seem, And now the cyclamen is dead.
The Sun's Wooing.
The sun just touched the morning;The morning, happy thing,Supposed that he had come to dwell,And life would be all spring.She felt herself supremer, --A raised, ethereal thing;Henceforth for her what holiday!Meanwhile, her wheeling kingTrailed slow along the orchardsHis haughty, spangled hems,Leaving a new necessity, --The want of diadems!The morning fluttered, staggered,Felt feebly for her crown, --Her unanointed foreheadHenceforth her only one.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
The Truckers
THE change of food enjoyment is to man;In this, t'include the woman is my plan.I cannot guess why Rome will not allowExchange in wedlock, and its leave avow;Not ev'ry time such wishes might arise,But, once in life at least, 'twere not unwise;Perhaps one day we may the boon obtain;Amen, I say: my sentiments are plain;The privilege in France may yet arriveThere trucking pleases, and exchanges thrive;The people love variety, we find;And such by heav'n was ere for them designed.ONCE there dwelled, near Rouen, (sapient clime)Two villagers, whose wives were in their prime,And rather pleasing in their shape and mien,For those in whom refinement 's scarcely seen.Each looker-on conceives, LOVE needs not greetSuch humble wights, as he would p...
Jean de La Fontaine
My Rival
I go to concert, party, ball,What profit is in these?I sit alone against the wallAnd strive to look at ease.The incense that is mine by rightThey burn before her shrine;And that's because I'm seventeenAnd She is forty-nine.I cannot check my girlish blush,My color comes and goes;I redden to my finger-tips,And sometimes to my nose.But She is white where white should be,And red where red should shine.The blush that flies at seventeenIs fixed at forty-nine.I wish I had Her constant cheek;I wish that I could singAll sorts of funny little songs,Not quite the proper thing.I'm very gauche and very shy,Her jokes aren't in my line;And, worst of all, I'm seventeenWhile She is forty-nine.The...
Rudyard
Lads an Lasses.
Lads an lasses lend yor earsUnto an old man's rhyme,Dooant hurry by an say wi' sneers,It's all a waste o' time.Some little wisdom yo may gain,Some trewth yo'll ne'er forget:Soa blame me net for spaikin plain,Yo'll find it's better net.For yo, life's journey may be long,Or it may end to-day;Deeath gethers in the young an strong,Along wi' th' old an gray.Then nivver do an unkind thing,Which yo will sure regret,Nor utter words 'at leeav a sting, -Yo'll find it's better net.If yo've a duty to get throo,Goa at it with a will,Dooant shirk it 'coss it's hard to do,That mak's it harder still.Dooant think to-morn is time enuffFor what to-day is set,Nor trust to others for ther help,Yo'll find it's be...
Sestina V.
Alia dolce ombra de le belle frondi.HE TELLS THE STORY OF HIS LOVE, RESOLVING HENCEFORTH TO DEVOTE HIMSELF TO GOD. Beneath the pleasant shade of beauteous leavesI ran for shelter from a cruel light,E'en here below that burnt me from high heaven,When the last snow had ceased upon the hills,And amorous airs renew'd the sweet spring time,And on the upland flourish'd herbs and boughs.Ne'er did the world behold such graceful boughs,Nor ever wind rustled so verdant leaves,As were by me beheld in that young time:So that, though fearful of the ardent light,I sought not refuge from the shadowing hills,But of the plant accepted most in heaven.A laurel then protected from that heaven:Whence, oft enamour'd with its lovely ...
Francesco Petrarca
Odes Of Anacreon - Ode LIX.
Ripened by the solar beam,Now the ruddy clusters teem,In osier baskets borne alongBy all the festal vintage throngOf rosy youths and virgins fair,Ripe as the melting fruits they bear.Now, now they press the pregnant grapes,And now the captive stream escapes,In fervid tide of nectar gushing.And for its bondage proudly blushingWhile, round the vat's impurpled brim,The choral song, the vintage hymnOf rosy youths and virgins fair,Steals on the charmed and echoing air.Mark, how they drink, with all their eyes,The orient tide that sparkling flies,The infant Bacchus, born in mirth,While Love stands by, to hail the birth.When he, whose verging years declineAs deep into the vale as mine,When he inhales the vintage-cup,
Thomas Moore
The Rhemese
NO city I to Rheims would e'er prefer:Of France the pride and honour I aver;The Holy Ampoule * and delicious wine,Which ev'ry one regards as most divine,We'll set apart, and other objects take:The beauties round a paradise might make!I mean not tow'rs nor churches, gates, nor streets;But charming belles with soft enchanting sweets:Such oft among the fair Rhemese we view:Kings might be proud those graces to pursue.ONE 'mong these belles had to the altar led,A painter, much esteemed, and who had bread.What more was requisite! - he lived at ease,And by his occupation sought to please.A happy woman all believed his wife;The husband's talents pleased her to the life:For gallantry howe'er he was renowned,And many am'rous dames, who dwelle...
Comparisons
Touch my hands with your fingers, yellow wallflower.Did God use a bluer paintPainting the sky for the gold sunOr making the sea about your two black stars?Treasure the touches of my fingers.God did not spread his bluest paintOn a hollow sky or a girl's eye,But on a topaz chain, from you to me.Touch my temples with your fingers, scarlet rose.Did God use a stronger lightWhen He fashioned and dropped the sun into the skyOr dropped your black stars into their blue sea?Treasure the touches of my fingers.God did not spend His strongest lightOn a sun above or a look of love,But on a round gold ring, from you to me.Touch my cheeks with your fingers, blue hyacinth.Did God use a whiter silkWeaving the veil for your fev...
Edward Powys Mathers
A Stein Song.
Give a rouse, then, in the MaytimeFor a life that knows no fear!Turn night-time into daytimeWith the sunlight of good cheer!For it's always fair weatherWhen good fellows get together,With a stein on the table and a good song ringing clear.When the wind comes up from CubaAnd the birds are on the wing,And our hearts are patting jubaTo the banjo of the spring,Then it's no wonder whetherThe boys will get together,With a stein on the table and a cheer for everything.For we're all frank-and-twentyWhen the spring is in the air;And we've faith and hope a-plenty,And we've life and love to spare;And it's birds of a featherWhen we all get together,With a stein on the table and a heart without a care.For we k...
Bliss Carman
The Orphan Maid of Glencoe.
NOTE: - The tale is told a few years after the massacre of Glencoe, by a wandering bard, who had formerly been piper to MacDonald of Glencoe, but had escaped the fate of his kinsmen.I tell a tale of woful tragedy,Resulting from that fearful infamy;That unsurpassed, unrivalled treachery,That merciless, that beastlike butchery.Upon the evening calm and bright,That followed on the fatal night,Just as the sun was setting redBehind Benmore's sequestered head,And weeping tears of yellow light,That, streaming down, bedimmed his sight,As he prepared to make his graveBeneath the deep Atlantic wave;I stood and viewed with starting tearsThe silent scene of glorious years,And thought me on my former pride,As when I marched my chief beside,
W. M. MacKeracher