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Somebody.
Tune - "For the sake of somebody."I. My heart is sair, I dare na tell My heart is sair for somebody; I could wake a winter night For the sake o' somebody. Oh-hon! for somebody! Oh-hey! for somebody! I could range the world around, For the sake o' somebody!II. Ye powers that smile on virtuous love, O, sweetly smile on somebody! Frae ilka danger keep him free, And send me safe my somebody. Oh-hon! for somebody! Oh-hey! for somebody! I wad do, what wad I not? For the sake o' somebody!
Robert Burns
A Rhyme Of Friends.
(In a Style Skeltonical)Listen now this timeShortly to my rhymeThat herewith startsAbout certain kind heartsIn those stricken partsThat lie behind Calais,Old crones and aged menAnd young children.About the Picardais,Who earned my thousand thanks,Dwellers by the banksOf mournful Somme(God keep me therefromUntil War ends),These, then, are my friends:Madame Averlant Lune,From the town of Bethune;Good Professeur la BruneFrom that town also.He played the piccolo,And left his locks to grow.Dear Madame Hojdes,Sempstress of Saint Fe.With Jules and SusetteAnd Antoinette.Her children, my sweethearts,For whom I made dartsOf paper to throwIn their mimic show,"La guerr...
Robert von Ranke Graves
Queen Mab in the Village
Once I loved a fairy, Queen Mab it was. Her voice Was like a little Fountain That bids the birds rejoice. Her face was wise and solemn, Her hair was brown and fine. Her dress was pansy velvet, A butterfly design. To see her hover round me Or walk the hills of air, Awakened love's deep pulses And boyhood's first despair; A passion like a sword-blade That pierced me thro' and thro': Her fingers healed the sorrow Her whisper would renew. We sighed and reigned and feasted Within a hollow tree, We vowed our love was boundless, Eternal as the sea. She banished from her kingdom The mortal boy I grew - So tall and crude and noisy,
Vachel Lindsay
Lines On A Little Bird Singing At The Window Of The Author, Soon After The Death Of A Beloved Sister.
Go, little flutt'rer! seek thy feather'd loves,And leave a wretched mourner to his woe;Seek out the bow'rs of bliss, seek happier groves,Nor here unheeded let thy music flow.Yet think me not ungrateful for thy song,If meant to cheer me in my lone retreat;Ah! not to thee, my little friend! belongThe pow'rs to soothe the pangs of adverse fate.Fly, then! the window of the wretched, fly!And be thy harmless life for ever blest;I only can reward thee with a sigh,And wish that joys may crown thy peaceful nest.
John Carr
Juliet's Nurse
In old-world nursery vacant now of children,With posied walls, familiar, fair, demure,And facing southward o'er romantic streets,Sits yet and gossips winter's dark awayOne gloomy, vast, glossy, and wise, and sly:And at her side a cherried country cousin.Her tongue claps ever like a ram's sweet bell;There's not a name but calls a tale to mind -Some marrowy patty of farce or melodram;There's not a soldier but hath babes in view;There's not on earth what minds not of the midwife:"O, widowhood that left me still espoused!"Beauty she sighs o'er, and she sighs o'er gold;Gold will buy all things, even a sweet husband,Else only Heaven is left and - farewell youth!Yet, strangely, in that money-haunted head,The sad, gemmed crucifix and incense blue...
Walter De La Mare
Thought-Magnets
With each strong thought, with every earnest longing For aught thou deemest needful to thy soul,Invisible vast forces are set thronging Between thee and that goal.'Tis only when some hidden weakness alters And changes thy desire, or makes it less,That this mysterious army ever falters Or stops short of success.Thought is a magnet; and the longed-for pleasure Or boon, or aim, or object, is the steel;And its attainment hangs but on the measure Of what thy soul can feel.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Naked Goddess
Arcane danzeDimmortal piede i ruinosi gioghiScossero e lardue selve (oggi romitoNido de vend).- LEOPARDI.Through the country to the townRan a rumour and renown,That a woman grand and tall,Swift of foot, and therewithalNaked as a lily gleaming,Had been seen by eyes not dreaming,Darting down far forest glades,Flashing sunshine through the shades.With this rumours swelling wordAll the city buzzed and stirred;Solemn senators conferred;Priest, astrologer, and mage,Subtle sophist, bard, and sage,Brought their wisdom, lore, and wit,To expound or riddle it:Last a porter ventured WeMight go out ourselves to see.Thus, upon a summer morn,Lo the city all forlorn;Every ho...
James Thomson
Autumn Violets
(Macmillan's Magazine, November 1868.)Keep love for youth, and violets for the spring:Of if these bloom when worn-out autumn grieves,Let them lie hid in double shade of leaves,Their own, and others dropped down withering;For violets suit when home birds build and sing,Not when the outbound bird a passage cleaves;Not with dry stubble of mown harvest sheaves,But when the green world buds to blossoming.Keep violets for the spring, and love for youth,Love that should dwell with beauty, mirth, and hope:Or if a later sadder love be born,Let this not look for grace beyond its scope,But give itself, nor plead for answering truth -A grateful Ruth tho' gleaning scanty corn.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
At The Foot Of Clifford Hill
Who loves the white-thorn tree,And the river running free?There a maiden stood with meIn Summer weather.Near a cottage far from town,While the sun went brightly downO'er the meadows green and brown,We loved together.How sweet her drapery flowed,While the moor-cock oddly crowed;I took the kiss which love bestowed,Under the white-thorn tree.Soft winds the water curled,The trees their branches furled;Sweetest nook in all the worldIs where she stood with me.Calm came the evening air,The sky was sweet and fair,In the river shadowed there,Close by the hawthorn tree.Round her neck I clasped my arms,And kissed her rosy charms;O'er the flood the hackle swarms,Where the maiden stood with me.
John Clare
An Inscription
Precious the box that Mary brakeOf spikenard for her Master's sake,But ah! it held nought half so dearAs the sweet dust that whitens here.The greater wonder who shall say:To make so white a soul of clay,From clay to win a face so fair,Those strange great eyes, that sunlit hairA-ripple o'er her witty brain, -Or turn all back to dust again.Who knows - but, in some happy hour,The God whose strange alchemic powerWrought her of dust, again may turnTo woman this immortal urn.
Richard Le Gallienne
Because
Oh, because you never triedTo bow my will or break my pride,And nothing of the cave-man madeYou want to keep me half afraid,Nor ever with a conquering airYou thought to draw me unaware,Take me, for I love you moreThan I ever loved before.And since the body's maidenhoodAlone were neither rare nor goodUnless with it I gave to youA spirit still untrammeled, too,Take my dreams and take my mindThat were masterless as wind;And "Master!" I shall say to youSince you never asked me to.
Sara Teasdale
The Nursing Sister
Our sister sayeth such and such,And we must bow to her behests.Our sister toileth overmuch,Our little maid that hath no breasts.A field untilled, a web unwove,A flower withheld from sun or bee,An alien in the Courts of Love,And teacher unto such as we!We love her, but we laugh the while,We laugh, but sobs are mixed with laughter;Our sister hath no time to smile,She knows not what must follow after.Wind of the South, arise and blow,From beds of spice thy locks shake free;Breathe on her heart that she may know,Breathe on her eyes that she may see!Alas! we vex her with our mirth,And maze her with most tender scorn,Who stands beside the Gates of Birth,Herself a child, a child unborn!Our sister s...
Rudyard
Go Where Glory Waits Thee.
Go where glory waits thee,But while fame elates thee, Oh! still remember me.When the praise thou meetestTo thine ear is sweetest, Oh! then remember me.Other arms may press thee,Dearer friends caress thee,All the joys that bless thee, Sweeter far may be;But when friends are nearest,And when joys are dearest, Oh! then remember me!When, at eve, thou rovestBy the star thou lovest, Oh! then remember me.Think, when home returning,Bright we've seen it burning, Oh! thus remember me.Oft as summer closes,When thine eye reposesOn its lingering roses, Once so loved by thee,Think of her who wove them,Her who made thee love them, Oh! then, remember me.When, around...
Thomas Moore
If It Should Come To Be
If it should come to be,This proof of you and me,This type and signOf hours that smiled and shone,And yet seemed dead and goneAs old-world wine:Of Them Within the GateAsk we no richer fate,No boon above,For girl child or for boy,My gift of life and joy,Your gift of love.
William Ernest Henley
Sonnet - On An Old Book With Uncut Leaves
Emblem of blasted hope and lost desire,No finger ever traced thy yellow pageSave Time's. Thou hast not wrought to noble rageThe hearts thou wouldst have stirred. Not any fireSave sad flames set to light a funeral pyreDost thou suggest. Nay,--impotent in age,Unsought, thou holdst a corner of the stageAnd ceasest even dumbly to aspire.How different was the thought of him that writ.What promised he to love of ease and wealth,When men should read and kindle at his wit.But here decay eats up the book by stealth,While it, like some old maiden, solemnly,Hugs its incongruous virginity!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Reverie
I know there shall dawn a dayIs it here on homely earth?Is it yonder, worlds away,Where the strange and new have birth,That Power comes full in play?Is it here, with grass about,Under befriending trees,When shy buds venture out,And the air by mild degreesPuts winters death past doubt?Is it up amid whirl and roarOf the elemental flameWhich star-flecks heavens dark floor,That, new yet still the same,Full in play comes Power once more?Somewhere, below, above,Shall a day dawn, this I know,When Power, which vainly stroveMy weakness to oerthrow,Shall triumph. I breathe, I move,I truly am, at last!For a veil is rent betweenMe and the truth which passedFitful, half-guessed, half-seen,...
Robert Browning
A Fantasy
A fantasy that came to me As wild and wantonly designedAs ever any dream might be Unraveled from a madman's mind, -A tangle-work of tissue, wrought By cunning of the spider-brain, And woven, in an hour of pain,To trap the giddy flies of thought.I stood beneath a summer moon All swollen to uncanny girth,And hanging, like the sun at noon, Above the center of the earth; But with a sad and sallow light, As it had sickened of the nightAnd fallen in a pallid swoon.Around me I could hear the rush Of sullen winds, and feel the whirOf unseen wings apast me brush Like phantoms round a sepulcher;And, like a carpeting of plush,0 A lawn unrolled beneath my feet, Bespangled o'er with flo...
James Whitcomb Riley
Sunday.
The Sabbath-day, of every day the best,The poor mans happiness, a poor man sings;When labour has no claim to break his rest,And the light hours fly swift on easy wings.What happiness this holy morning brings,How soft its pleasures on his senses steal;How sweet the village-bells' first warning rings;And O how comfortable does he feel,When with his family at ease he takes his early meal.The careful wife displays her frugal hoard,And both partake in comfort though they're poor;While love's sweet offsprings crowd the lowly board,Their little likenesses in miniature.Though through the week he labour does endure,And weary limbs oft cause him to complain,This welcome morning always brings a cure;It teems with joys his soul to entertain,And...