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Song To Celia (2)
Come, my Celia, let us proveWhile we may the sports of love;Time will not be ours forever,He at length our good will sever.Spend not then his gifts in vain;Suns that set may rise again,But if once we lose this light,'Tis with us perpetual night.Why should we defer our joys?Fame and rumour are but toys.Cannot we delude the eyesOf a few poor household spies?Or his easier ears beguile,So removed by our wile?'Tis no sin love's fruits to steal;But the sweet theft to reveal,To be taken, to be seen,These have crimes accounted been.
Ben Jonson
To My Husband.
Just two-and-forty years have passed[5]Since we, a youthful pair,Together at the altar stood,And mutual vows pledged there.Our lives have been a checkered scene,Since that midsummer's eve;Much good received our hearts to cheer,And much those hearts to grieve.Children confided to our care,Hath God in kindness given,Of whom five still on earth remain,And two, we trust, in heaven.How many friends of early days,Have fallen by our side;Shook by some blast, like autumn leavesThey withered, drooped, and died.But still permitted, hand in handOur journey we pursue;And when we're weary, cheered by glimpseOf "better land" in view.We may not hope in this low world,Much longer to remain,But o...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
Gifts Returned
"You must give back," her mother said,To a poor sobbing little maid,"All the young man has given you,Hard as it now may seem to do.""'Tis done already, mother dear!"Said the sweet girl, "So never fear." Mother. Are you quite certain? Come, recount(There was not much) the whole amount. Girl. The locket; the kid gloves. Mother. Go on. Girl. Of the kid gloves I found but one. Mother. Never mind that. What else? Proceed.You gave back all his trash? Girl. Indeed. Mother. And was there nothing you would save? Girl. Everything I could give I gave. Mother. To the last tittle? Girl. Even to that. Mother. Freely? Girl<...
Walter Savage Landor
Horatian Echo
Omit, omit, my simple friend,Still to inquire how parties tend,Or what we fix with foreign powers.If France and we are really friends,And what the Russian Czar intends,Is no concern of ours.Us not the daily quickening raceOf the invading populaceShall draw to swell that shouldering herd.Mourn will we not your closing hour,Ye imbeciles in present power,Doomd, pompous, and absurd!And let us bear, that they debateOf all the engine-work of state,Of commerce, laws, and policy,The secrets of the worlds machine,And what the rights of man may mean,With readier tongue than we.Only, that with no finer artThey cloak the troubles of the heartWith pleasant smile, let us take care;Nor with a lighter hand disp...
Matthew Arnold
The Statue
When we are dead, some Hunting-boy will passAnd find a stone half-hidden in tall grassAnd grey with age: but having seen that stone(Which was your image), ride more slowly on.
Hilaire Belloc
The Land We Love
Land of the gentle and brave!Our love is as wide as thy woe;It deepens beside every graveWhere the heart of a hero lies low.Land of the sunniest skies!Our love glows the more for thy gloom;Our hearts, by the saddest of ties,Cling closest to thee in thy doom.Land where the desolate weepIn a sorrow no voice may console!Our tears are but streams, making deepThe ocean of love in our soul.Land where the victor's flag waves,Where only the dead are free!Each link of the chain that enslavesBut binds us to them and to thee.Land where the Sign of the CrossIts shadow hath everywhere shed!We measure our love by thy loss,Thy loss by the graves of our dead!
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Blind God.
I know not if she be unkind,If she have faults I do not care;Search through the world - where will you findA face like hers, a form, a mind?I love her to despair.If she be cruel, crueltyIs a great virtue, I will swear;If she be proud - then pride must beAkin to Heaven's divinest three -I love her to despair.Why speak to me of that and this?All you may say weighs not a hair!In her, - whose lips I may not kiss, -To me naught but perfection is! -I love her to despair.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Inlander
I never climb a high hillOr gaze across the lea,But, Oh, beyond the two of them,Beyond the height and blue of them,I'm looking for the sea.A blue sea--a crooning sea--A grey sea lashed with foam--But, Oh, to take the drift of it,To know the surge and lift of it,And 'tis I am longing for it as the homeless long for home.I never dream at night-timeOr close my eyes by day,But there I have the might of it,The wind-whipped, sun-drenched sight of it,That calls my soul away.Oh, deep dreams and happy dreams,Its dreaming still I'd be,For still the land I'm waking in,'Tis that my heart is breaking in,And 'tis far where I'd be sleeping with the blue waves over me.
Theodosia Garrison
An Unmarked Festival
There's a feast undated yet: Both our true lives hold it fast,-The first day we ever met. What a great day came and passed! -Unknown then, but known at last.And we met: You knew not me, Mistress of your joys and fears;Held my hands that held the key Of the treasure of your years, Of the fountain of your tears.For you knew not it was I, And I knew not it was you.We have learnt, as days went by. But a flower struck root and grew Underground, and no one knew.Days of days! Unmarked it rose, In whose hours we were to meet;And forgotten passed. Who knows, Was earth cold or sunny, Sweet, At the coming of your feet?One mere day, we thought; the measure Of such ...
Alice Meynell
A Lost Dream
Ah, I have changed, I do not knowWhy lonely hours affect me so.In days of yore, this were not wont,No loneliness my soul could daunt.For me too serious for my age,The weighty tome of hoary sage,Until with puzzled heart astir,One God-giv'n night, I dreamed of her.I loved no woman, hardly knewMore of the sex that strong men wooThan cloistered monk within his cell;But now the dream is lost, and hellHolds me her captive tight and fastWho prays and struggles for the past.No living maid has charmed my eyes,But now, my soul is wonder-wise.For I have dreamed of her and seenHer red-brown tresses' ruddy sheen,Have known her sweetness, lip to lip,The joy of her companionship.When days were bleak and wi...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Love's Loadstone. Second Reading.
Non so se s' é l' immaginata luce.I know not if it be the fancied light Which every man or more or less doth feel; Or if the mind and memory reveal Some other beauty for the heart's delight;Or if within the soul the vision bright Of her celestial home once more doth steal, Drawing our better thoughts with pure appeal To the true Good above all mortal sight:This light I long for and unguided seek; This fire that burns my heart, I cannot find; Nor know the way, though some one seems to lead.This, since I saw thee, lady, makes me weak: A bitter-sweet sways here and there my mind; And sure I am thine eyes this mischief breed.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
Ah what avails the sceptred race,
Ah what avails the sceptred race,Ah what the form divine!What every virtue, every grace!Rose Aylmer, all were thine.Rose Aylmer, whom these wakeful eyesMay weep, but never see,A night of memories and of sighsI consecrate to thee.
The Scholars
Oh, show me how a rose can shut and be a bud again!Nay, watch my Lords of the Admiralty, for they have the work in train.They have taken the men that were careless lads at Dartmouth in FourteenAnd entered them at the landward schools as though no war had been.They have piped the children off all the seas from the Falklands to the Bight,And quartered them on the Colleges to learn to read and write!Their books were rain and sleet and fog, the dry gale and the snow,Their teachers were the horned mines and the hump-backed Death below.Their schools were walled by the walking mist and roofed by the waiting skies,When they conned their task in a new-sown field with the Moonlight Sacrifice.They were not rated too young to teach, nor reckoned unfit to guideWhen they formed ...
Rudyard
The Vote Of Thanks Debate
The other night I got the blues and tried to smile in vain.I couldnt chuck a chuckle at the foolery of Twain;When Ward and Billings failed to bring a twinkle to my eye,I turned my eyes to Hansard of the fifteenth of July.I laughed and roared until I thought that I was growing fat,And all the boarders came to see what I was laughing at:It rose the risibility of some, I grieve to state,That foolish speech of Brentnalls in the Vote of Thanks debate.O Brentnall, of the olden school and cold sarcastic style!Youll take another WORKER now and stick it on your file;Were very fond of poetry,, we hope that this is quiteAs entertaining as the lines you read the other night.We know that you are honest, but twas foolish to confessYou read and file the WORKER; we...
Henry Lawson
To A Poet
Oh, be not led away.Lured by the colour of the sun-rich day. The gay romances of songUnto the spirit-life doth not belong. Though far-between the hoursIn which the Master of Angelic Powers Lightens the dusk withinThe Holy of Holies; be it thine to win Rare vistas of white light,Half-parted lips, through which the Infinite Murmurs her ancient story;Hearkening to whom the wandering planets hoary Waken primeval fires,With deeper rapture in celestial choirs Breathe, and with fleeter motionWheel in their orbits through the surgeless ocean. So, hearken thou like these,Intent on her, mounting by slow degrees, Until thy song's elationEchoes her multitudinous meditation.--November 15, 1893
George William Russell
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXXIX.
Io pensava assai destro esser sull' ale.UNWORTHY TO HAVE LOOKED UPON HER, HE IS STILL MORE SO TO ATTEMPT HER PRAISES. I thought me apt and firm of wing to rise(Not of myself, but him who trains us all)In song, to numbers fitting the fair thrallWhich Love once fasten'd and which Death unties.Slow now and frail, the task too sorely tries,As a great weight upon a sucker small:"Who leaps," I said, "too high may midway fall:Man ill accomplishes what Heaven denies."So far the wing of genius ne'er could fly--Poor style like mine and faltering tongue much less--As Nature rose, in that rare fabric, high.Love follow'd Nature with such full successIn gracing her, no claim could I advanceEven to look, and yet was bless'd by chance.
Francesco Petrarca
An Irish Airman Foresees His Death
I know that I shall meet my fateSomewhere among the clouds above:Those that I fight I do not hate,Those that I guard I do not love:My country is Kiltartan Cross,My countrymen Kiltartan's poor,No likely end could bring them lossOr leave them happier than before.Nor law, nor duty bade me fight,Nor public men, nor cheering crowds,A lonely impulse of delightDrove to this tumult in the clouds;I balanced all, brought all to mind,The years to come seemed waste of breath,A waste of breath the years behindIn balance with this life, this death.
William Butler Yeats
The Telegraph Operator
I will not wash my face;I will not brush my hair;I "pig" around the place -There's nobody to care.Nothing but rock and tree;Nothing but wood and stone,Oh, God, it's hell to beAlone, alone, alone!Snow-peaks and deep-gashed drawsCorral me in a ring.I feel as if I wasThe only living thingOn all this blighted earth;And so I frowst and shrink,And crouching by my hearthI hear the thoughts I think.I think of all I miss -The boys I used to know;The girls I used to kiss;The coin I used to blow:The bars I used to haunt;The racket and the row;The beers I didn't want(I wish I had 'em now).Day after day the same,Only a little worse;No one to grouch or blame -Oh, for a loving...
Robert William Service