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Human Life
If dead, we cease to be; if total gloomSwallow up life's brief flash for aye, we fareAs summer-gusts, of sudden birth and doom,Whose sound and motion not alone declare,But are their whole of being! If the breathBe Life itself, and not its task and tent,If even a soul like Milton's can know death;O Man! thou vessel purposeless, unmeant,Yet drone-hive strange of phantom purposes!Surplus of Nature's dread activity,Which, as she gazed on some nigh-finished vase,Retreating slow, with meditative pause,She formed with restless hands unconsciously.Blank accident! nothing's anomaly!If rootless thus, thus substanceless thy state,Go, weigh thy dreams, and be thy hopes, thy fears,The counter-weights! Thy laughter and thy tearsMean but themselves, eac...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
By Their Works
Call him not heretic whose works attestHis faith in goodness by no creed confessed.Whatever in love's name is truly doneTo free the bound and lift the fallen oneIs done to Christ. Whoso in deed and wordIs not against Him labors for our Lord.When He, who, sad and weary, longing soreFor love's sweet service, sought the sisters' door,One saw the heavenly, one the human guest,But who shall say which loved the Master best
John Greenleaf Whittier
Work
What are we set on earth for? Say, to toil;Nor seek to leave thy tending of the vinesFor all the heat o' the day, till it declines,And Death's mild curfew shall from work assoil.God did anoint thee with his odorous oil,To wrestle, not to reign; and He assignsAll thy tears over, like pure crystallines,For younger fellow-workers of the soilTo wear for amulets. So others shallTake patience, labor, to their heart and handFrom thy hand and thy heart and thy brave cheer,And God's grace fructify through thee toThe least flower with a brimming cup may stand,And share its dew-drop with another near.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
The Boy And The Angel
Morning, evening, noon and night,Praise God!; sang Theocrite.Then to his poor trade he turned,Whereby the daily meal was earned.Hard he laboured, long and well;Oer his work the boys curls fell:But ever, at each period,He stopped and sang, Praise God!Then back again his curls he threw,And cheerful turned to work anew.Said Blaise, the listening monk, Well done;I doubt not thou art heard, my son:As well as if thy voice to-dayWere praising God, the Popes great way.This Easter Day, the Pope at RomePraises God from Peters dome.Said Theocrite, Would God that IMight praise him, that great way, and die!Night passed, day shone,And Theocrite was gone.With ...
Robert Browning
Easter
I have met them at close of dayComing with vivid facesFrom counter or desk among greyEighteenth-century houses.I have passed with a nod of the headOr polite meaningless words,Or have lingered awhile and saidPolite meaningless words,And thought before I had doneOf a mocking tale or a gibeTo please a companionAround the fire at the club,Being certain that they and IBut lived where motley is worn:All changed, changed utterly:A terrible beauty is born.That woman's days were spentIn ignorant good-will,Her nights in argumentUntil her voice grew shrill.What voice more sweet than hersWhen, young and beautiful,She rode to harriers?This man had kept a schoolAnd rode our winged horse;This other h...
William Butler Yeats
Temptations.
No man is tempted so but may o'ercome,If that he has a will to masterdom.
Robert Herrick
A Welcome To Lowell
Take our hands, James Russell Lowell,Our hearts are all thy own;To-day we bid thee welcomeNot for ourselves alone.In the long years of thy absenceSome of us have grown old,And some have passed the portalsOf the Mystery untold;For the hands that cannot clasp thee,For the voices that are dumb,For each and all I bid theeA grateful welcome home!For Cedarcroft's sweet singerTo the nine-fold Muses dear;For the Seer the winding ConcordPaused by his door to hear;For him, our guide and Nestor,Who the march of song began,The white locks of his ninety yearsBared to thy winds, Cape Ann!For him who, to the musicHer pines and hemlocks played,Set the old and tender storyOf the lorn Acadia...
Vanity Fair
In Vanity Fair, as we bow and smile, As we talk of the opera after the weather,As we chat of fashion and fad and style, We know we are playing a part together.You know that the mirth she wears, she borrows;She knows you laugh but to hide your sorrows;We know that under the silks and laces,And back of beautiful, beaming faces,Lie secret trouble and grim despair, In Vanity Fair.In Vanity Fair, on dress parade, Our colours look bright and our swords are gleaming;But many a uniform's worn and frayed, And most of the weapons, despite their seeming,Are dull and blunted and badly battered,And close inspection will show how tatteredAnd stained are the banners that float above us.Our comrades hate, while they swear to love...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Flower's Lesson.
There grew a fragrant rose-tree where the brook flows,With two little tender buds, and one full rose;When the sun went down to his bed in the west,The little buds leaned on the rose-mother's breast,While the bright eyed stars their long watch kept,And the flowers of the valley in their green cradles slept;Then silently in odors they communed with each other,The two little buds on the bosom of their mother."O sister," said the little one, as she gazed at the sky,"I wish that the Dew Elves, as they wander lightly by,Would bring me a star; for they never grow dim,And the Father does not need them to burn round him.The shining drops of dew the Elves bring each dayAnd place in my bosom, so soon pass away;But a star would glitter brightly through the long summer...
Louisa May Alcott
Glory.
Glory no other thing is, Tully says,Than a man's frequent fame spoke out with praise.
Old John
Old John, if I could sit with you a dayAt Abrams feet upon the asphodel,There, while the grand old patriarch dreamed away,To you my lifes whole progress I would tell;To you would give accompt of what is well,What ill performed; how used the trusted talents,Since last we heard the sound of Braddan bell, "A wheen bit callants."You were not of our kin nor of our race,Old John, nor of our church, nor of our speech;Yet what of strength, or truth, or tender graceI owe, twas you that taught me. Born to teachAll nobleness, whereof divines may preach,And pedagogues may wag their tongues of iron,I have no doubt you could have taught the leech That taught old Chiron.For so it is, the nascent souls may wait,And lose the flexile a...
Thomas Edward Brown
To The Citizens[1]
And shall the Patriot who maintain'd your cause,From future ages only meet applause?Shall he, who timely rose t'his country's aid,By her own sons, her guardians, be betray'd?Did heathen virtues in your hearts reside,These wretches had been damn'd for parricide. Should you behold, whilst dreadful armies threatThe sure destruction of an injured state,Some hero, with superior virtue bless'd,Avert their rage, and succour the distress'd;Inspired with love of glorious liberty,Do wonders to preserve his country free;He like the guardian shepherd stands, and theyLike lions spoil'd of their expected prey,Each urging in his rage the deadly dart,Resolved to pierce the generous hero's heart;Struck with the sight, your souls would swell with grief,...
Jonathan Swift
Work And Contemplation
The woman singeth at her spinning-wheelA pleasant chant, ballad or barcarole;She thinketh of her song, upon the whole,Far more than of her flax; and yet the reelIs full, and artfully her fingers feelWith quick adjustment, provident control,The lines, too subtly twisted to unrollOut to a perfect thread. I hence appealTo the dear Christian Church, that we may doOur Father's business in these temples mirk,Thus swift and steadfast, thus intent and strong;While thus, apart from toil, our souls pursueSome high calm spheric tune, and prove our workThe better for the sweetness of our song.
His Grange, Or Private Wealth
Though clock,To tell how night draws hence, I've none,A cockI have to sing how day draws on:I haveA maid, my Prue, by good luck sent,To saveThat little, Fates me gave or lent.A henI keep, which, creeking day by day,Tells whenShe goes her long white egg to lay:A gooseI have, which, with a jealous ear,Lets looseHer tongue, to tell what danger's near.A lambI keep, tame, with my morsels fed,Whose damAn orphan left him, lately dead:A catI keep, that plays about my house,Grown fatWith eating many a miching mouse:To theseA Trasy I do keep, wherebyI pleaseThe more my rural privacy:Which areBut toys, to give my heart some ease:Where careNone is, slight things do li...
Nursery Rhyme. DCXXIV. Relics.
Little Mary Ester, Sat upon a tester, Eating of curds and whey; There came a little spider, And sat him down beside her, And frightened Mary Ester away.
Unknown
The Threshold
In their deepest caverns of limestoneThey pictured the Gods of Food,The Horse, the Elk, and the BisonThat the hunting might be good;With the Gods of Death and Terror,The Mammoth, Tiger, and Bear.And the pictures moved in the torchlightTo show that the Gods were there!But that was before Ionia,(Or the Seven Holy Islands of Ionia)Any of the Mountains of Ionia,Had bared their peaks to the air.The close years packed behind them,As the glaciers bite and grind,Filling the new-gouged valleysWith Gods of every kind.Gods of all-reaching power,Gods of all-searching eyes,But each to be wooed by worshipAnd won by sacrifice.Till, after many winters, rose Ionia,(Strange men brooding in Ionia)Crystal-eyed Sages of Ion...
Rudyard
Why Does She So Long Delay? By Paul, The Silentiary.
Why does she so long delay? Night is waning fast away;Thrice have I my lamp renewed, Watching here in solitude,Where can she so long delay? Where, so long delay?Vainly now have two lamps shone; See the third is nearly gone:Oh that Love would, like the ray Of that weary lamp, decay!But no, alas, it burns still on, Still, still, burns on.Gods, how oft the traitress dear Swore, by Venus, she'd be here!But to one so false as she What is man or deity?Neither doth this proud one fear,-- No, neither doth she fear.
Thomas Moore
Epilogue To "All For Love."
Poets, like disputants, when reasons fail, Have one sure refuge left--and that's to rail. Fop, coxcomb, fool, are thunder'd through the pit; And this is all their equipage of wit. We wonder how the devil this difference grows, Betwixt our fools in verse, and yours in prose: For, 'faith, the quarrel rightly understood, 'Tis civil war with their own flesh and blood. The threadbare author hates the gaudy coat; And swears at the gilt coach, but swears afoot: For 'tis observed of every scribbling man, He grows a fop as fast as e'er he can; Prunes up, and asks his oracle, the glass, If pink and purple best become his face. For our poor wretch, he neither rails nor prays; Nor likes your wit, just as you like ...
John Dryden