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Benedictio Domini
Without, the sullen noises of the street!The voice of London, inarticulate,Hoarse and blaspheming, surges in to meetThe silent blessing of the Immaculate.Dark is the church, and dim the worshippers,Hushed with bowed heads as though by some old spell.While through the incense-laden air there stirsThe admonition of a silver bell.Dark is the church, save where the altar stands,Dressed like a bride, illustrious with light,Where one old priest exalts with tremulous handsThe one true solace of man's fallen plight.Strange silence here: without, the sounding streetHeralds the world's swift passage to the fire:O Benediction, perfect and complete!When shall men cease to suffer and desire?
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part II. - VIII - Crusaders
Furl we the sails, and pass with tardy oarsThrough these bright regions, casting many a glanceUpon the dream-like issues, the romanceOf many-coloured life that Fortune poursRound the Crusaders, till on distant shoresTheir labours end; or they return to lie,The vow performed, in cross-legged effigy,Devoutly stretched upon their chancel floors.Am I deceived? Or is their requiem chantedBy voices never mute when Heaven untiesHer inmost, softest, tenderest harmonies;Requiem which Earth takes up with voice undaunted,When she would tell how Brave, and Good, and Wise,For their high guerdon not in vain have panted!
William Wordsworth
The Brute
Through his might men work their wills. They have boweled out the hills For food to keep him toiling in the cages they have wrought; And they fling him, hour by hour, Limbs of men to give him power; Brains of men to give him cunning; and for dainties to devour Children's souls, the little worth; hearts of women, cheaply bought: He takes them and he breaks them, but he gives them scanty thought. For about the noisy land, Roaring, quivering 'neath his hand, His thoughts brood fierce and sullen or laugh in lust of pride O'er the stubborn things that he, Breaks to dust and brings to be. Some he mightily establishes, some flings down utterly. There is...
William Vaughn Moody
Hamlet
Umbrageous cedars murmuring symphoniesStooped in late twilight o'er dark Denmark's Prince:He sat, his eyes companioned with dream -Lustrous large eyes that held the world in viewAs some entrancèd child's a puppet show.Darkness gave birth to the all-trembling stars,And a far roar of long-drawn cataracts,Flooding immeasurable night with sound.He sat so still, his very thoughts took wing,And, lightest Ariels, the stillness hauntedWith midge-like measures; but, at last, even theySank 'neath the influences of his night.The sweet dust shed faint perfume in the gloom;Through all wild space the stars' bright arrows fellOn the lone Prince - the troubled son of man -On Time's dark waters in unearthly trouble:Then, as the roar increased, and one fair towe...
Walter De La Mare
To A Friend On His Marriage.
On thee, blest youth, a father's hand confersThe maid thy earliest, fondest wishes knew.Each soft enchantment of the soul is hers;Thine be the joys to firm attachment due.As on she moves with hesitating grace,She wins assurance from his soothing voice;And, with a look the pencil could not trace,Smiles thro' her blushes, and confirms the choice.Spare the fine tremors of her feeling frame!To thee she turns--forgive a virgin's fears!To thee she turns with surest, tenderest claim;Weakness that charms, reluctance that endears!At each response the sacred rite requires,From her full bosom bursts the unbidden sigh.A strange mysterious awe the scene inspires;And on her lips the trembling accents die.O'er her fair face what wild e...
Samuel Rogers
To His Friend, Mr. J. Jincks.
Love, love me now, because I placeThee here among my righteous race:The bastard slips may droop and dieWanting both root and earth; but thyImmortal self shall boldly trustTo live for ever with my Just.
Robert Herrick
Playmates.
God permits industrious angelsAfternoons to play.I met one, -- forgot my school-mates,All, for him, straightway.God calls home the angels promptlyAt the setting sun;I missed mine. How dreary marbles,After playing Crown!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Prairie
Where yesterday rolled long waves of goldBeneath the burnished blue of the sky,A silver-white sea lies still and cold,And a bitter wind blows by.But nothing passes the door all day,Though my watching eyes grow worn and dim,Save a lean, grey wolf that swings awayTo the far horizon rim.Then, one by one, the stars glisten outLike frozen tears on a purple pall -The darkness folds my cabin aboutAnd the snow begins to fall.I will make a hearth-fire red and brightAnd set a light by the window paneFor one who follows the trail to-nightThat will bring him home again.Love will ride with him my heart to bless -Joy will out-step him across the floor -What matters the great white lonelinessWhen we bar the cabin door...
Virna Sheard
Self-Reliance
Henceforth, please God, forever I foregoThe yoke of men's opinions. I will beLight-hearted as a bird, and live with God.I find him in the bottom of my heart,I hear continually his voice therein.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
To The Rain
Come forth, O rain! from thy cool, distant hall,And lave the parched brow of the feverish earth,The little drooping flow'rets on thee call,Come, with thy cool touch wake them up to mirthThey will lift up glad faces to the sky,Drinking in gladness from the warm moist air,Now, thirsty, hot, and faint they droop and die,Thou only canst revive these fainting fairThe grain has shrivelled, pining after thee,And waves light-headed from a sickly stalk,There's no green herbage on the sunburned lea,The glaring sun through glowing skies doth walk,Looking down hotly on sweet Allumette,Thinking to dry it with his ardent gaze,Each day a strip of sand left bare and wet,Tells how she shrinks from his pursuing rays1870
Nora Pembroke
God To Be First Served.
Honour thy parents; but good manners callThee to adore thy God the first of all.
To Canaris, The Greek Patriot.
("Canaris! nous t'avons oublié.")[VIII., October, 1832.]O Canaris! O Canaris! the poet's songHas blameful left untold thy deeds too long!But when the tragic actor's part is done,When clamor ceases, and the fights are won,When heroes realize what Fate decreed,When chieftains mark no more which thousands bleed;When they have shone, as clouded or as bright,As fitful meteor in the heaven at night,And when the sycophant no more proclaimsTo gaping crowds the glory of their names, -'Tis then the mem'ries of warriors die,And fall - alas! - into obscurity,Until the poet, in whose verse aloneExists a world - can make their actions known,And in eternal epic measures, showThey are not yet forgotten here below.And yet by...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Fragments Of Ancient Poetry, Fragment IX
Thou askest, fair daughter of theisles! whose memory is preservedin these tombs? The memory of Ronnanthe bold, and Connan the chief ofmen; and of her, the fairest of maids,Rivine the lovely and the good. Thewing of time is laden with care. Everymoment hath woes of its own. Whyseek we our grief from afar? or give ourtears to those of other times? But thoucommanded, and I obey, O fair daughterof the isles!Conar was mighty in war. Caulwas the friend of strangers. His gateswere open to all; midnight darkenednot on his barred door. Both lived uponthe sons of the mountains. Their bowwas the support of the poor.Connan was the image of Conar'ssoul. Caul was renewed in Ronnan hisson. Rivine the daughter of Conar was
James Macpherson
The Prairie.
The skies are blue above my head, The prairie green below,And flickering o'er the tufted grass The shifting shadows go,Vague-sailing, where the feathery clouds Fleck white the tranquil skies,Black javelins darting where aloft The whirring pheasant flies.A glimmering plain in drowsy trance The dim horizon bounds,Where all the air is resonant With sleepy summer sounds, -The life that sings among the flowers, The lisping of the breeze,The hot cicala's sultry cry, The murmurous dream of bees.The butterfly - a flying flower - Wheels swift in flashing rings,And flutters round his quiet kin, With brave flame-mottled wings.The wild Pinks burst in crimson fire The Phlox' bright c...
John Hay
Helpstone Church-Yard.
What makes me love thee now, thou dreary scene,And see in each swell'd heap a peaceful bed?I well remember that the time has been,To walk a church-yard when I us'd to dread;And shudder'd, as I read upon the stoneOf well-known friends and next-door-neighbours gone.But then I knew no cloudy cares of life,Where ne'er a sunbeam comes to light me thorough;A stranger then to this world's storms and strife,Where ne'er a charm is met to lull my sorrow:I then was blest, and had not eyes to seeLife's future change, and Fate's severe to-morrow;When all those ills and pains should compass me,With no hope left but what I meet in thee.
John Clare
Saul
Said Abner, At last thou art come!Ere I tell, ere thou speak,Kiss my cheek, wish me well! Then I wished it,And did kiss his cheek.And he, Since the King, O my friend,For thy countenance sent,Nor drunken nor eaten have we;Nor until from his tentThou return with the joyful assuranceThe King liveth yet,Shall our lip with the honey be brightened,The water be wet.For out of the black mid-tents silence,A space of three days,No sound hath escaped to thy servants,Of prayer nor of praise,To betoken that Saul and the SpiritHave ended their strife,And that, faint in his triumph, the monarchSinks back upon life.Yet now my heart leaps, O beloved!Gods child with his dewOn thy gracious gold hair, and t...
Robert Browning
Transcendentalism:
A Poem In Twelve BooksStop playing, poet! may a brother speak?Tis you speak, thats your error. Songs our art:Whereas you please to speak these naked thoughtsInstead of draping them in sighs and sounds.True thoughts, good thoughts, thoughts fit to treasure up!But why such long prolusion and display,Such turning and adjustment of the harp,And taking it upon your breast at length,Only to speak dry words across its strings?Stark-naked thought is in request enough,Speak prose and holloa it till Europe hears!The six-foot Swiss tube, braced about with bark,Which helps the hunters voice from Alp to Alp,Exchange our harp for that, who hinders you?But heres your fault; grown men want thought, you think;Thoughts what they me...
A Childs Thanks
How low soeer men rank us,How high soeer we win,The children far above usDwell, and they deign to love us,With lovelier love than ours,And smiles more sweet than flowers;As though the sun should thank usFor letting light come in.With too divine complaisance,Whose grace misleads them thus,Being gods, in heavenly blindnessThey call our worship kindness,Our pebble-gift a gem:They think us good to them,Whose glance, whose breath, whose presence,Are gifts too good for us.The poet high and hoaryOf meres that mountains bindFelt his great heart more oftenYearn, and its proud strength softenFrom stern to tenderer mood,At thought of gratitudeShown than of song or storyHe heard of hearts unkind.
Algernon Charles Swinburne