Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 57 of 739
Previous
Next
The Revolt Of Islam. - Canto 11.
1.She saw me not - she heard me not - aloneUpon the mountain's dizzy brink she stood;She spake not, breathed not, moved not - there was thrownOver her look, the shadow of a moodWhich only clothes the heart in solitude,A thought of voiceless depth; - she stood alone,Above, the Heavens were spread; - below, the floodWas murmuring in its caves; - the wind had blownHer hair apart, through which her eyes and forehead shone.2.A cloud was hanging o'er the western mountains;Before its blue and moveless depth were flyingGray mists poured forth from the unresting fountainsOf darkness in the North: - the day was dying: -Sudden, the sun shone forth, its beams were lyingLike boiling gold on Ocean, strange to see,And on the shattered vapours, whi...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Now
I leave with God to-morrow's where and how,And do concern myself but with the Now,That little word, though half the future's length,Well used, holds twice its meaning and its strength.Like one blindfolded groping out his way,I will not try to touch beyond to-day.Since all the future is concealed from sightI need but strive to make the next step right.That done, the next, and so on, till I findPerchance some day I am no longer blind,And looking up, behold a radiant FriendWho says, "Rest, now, for you have reached the end."
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - January.
1. LORD, what I once had done with youthful might, Had I been from the first true to the truth, Grant me, now old, to do--with better sight, And humbler heart, if not the brain of youth; So wilt thou, in thy gentleness and ruth, Lead back thy old soul, by the path of pain, Round to his best--young eyes and heart and brain. 2. A dim aurora rises in my east, Beyond the line of jagged questions hoar, As if the head of our intombed High Priest Began to glow behind the unopened door: Sure the gold wings will soon rise from the gray!-- They rise not. Up I rise, press on the more, To meet the slow coming of the Master's day.
George MacDonald
To the Companions
How comes it that, at even-tide,When level beams should show most truth,Man, failing, takes unfailing prideIn memories of his frolic youth?Venus and Liber fill their hour;The games engage, the law-courts prove;Till hardened life breeds love of powerOr Avarice, Age's final love.Yet at the end, these comfort notNor any triumph Fate decreesCompared with glorious, unforgotTen innocent enormitiesOf frontless days before the beard,When, instant on the casual jest,The God Himself of Mirth appearedAnd snatched us to His heaving breastAnd we not caring who He wasBut certain He would come againAccepted all He brought to passAs Gods accept the lives of men...Then He withdrew from sight and speech,
Rudyard
The Prism
I.A pool of broken sunbeams lay Upon the passage-floor,Radiant and rich, profound and gay As ever diamond bore.Small, flitting hands a handkerchief Spread like a cunning trap:Prone lay the gorgeous jewel-sheaf In the glory-gleaner's lap!Deftly she folded up the prize, With lovely avarice;Like one whom having had made wise, She bore it off in bliss.But ah, when for her prisoned gems She peeped, to prove them there,No glories broken from their stems Lay in the kerchief bare!For still, outside the nursery door, The bright persistency,A molten diadem on the floor, Lay burning wondrously.II.How oft have I laid fold from fold And peere...
Readjustment.
After the earthquake shock or lightning dartComes a recoil of silence o'er the lands,And then, with pulses hot and quivering hands,Earth calls up courage to her mighty heart,Plies every tender, compensating art,Draws her green, flowery veil above the scar,Fills the shrunk hollow, smooths the riven plain,And with a century's tendance heals againThe seams and gashes which her fairness mar.So we, when sudden woe like lightning sped,Finds us and smites us in our guarded place,After one brief, bewildered moment's space,By the same heavenly instinct taught and led,Adjust our lives to loss, make friends with pain,Bind all our shattered hopes and bid them bloom again.
Susan Coolidge
A Charm
Take of English earth as muchAs either hand may rightly clutch.In the taking of it breathePrayer for all who lie beneath.Not the great nor well-bespoke,But the mere uncounted folkOf whose life and death is noneReport or lamentation.Lay that earth upon thy heart,And thy sickness shall depart!It shall sweeten and make wholeFevered breath and festered soul.It shall mightily restrainOver-busied hand and brain.It shall ease thy mortal strife'Gainst the immortal woe of life,Till thyself, restored, shall proveBy what grace the Heavens do move.Take of English flowers these,Spring's full-faced primroses,Summer's wild wide-hearted rose,Autumn's wall-flower of the close,And, thy darkness to illume,Wint...
Hard Times
I am weary, and very lonely, And can but think--think. If there were some water only That a spirit might drink--drink, And arise, With light in the eyes And a crown of hope on the brow, To walk abroad in the strength of gladness, Not sit in the house, benumbed with sadness-- As now! But, Lord, thy child will be sad-- As sad as it pleases thee; Will sit, not seeking to be glad, Till thou bid sadness flee, And, drawing near, With thy good cheer Awake thy life in me.
Of Prayer. From Proverbial Philosophy
A WICKED man scorneth prayer, in the shallow sophistry of reason.He derideth the silly hope that God can be moved by supplication: Can the unchangeable be changed, or waver in his purpose?Can the weakness of pity affect him? Should he turn at the bidding of a man?Methought lie ruled all things, and ye called his decrees immutable,But if thus he listeneth to words, wherein is the firmness of his will? So I heard the speech of the wicked, and, lo, it was smoother than oil;But I knew that his reasonings were false, for the promise of the Scripture is true:Yet was my soul in darkness, for his words were too hard for me;Till I turned to my God in prayer: for I know He heareth always.Then I looked abroad on the earth, and, behold, the Lord was in all things;Yet saw I not his ha...
Martin Farquhar Tupper
Courage.
There is a courage, a majestic thing That springs forth from the brow of pain, full-grown, Minerva-like, and dares all dangers known, And all the threatening future yet may bring; Crowned with the helmet of great suffering; Serene with that grand strength by martyrs shown, When at the stake they die and make no moan, And even as the flames leap up are heard to sing: A courage so sublime and unafraid, It wears its sorrows like a coat of mail; And Fate, the archer, passes by dismayed, Knowing his best barbed arrows needs must fail To pierce a soul so armored and arrayed That Death himself might look on it and quail.
The Christian Tourists
No aimless wanderers, by the fiend UnrestGoaded from shore to shore;No schoolmen, turning, in their classic quest,The leaves of empire o'er.Simple of faith, and bearing in their heartsThe love of man and God,Isles of old song, the Moslem's ancient marts,And Scythia's steppes, they trod.Where the long shadows of the fir and pineIn the night sun are cast,And the deep heart of many a Norland mineQuakes at each riving blast;Where, in barbaric grandeur, Moskwa stands,A baptized Scythian queen,With Europe's arts and Asia's jewelled hands,The North and East between!Where still, through vales of Grecian fable, strayThe classic forms of yore,And beauty smiles, new risen from the spray,And Dian weeps once more;Where every tongue i...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Wedding In War-Time
Our God who made two lovers in a garden,And smote them separate and set them free,Their four eyes wild for wonder and wrath and pardonAnd their kiss thunder as lips of land and sea:Each rapt unendingly beyond the other,Two starry worlds of unknown gods at war,Wife and not mate, a man and not a brother,We thank thee thou hast made us what we are.Make not the grey slime of infinityTo swamp these flowers thou madest one by one;Let not the night that was thine enemyMix a mad twilight of the moon and sun;Waken again to thunderclap and clamourThe wonder of our sundering and the song,Or break our hearts with thine hell-shattering hammerBut leave a shade between us all day long.Shade of high shame and honourable blindnessWhen youth, i...
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
The Opportunity
Forty springs back, I recall,We met at this phase of the Maytime:We might have clung close through all,But we parted when died that daytime.We parted with smallest regret;Perhaps should have cared but slightly,Just then, if we never had met:Strange, strange that we lived so lightly!Had we mused a little spaceAt that critical date in the Maytime,One life had been ours, one place,Perhaps, till our long cold daytime.- This is a bitter thingFor thee, O man: what ails it?The tide of chance may bringIts offer; but nought avails it!
Thomas Hardy
Amour 37
I euer loue where neuer hope appeares,Yet hope drawes on my neuer-hoping care,And my liues hope would die but for dyspaire;My neuer certaine ioy breeds euer-certaine feares.Vncertaine dread gyues wings vnto my hope,Yet my hopes wings are loden so with feare,As they cannot ascend to my hopes spheare,Yet feare gyues them more then a heauenly scope.Yet this large roome is bounded with dyspaire,So my loue is still fettered with vaine hope,And lyberty depriues him of hys scope,And thus am I imprisond in the ayre: Then, sweet Dispaire, awhile hold vp thy head, Or all my hope for sorrow will be dead.
Michael Drayton
A Word For The Hour
The firmament breaks up. In black eclipseLight after light goes out. One evil star,Luridly glaring through the smoke of war,As in the dream of the Apocalypse,Drags others down. Let us not weakly weepNor rashly threaten. Give us grace to keepOur faith and patience; wherefore should we leapOn one hand into fratricidal fight,Or, on the other, yield eternal right,Frame lies of law, and good and ill confound?What fear we? Safe on freedoms vantage-groundOur feet are planted: let us there remainIn unrevengeful calm, no means untriedWhich truth can sanction, no just claim denied,The sad spectators of a suicide!They break the links of Union: shall we lightThe fires of hell to weld anew the chainOn that red anvil where each blow is pain?Draw...
Daybreak
Until the day break, and the shadows flee away. Song of Solomon 4:6.Gleaming softly, silvery-faint,Heralded by chanticleer,Merging from night's shadowy taint,New day of the passing year!Born to bless or born to blight,Born for you and born for me,Leaving, ere it take its flight,Impress on eternity!'Tis a gift from God's own hand.On its pure unsullied pageLet us write at his commandWhat will bless our pilgrimage.True repentance giveth joyTo the angels in the sky.What could be more blest employThan to cheer the choirs on high?Deeds of patience, deeds of love,Banishing all hate and guileThese will steer toward heaven above,These will make the angels smile.May this child...
Nancy Campbell Glass
The Crusaders Return
1.High deeds achieved of knightly fame,From Palestine the champion came;The cross upon his shoulders borne,Battle and blast had dimmd and torn.Each dint upon his batterd shieldWas token of a foughten field;And thus, beneath his ladys bower,He sung as fell the twilight hour:2.Joy to the fair! thy knight behold,Returnd from yonder land of gold;No wealth he brings, nor wealth can need,Save his good arms and battle-steedHis spurs, to dash against a foe,His lance and sword to lay him low;Such all the trophies of his toil,Such, and the hope of Teklas smile!3.Joy to the fair! whose constant knightHer favour fired to feats of might;Unnoted shall she not remain,Where meet the brigh...
Walter Scott
Answers In A Game Of Questions.
THE LADY.IN the small and great world too,What most charms a woman's heart?It is doubtless what is new,For its blossoms joy impart;Nobler far is what is true,For fresh blossoms it can shootEven in the time of fruit.THE YOUNG GENTLEMAN.With the Nymphs in wood and caveParis was acquainted well,Till Zeus sent, to make him rave,Three of those in Heav'n who dwell;And the choice more trouble gaveThan e'er fell to mortal lot,Whether in old times or not.THE EXPERIENCED.Tenderly a woman view,And thoult win her, take my word;He who's quick and saucy too,Will of all men be preferr'd;Who ne'er seems as if he knewIf he pleases,...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe