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The Sower. (Little Poems In Prose.)
1. Over a boundless plain went a man, carrying seed.2. His face was blackened by sun and rugged from tempest, scarred and distorted by pain. Naked to the loins, his back was ridged with furrows, his breast was plowed with stripes.3. From his hand dropped the fecund seed.4. And behold, instantly started from the prepared soil a blade, a sheaf, a springing trunk, a myriad-branching, cloud-aspiring tree. Its arms touched the ends of the horizon, the heavens were darkened with its shadow.5. It bare blossoms of gold and blossoms of blood, fruitage of health and fruitage of poison; birds sang amid its foliage, and a serpent was coiled about its stem.6. Under its branches a divinely beautiful man, crowned with thorns, was nailed to a cross.7. And the tree put forth treachero...
Emma Lazarus
Translations. - The Hundred And Twenty-Eighth Psalm. (Luther's Song-Book.)
Happy who in God's fear doth stay,And in it goeth on his way;Thine own hand thee shall find thy food,So liv'st thou right, and all is good.So shall thy wife be, in thy house,Like vine with clusters plenteous,Thy children sit thy table roundLike olive plants all fresh and sound.See, such rich blessing hangs him onWhom God's fear maketh live a man;From him the old curse away is wornTo which the sons of men are born.From Zion God will prosper thee;Thou shalt behold continuallyJerusalem's now happy caseSo pleasing to the God of grace.He will thy days prolong for thee,With goodness ever nigh thee beThat thou with thy sons' sons may'st dwell,And there be peace in Israel.
George MacDonald
Sonnet V.
Hard by the road, where on that little mound The high grass rustles to the passing breeze, The child of Misery rests her head in peace.Pause there in sadness. That unhallowed groundInshrines what once was Isabel. Sleep on Sleep on, poor Outcast! lovely was thy cheek, And thy mild eye was eloquent to speakThe soul of Pity. Pale and woe-begoneSoon did thy fair cheek fade, and thine eye weep The tear of anguish for the babe unborn, The helpless heir of Poverty and Scorn.She drank the draught that chill'd her soul to sleep.I pause and wipe the big drop from mine eye,Whilst the proud Levite scowls and passes by.
Robert Southey
Memorials Of A Tour In Italy, 1837 - XVI. - Continued
The world forsaken, all its busy caresAnd stirring interests shunned with desperate flight,All trust abandoned in the healing mightOf virtuous action; all that courage dares,Labour accomplishes, or patience bearsThose helps rejected, they, whose minds perceiveHow subtly works man's weakness, sighs may heaveFor such a One beset with cloistral snares.Father of Mercy! rectify his view,If with his vows this object ill agree;Shed over it thy grace, and thus subdueImperious passion in a heart set free:That earthly love may to herself be true,Give him a soul that cleaveth unto thee.
William Wordsworth
Norwegian Students' Greeting With A Procession
TO PROFESSOR WELHAVEN(See Note 36)Hear us, O age-laden singer!Streams of your tones are returning, Touching your heart!Spirit of youth is their bringer,Under your window with yearning Called by your art.Now our soul's echoes abounding Soar in the blue,In the sun-shimmering blue,High where your silvery song-notes are sounding.Smile on your labor now lightened,You who in winter perfected Seeds to be sown!All that your courage has brightened,All that your pity protected, Now it is grown;Over your shoulders upswinging, Folds round your frame,Bringing in roses your name,Joyous the sprite of your poetry bringing.Onward our life is now marching,Banner-like high thoughts are ...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
The Dungeon
And this place our forefathers made for man!This is the process of our love and wisdom,To each poor brother who offends against us -Most innocent, perhaps -and what if guilty?Is this the only cure? Merciful God!Each pore and natural outlet shrivelled upBy Ignorance and parching Poverty,His energies roll back upon his heart,And stagnate and corrupt; till changed to poison,They break out on him, like a loathsome plague-spot;Then we call in our pampered mountebanks -And this is their best cure! uncomfortedAnd friendless solitude, groaning and tears,And savage faces, at the clanking hour,Seen through the steam and vapours of his dungeon,By the lamp's dismal twilgiht! So he liesCircled with evil, till his very soulUnmoulds its essence, hopeles...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Builders Of Ruins
We build with strength the deep tower-wall That shall be shattered thus and thus.And fair and great are court and hall, But how fair-this is not for us,Who know the lack that lurks in all.We know, we know how all too bright The hues are that our painting wears,And how the marble gleams too white;- We speak in unknown tongues, the yearsInterpret everything aright,And crown with weeds our pride of towers, And warm our marble through with sun,And break our pavements through with flowers, With an Amen when all is done,Knowing these perfect things of ours.O days, we ponder, left alone, Like children in their lonely hour,And in our secrets keep your own, As seeds the colour of the flower.
Alice Meynell
The Same.
Hush'd on the hillIs the breeze;Scarce by the zephyrThe treesSoftly are press'd;The woodbird's asleep on the bough.Wait, then, and thouSoon wilt find rest.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
On William Francis Bartlett
O poor Romancer thou whose printed page,Filled with rude speech and ruder forms of strife,Was given to heroes in whose vulgar rageNo trace appears of gentler ways and life!Thou who wast wont of commoner clay to buildSome rough Achilles or some Ajax tall;Thou whose free brush too oft was wont to gildSome single virtue till it dazzled all;What right hast thou beside this laureled bierWhereon all manhood lies whereon the wreathOf Harvard rests, the civic crown, and hereThe starry flag, and sword and jeweled sheath?Seest thou these hatchments? Knowest thou this bloodNourished the heroes of Colonial daysSent to the dim and savage-haunted woodThose sad-eyed Puritans with hymns of praise?Look round thee! Everywhere is classic g...
Bret Harte
Long-Legged Fly
That civilisation may not sink,Its great battle lost,Quiet the dog, tether the ponyTo a distant post;Our master Caesar is in the tentWhere the maps are spread,His eyes fixed upon nothing,A hand under his head.(Like a long-legged fly upon the streamHis mind moves upon silence.)That the topless towers be burntAnd men recall that face,Move most gently if move you mustIn this lonely place.She thinks, part woman, three parts a child,That nobody looks; her feetPractise a tinker shufflePicked up on a street.(Like a long-legged fly upon the streamHer mind moves upon silence.)That girls at puberty may findThe first Adam in their thought,Shut the door of the Pope's chapel,Keep those children out.There on th...
William Butler Yeats
Paths That Wind . . .
Paths that windO'er the hills and by the streamsI must leave behind -Dawns and dews and dreams.Trails that goThrough the woods and down the slopesTo the vale below;Done with fears and hopes,I must wander onTill the purple twilight ends,Where the sun has gone -Faces, flowers and friends.
Richard Le Gallienne
The Wood-God.
Brother, lost brother!Thou of mine ancient kin!Thou of the swift will that no ponderings smother!The dumb life in me fumbles out to the shadeThou lurkest in.In vain--evasive ever through the gladeDeparting footsteps fail;And only where the grasses have been pressed,Or by snapped twigs I follow a fruitless trail.So--give o'er the quest!Sprawl on the roots and moss!Let the lithe garter squirm across my throat!Let the slow clouds and leaves above me floatInto mine eyeballs and across,--Nor think them further! Lo, the marvel! now,Thou whom my soul desireth, even thouSprawl'st by my side, who fled'st at my pursuit.I hear thy fluting; at my shoulder thereI see the sharp ears through the tangled hair,And birds and bunnies at thy musi...
Bliss Carman
Captain's Adventure.
Three years ago my vessel lay In a port of Hudson Bay, I started off for the trading post, But on the way back I then got lost. And the thought soon gave me the blues, Trudging along on my snow shoes, Over the wastes of drifting snow, While the wind it did fiercely blow. I feared that I would be froze hard, For it was a fearful blizzard, I was growing faint and weary, Not the slightest hopes to cheer me. Without compass to bearing, My yells were beyond crews' hearing, But at last to my loud halloo There came a mournful ho, ho. From creature white I thought 'twas ghost, And that I was foreve...
James McIntyre
A Prayer In Sickness.
Thou foldest me in sickness; Thou callest through the cloud;I batter with the thickness Of the swathing, blinding shroud:Oh, let me see thy face,The only perfect grace That thou canst show thy child.0 father, being-giver, Take off the sickness-cloud;Saviour, my life deliver From this dull body-shroud:Till I can see thy faceI am not full of grace, I am not reconciled.
Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part II. - XXVIII - Reflections
Grant, that by this unsparing hurricaneGreen leaves with yellow mixed are torn away,And goodly fruitage with the mother spray;'Twere madness, wished we, therefore, to detain,With hands stretched forth in mollified disdain,The "trumpery" that ascends in bare displayBulls, pardons, relics, cowls black, white, and greyUpwhirled, and flying o'er the ethereal plainFast bound for Limbo Lake. And yet not choiceBut habit rules the unreflecting herd,And airy bonds are hardest to disown;Hence, with the spiritual sovereignty transferredUnto itself, the Crown assumes a voiceOf reckless mastery, hitherto unknown.
Unforgotten
I.How many things, that we would remember,Sweet or sad, or great or small,Do our minds forget! and how one thing only,One little thing endures o'er all!For many things have I forgotten,But this one thing can never forgetThe scent of a primrose, woodland-wet,Long years ago I found in a far land;A fragile flower that April set,Rainy pink, in her forehead's garland.II.How many things by the heart are forgotten!Sad as sweet, or little or great!And how one thing that could mean nothingStays knocking still at the heart's red gate!For many things has my heart forgotten,But this one thing can never forgetThe face of a girl, a moment met,Who smiled in my eyes; whom I passed in pity;A flower-like face, with weepi...
Madison Julius Cawein
Bridge-Guard In The Karroo
"... and will supply details to guard the Blood River Bridge." - District Orders-Lines of Communication, South African War.Sudden the desert changes,The raw glare softens and clings,Till the aching Oudtshoorn rangesStand up like the thrones of Kings,Ramparts of slaughter and peril,Blazing, amazing, aglow,'Twixt the sky-line's belting berylAnd the wine-dark flats below.Royal the pageant closes,Lit by the last of the sun,Opal and ash-of-roses,Cinnamon, umber, and dun.The twilight swallows the thicket,The starlight reveals the ridge.The whistle shrills to the picket,We are changing guard on the bridge.(Few, forgotten and lonely,Where the empty metals shine,No, not combatants-onlyDetails guardin...
Rudyard
Another. (On Love.)
Where love begins, there dead thy first desire:A spark neglected makes a mighty fire.
Robert Herrick