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To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXIX.
L' aura mia sacra al mio stanco riposo.HE TELLS HER IN SLEEP OF HIS SUFFERINGS, AND, OVERCOME BY HER SYMPATHY, AWAKES. On my oft-troubled sleep my sacred airSo softly breathes, at last I courage take,To tell her of my past and present ache,Which never in her life my heart did dare.I first that glance so full of love declareWhich served my lifelong torment to awake,Next, how, content and wretched for her sake,Love day by day my tost heart knew to tear.She speaks not, but, with pity's dewy trace,Intently looks on me, and gently sighs,While pure and lustrous tears begem her face;My spirit, which her sorrow fiercely tries,So to behold her weep with anger burns,And freed from slumber to itself returns.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Hymn To Physical Pain
Dread Mother of ForgetfulnessWho, when Thy reign begins,Wipest away the Soul's distress,And memory of her sins.The trusty Worm that dieth notThe steadfast Fire also,By Thy contrivance are forgotIn a completer woe.Thine are the lidless eyes of nightThat stare upon our tears,Through certain hours which in our sightExceed a thousand years:Thine is the thickness of the DarkThat presses in our pain,As Thine the Dawn that bids us markLife's grinning face again.Thine is the weariness outwornNo promise shall relieve,That says at eve, "Would God 'twere morn"At morn, "Would God 'twere eve!"And when Thy tender mercies ceaseAnd life unvexed is due,Instant upon the false releaseThe Worm...
Rudyard
Before The Tomb.
The way went under cedared gloomTo moonlight, like a cactus bloom,Before the entrance of her tomb.I had an hour of night and thinSad starlight; and I set my chinAgainst the grating and looked in.A gleam, like moonlight, through a squareOf opening, I knew not whereShone on her coffin resting there.And on its oval silver-plateI read her name and age and date,And smiled, soft-thinking on my hate.There was no insect sound to chirr;No wind to make a little stir.I stood and looked and thought on her.The gleam stole downward from her head,Till at her feet it rested redOn Gothic gold, that sadly said:"God to her love lent a weak reedOf strength: and gave no light to lead:Pray for her soul; for...
Madison Julius Cawein
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXII.
Ripensando a quel ch' oggi il ciel onora.HE WOULD DIE OF GRIEF WERE SHE NOT SOMETIMES TO CONSOLE HIM BY HER PRESENCE. To that soft look which now adorns the skies,The graceful bending of the radiant head,The face, the sweet angelic accents fled,That soothed me once, but now awake my sighsOh! when to these imagination flies,I wonder that I am not long since dead!'Tis she supports me, for her heavenly treadIs round my couch when morning visions rise!In every attitude how holy, chaste!How tenderly she seems to hear the taleOf my long woes, and their relief to seek!But when day breaks she then appears in hasteThe well-known heavenward path again to scale,With moisten'd eye, and soft expressive cheek!MOREHEAD....
Song.
Fierce roars the midnight stormO'er the wild mountain,Dark clouds the night deform,Swift rolls the fountain -See! o'er yon rocky height,Dim mists are flying -See by the moon's pale light,Poor Laura's dying!Shame and remorse shall howl,By her false pillow -Fiercer than storms that roll,O'er the white billow;No hand her eyes to close,When life is flying,But she will find repose,For Laura's dying!Then will I seek my love,Then will I cheer her,Then my esteem will prove,When no friend is near her.On her grave I will lie,When life is parted,On her grave I will die,For the false hearted.DECEMBER, 1809.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
In Late Fall.
Such days as break the wild bird's heart; Such days as kill it and its songs; A death which knows a sweeter part Of days to which such death belongs. And now old eyes are filled with tears, As with the rain the frozen flowers; Time moves so slowly one but fears The burthen on his wasted powers. And so he stopped;--and thou art dead! And that is found which once was feared:-- A farewell to thy gray, gray head, A goodnight to thy goodly beard!
Michael Robartes Bids His Beloved Be At Peace
I hear the Shadowy Horses, their long manes a-shake,Their hoofs heavy with tumult, their eyes glimmering white;The North unfolds above them clinging, creeping night,The East her hidden joy before the morning break,The West weeps in pale dew and sighs passing away,The South is pouring down roses of crimson fire:O vanity of Sleep, Hope, Dream, endless Desire,The Horses of Disaster plunge in the heavy clay:Beloved, let your eyes half close, and your heart beatOver my heart, and your hair fall over my breast,Drowning loves lonely hour in deep twilight of rest,And hiding their tossing manes and their tumultuous feet.
William Butler Yeats
The Dying Bondman.
Life was trembling, faintly tremblingOn the bondman's latest breath,And he felt the chilling pressureOf the cold, hard hand of Death.He had been an Afric chieftain,Worn his manhood as a crown;But upon the field of battleHad been fiercely stricken down.He had longed to gain his freedom,Waited, watched and hoped in vain,Till his life was slowly ebbing -Almost broken was his chain.By his bedside stood the master,Gazing on the dying one,Knowing by the dull grey shadowsThat life's sands were almost run."Master," said the dying bondman,"Home and friends I soon shall see;But before I reach my country,Master write that I am free;"For the spirits of my fathersWould shrink back from me in ...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
The Three Warnings: Mrs. Thrale.
The tree of deepest root is bound With most tenacity to earth; 'Twas therefore thought by ancient sages, That with the ills of life's last stages The love of life increased, with dearth Of fibres rooting it to ground. It was young Dobson's wedding-day, Death summoned him, the happy groom, Into a sombre private room, From marriage revelries away; And, looking very grave, said he: "Young Dobson, you must go with me." "Not if I know it," Dobson cried; "What! leave my Susan, - quit my bride? I shan't do any such a thing: Besides I'm not at all prepared, - My thoughts are all upon the wing. ...
John Gay
To Jane: The Invitation.
Best and brightest, come away!Fairer far than this fair Day,Which, like thee to those in sorrow,Comes to bid a sweet good-morrowTo the rough Year just awakeIn its cradle on the brake.The brightest hour of unborn Spring,Through the winter wandering,Found, it seems, the halcyon MornTo hoar February born,Bending from Heaven, in azure mirth,It kissed the forehead of the Earth,And smiled upon the silent sea,And bade the frozen streams be free,And waked to music all their fountains,And breathed upon the frozen mountains,And like a prophetess of MayStrewed flowers upon the barren way,Making the wintry world appearLike one on whom thou smilest, dear.Away, away, from men and towns,To the wild wood and the downs -
Elegiac Stanzas - Addressed To Sir G. H. B. Upon The Death Of His Sister-In-Law
O for a dirge! But why complain?Ask rather a triumphal strainWhen Fermor's race is run;A garland of immortal boughsTo twine around the Christian's brows,Whose glorious work is done.We pay a high and holy debt;No tears of passionate regretShall stain this votive lay;Ill-worthy, Beaumont! were the griefThat flings itself on wild reliefWhen Saints have passed away.Sad doom, at Sorrow's shrine to kneel,For ever covetous to feel,And impotent to bear!Such once was hers, to think and thinkOn severed love, and only sinkFrom anguish to despair!But nature to its inmost partFaith had refined; and to her heartA peaceful cradle given:Calm as the dew-drop's, free to restWithin a breeze-fanned rose's breas...
William Wordsworth
Lines Suggested By The Death Of The Princess Charlotte.
Genius of England! wherefore to the earthIs thy plumed helm, thy peerless sceptre cast?Thy courts of late with minstrelsy and mirthRang jubilant, and dazzling pageants past;Kings, heroes, martial triumphs, nuptial rites--Now, like a cypress, shiver'd by the blast,Or mountain-cedar, which the lightning smites,In dust and darkness sinks thy head declined,Thy tresses streaming wild on ocean's reckless wind.Art thou not glorious?--In that night of storms,When He, in Power's supremacy elate,Gaul's fierce Usurper! fulminating fate,The Goth's barbaric tyranny restored,And science, art, and all life's fairer forms,Sunk to the dark dominion of the sword:Didst thou not, champion of insulted man!Confront this stern Destroyer in his pride?
Thomas Gent
A Dog's Death
The loose earth falls in the grave like a peaceful regular breathing; Too like, for I was deceived a moment by the sound: It has covered the heap of bracken that the gardener laid above him; Quiet the spade swings: there we have now his mound. A patch of fresh earth on the floor of the wood's renewing chamber: All around is grass and moss and the hyacinth's dark green sprouts: And oaks are above that were old when his fiftieth sire was a puppy: And far away in the garden I hear the children's shouts. Their joy is remote as a dream. It is strange how we buy our sorrow For the touch of perishing things, idly, with open eyes; How we give our hearts to brutes that will die in a few seasons, Nor trouble what we do when we do it...
John Collings Squire, Sir
Sonnet LXXIII. Translation.
He who a tender long-lov'd Wife survives, Sees himself sunder'd from the only mind Whose hopes, and fears, and interests, were combin'd, And blended with his own. - No more she lives!No more, alas! her death-numb'd ear receives His thoughts, that trace the Past, or anxious wind The Future's darkling maze! - His wish refin'd, The wish to please, exists no more, that givesThe will its energy, the nerves their tone! - He feels the texture of his quiet torn, And stopt the settled course that Action drew;Life stands suspended - motionless - till thrown By outward causes, into channels new; - But, in the dread suspense, how sinks the Soul forlorn!
Anna Seward
Four Points in a Life
ILOVE'S DAWNStill thine eyes haunt me; in the darkness now,The dreamtime, the hushed stillness of the night,I see them shining pure and earnest light;And here, all lonely, may I not avowThe thrill with which I ever meet their glance?At first they gazed a calm abstracted gaze,The while thy soul was floating through some mazeOf beautiful divinely-peopled trance;But now I shrink from them in shame and fear,For they are gathering all their beams of lightInto an arrow, keen, intense and bright,Swerveless and starlike from its deep blue sphere,Piercing the cavernous darkness of my soul,Burning its foul recesses into view,Transfixing with sharp agony through and throughWhatever ls not brave and clean and whole.And yet I w...
James Thomson
Shameful Death
There were four of us about that bed; The mass-priest knelt at the side,I and his mother stood at the head, Over his feet lay the bride;We were quite sure that he was dead, Though his eyes were open wide.He did not die in the night, He did not die in the day,But in the morning twilight His spirit pass'd away,When neither sun nor moon was bright, And the trees were merely grey.He was not slain with the sword, Knight's axe, or the knightly spear,Yet spoke he never a word After he came in here;I cut away the cord From the neck of my brother dear.He did not strike one blow, For the recreants came behind,In a place where the hornbeams grow, A path right hard to find,
William Morris
Maternal Grief
Departed Child! I could forget thee onceThough at my bosom nursed; this woeful gainThy dissolution brings, that in my soulIs present and perpetually abidesA shadow, never, never to be displacedBy the returning substance, seen or touched,Seen by mine eyes, or clasped in my embrace.Absence and death how differ they! and howShall I admit that nothing can restoreWhat one short sigh so easily removed?Death, life, and sleep, reality and thought,Assist me, God, their boundaries to know,O teach me calm submission to thy Will!The Child she mourned had overstepped the paleOf Infancy, but still did breathe the airThat sanctifies its confines, and partookReflected beams of that celestial lightTo all the Little-ones on sinful earthNot unvouchsaf...
The Past.
Thou unrelenting Past!Strong are the barriers round thy dark domain,And fetters, sure and fast,Hold all that enter thy unbreathing reign.Far in thy realm withdrawnOld empires sit in sullenness and gloom,And glorious ages goneLie deep within the shadow of thy womb.Childhood, with all its mirth,Youth, Manhood, Age, that draws us to the ground,And last, Man's Life on earth,Glide to thy dim dominions, and are bound.Thou hast my better years,Thou hast my earlier friends, the good, the kind,Yielded to thee with tears,The venerable form, the exalted mind.My spirit yearns to bringThe lost ones back, yearns with desire intense,And struggles hard to wringThy bolts apart, and pluck thy captives thence....
William Cullen Bryant