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A Lilt Of The Road
Being the doggerel Itinerary of a Holiday in September, 1908To St. Albans' town we came;Roman Albanus hence the name.Whose shrine commemorates the faithWhich led him to a martyr's death.A high cathedral marks his grave,With noble screen and sculptured nave.From thence to Hatfield lay our way,Where the proud Cecils held their sway,And ruled the country, more or less,Since the days of Good Queen Bess.Next through Hitchin's Quaker holdTo Bedford, where in days of oldJohn Bunyan, the unorthodox,Did a deal in local stocks.Then from Bedford's peaceful nookOur pilgrim's progress still we tookUntil we slackened up our paceIn Saint Neots' market-place.Next day, the motor flying fast,Through Newark, Tuxford, Retford pa...
Arthur Conan Doyle
Mi Old Umberel
What matters if some fowk deride,An point wi' a finger o' scorn?Th' time wor tha wor lukt on wi' pride,Befooar mooast o'th' scoffers wor born.But aw'll ne'er turn mi back on a friend,Tho' old-fashioned an grey like thisen;But aw'll try to cling to thi to th' end,Tho' thart nobbut an old umberel.Whear wod th' young ens 'at laff be to-day,But for th' old ens they turn into fun?Who wor wearm thersen bent an grey,When their days had hardly begun.Ther own youth will quickly glide past;If they live they'll ail grow old thersel;An they'll long for a true friend at last,Tho' its nobbut an old umberel.Tha's grown budgey, an faded, an worn,Yet thi inside is honest an strong;But thi coverin's tattered an torn,An awm feeard 'a...
John Hartley
Everything Comes
"The house is bleak and coldBuilt so new for me!All the winds upon the woldSearch it through for me;No screening trees abound,And the curious eyes aroundKeep on view for me.""My Love, I am planting treesAs a screen for youBoth from winds, and eyes that teaseAnd peer in for you.Only wait till they have grown,No such bower will be knownAs I mean for you.""Then I will bear it, Love,And will wait," she said.- So, with years, there grew a grove."Skill how great!" she said."As you wished, Dear?" - "Yes, I see!But - I'm dying; and for me'Tis too late," she said.
Thomas Hardy
I Stood Tip-Toe Upon A Little Hill
I stood tip-toe upon a little hill,The air was cooling, and so very still,That the sweet buds which with a modest pridePull droopingly, in slanting curve aside,Their scantly leaved, and finely tapering stems,Had not yet lost those starry diademsCaught from the early sobbing of the morn.The clouds were pure and white as flocks new shorn,And fresh from the clear brook; sweetly they sleptOn the blue fields of heaven, and then there creptA little noiseless noise among the leaves,Born of the very sigh that silence heaves:For not the faintest motion could be seenOf all the shades that slanted oer the green.There was wide wandring for the greediest eye,To peer about upon variety;Far round the horizons crystal air to skim,And trace the dwindle...
John Keats
Light Love
'Oh, sad thy lot before I came, But sadder when I go;My presence but a flash of flame, A transitory glow Between two barren wastes like snow.What wilt thou do when I am gone, Where wilt thou rest, my dear?For cold thy bed to rest upon, And cold the falling year Whose withered leaves are lost and sere.'She hushed the baby at her breast, She rocked it on her knee:'And I will rest my lonely rest, Warmed with the thought of thee, Rest lulled to rest by memory.'She hushed the baby with her kiss, She hushed it with her breast:'Is death so sadder much than this - Sure death that builds a nest For those who elsewhere cannot rest?''Oh, sad thy note, my mateless dove, With t...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Visit Of The Dead
Thy soul shall find itself aloneAlone of all on earth, unknownThe cause, but none are near to pryInto thine hour of secrecy.Be silent in that solitude,Which is not loneliness, for thenThe spirits of the dead, who stoodIn life before thee, are againIn death around thee, and their willShall then oershadow thee, be stillFor the night, tho clear, shall frown:And the stars shall look not downFrom their thrones, in the dark heavn;With light like Hope to mortals givn,But their red orbs, without beam,To thy withering heart shall seemAs a burning, and a ferverWhich would cling to thee forever.But twill leave thee, as each starIn the morning light afarWill fly thee, and vanish:But its thought thou canst not banish.
Edgar Allan Poe
Love and Scorn
I.Love, loyallest and lordliest born of things,Immortal that shouldst be, though all else end,In plighted hearts of fearless friend with friend,Whose hand may curb or clip thy plume-plucked wings?Not griefs nor times: though these be lords and kingsCrowned, and their yoke bid vassal passions bend,They may not pierce the spirit of sense, or blendQuick poison with the souls live watersprings.The true clear heart whose core is manful trustFears not that very death may turn to dustLove lit therein as toward a brother born,If one touch make not all its fine gold rust,If one breath blight not all its glad ripe corn,And all its fire be turned to fire of scorn.II.Scorn only, scorn begot of bitter proofBy keen experience of a trustless he...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
In Fisherrow
A hard north-easter fifty winters longHas bronzed and shrivelled sere her face and neck;Her locks are wild and grey, her teeth a wreck;Her foot is vast, her bowed leg spare and strong.A wide blue cloak, a squat and sturdy throngOf curt blue coats, a mutch without a speck,A white vest broidered black, her person deck,Nor seems their picked, stern, old-world quaintness wrong.Her great creel forehead-slung, she wanders nigh,Easing the heavy strap with gnarled, brown fingers,The spirit of traffic watchful in her eye,Ever and anon imploring you to buy,As looking down the street she onward lingers,Reproachful, with a strange and doleful cry.
William Ernest Henley
Humboldt's Birthday
Ere yet the warning chimes of midnight sound,Set back the flaming index of the year,Track the swift-shifting seasons in their roundThrough fivescore circles of the swinging sphere!Lo, in yon islet of the midland seaThat cleaves the storm-cloud with its snowy crest,The embryo-heir of Empires yet to be,A month-old babe upon his mother's breast.Those little hands that soon shall grow so strongIn their rude grasp great thrones shall rock and fall,Press her soft bosom, while a nursery songHolds the world's master in its slender thrall.Look! a new crescent bends its silver bow;A new-lit star has fired the eastern sky;Hark! by the river where the lindens blowA waiting household hears an infant's cry.This, too, a conqueror! His ...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XLVII.
Tutta la mia fiorita e verde etade.JUST WHEN HE MIGHT FAIRLY HOPE SOME RETURN OF AFFECTION, ENVIOUS DEATH CARRIES HER OFF. All my green years and golden prime of manHad pass'd away, and with attemper'd sighsMy bosom heaved--ere yet the days ariseWhen life declines, contracting its brief span.Already my loved enemy beganTo lull suspicion, and in sportive guise,With timid confidence, though playful, wise,In gentle mockery my long pains to scan:The hour was near when Love, at length, may mateWith Chastity; and, by the dear one's side,The lover's thoughts and words may freely flow:Death saw, with envy, my too happy state,E'en its fair promise--and, with fatal pride,Strode in the midway forth, an armèd foe!DACRE.
Francesco Petrarca
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XVIII
There is a place within the depths of hellCall'd Malebolge, all of rock dark-stain'dWith hue ferruginous, e'en as the steepThat round it circling winds. Right in the midstOf that abominable region, yawnsA spacious gulf profound, whereof the frameDue time shall tell. The circle, that remains,Throughout its round, between the gulf and baseOf the high craggy banks, successive formsTen trenches, in its hollow bottom sunk.As where to guard the walls, full many a fossBegirds some stately castle, sure defenceAffording to the space within, so hereWere model'd these; and as like fortressesE'en from their threshold to the brink without,Are flank'd with bridges; from the rock's low baseThus flinty paths advanc'd, that 'cross the molesAnd dikes...
Dante Alighieri
Man's Place In Nature, Dedicated To Darwin And Huxley
They told him gently he was made Of nicely tempered mud,That man no lengthened part had played Anterior to the Flood.'Twas all in vain; he heeded not, Referring plant and worm,Fish, reptile, ape, and Hottentot, To one primordial germ.They asked him whether he could bear To think his kind alliedTo all those brutal forms which were In structure Pithecoid;Whether he thought the apes and us Homologous in form;He said, "Homo and Pithecus Came from one common germ."They called him "atheistical," "Sceptic," and "infidel."They swore his doctrines without fail Would plunge him into hell.But he with proofs in no way lame, Made this deduction firm,That all organic beings came...
Unknown
Mi Fayther's Pipe.
Aw've a treasure yo'd laff if yo saw,But its mem'ries are dear to mi heart;For aw've oft seen it stuck in a jaw,Whear it seem'd to form ommost a part.Its net worth a hawpny, aw know,But its given mooar pleasure maybe,Nor some things at mak far mooar show,An yo can't guess its vally to me.Mi fayther wor fond ov his pipe,An this wor his favorite clay;An if mi ideas wor ripe,Awd enshrine it ith' folds ov a lay;But words allus fail to expressWhat aw think when aw see its old face;For aw know th' world holds one friend the less,An mi hearth has one mooar vacant place.Ov trubbles his life had its share,But he kept all his griefs to hissen;Tho aw've oft seen his brow knit wi care,Wol he tried to crack jooaks nah an then.<...
Mount Vernon.
Subdued and sad, I trod the place Where he, the hero, lived and died;Where, long-entombed beneath the shadeBy willow bough and cypress made,The peaceful scene with verdure rife,He and the partner of his life,Beloved of every land and race, Are sleeping side by side.The summer solstice at its height Reflected from Potomac's tideA glare of light, and through the treesIntensified the Southern breeze,That dallied, in the deep ravines,With graceful ferns and evergreens,While Northern cheeks so strangely white Grew dark as Nubia's pride.What must this homestead once have been In boundless hospitality,When Greene or Putnam may have metThe host who welcomed Lafayette,Or when Pulaski, honored guest,
Hattie Howard
To The Unknown Goddess
Will you conquer my heart with your beauty; my sould going out from afar?Shall I fall to your hand as a victim of crafty and cautions shikar?Have I met you and passed you already, unknowing, unthinking and blind?Shall I meet you next session at Simla, O sweetest and best of your kind?Does the P. and O. bear you to meward, or, clad in short frocks in the West,Are you growing the charms that shall capture and torture the heart in my breast?Will you stay in the Plains till September, my passion as warm as the day?Will you bring me to book on the Mountains, or where the thermantidotes play?When the light of your eyes shall make pallid the mean lesser lights I pursue,And the charm of your presence shall lure me from love of the gay "thirteen-two";When the...
Rudyard
To ----
Between two common days this day was hung When Love went to the ending that was his; His seamless robe was rent, his brow was wrung, He took at last the sponge's bitter kiss. A simple day the dawn had watched unfold Before the night had borne the death of love; You took the bread I blessed, and love was sold Upon your lips, and paid the price thereof. I changed then, as when soul from body slips, And casts its passion and its pain aside; I pledged you with most spiritual lips, And gave you hands that you had crucified. You who betrayed, kissed, crucified, forgot, You walked with Christ, poor fool, and knew it not!
Muriel Stuart
The Paphian Venus
With anxious eyes and dry, expectant lips,Within the sculptured stoa by the sea,All day she waited while, like ghostly ships,Long clouds rolled over Paphos: the wild beeHung in the sultry poppy, half asleep,Beside the shepherd and his drowsy sheep.White-robed she waited day by day; aloneWith the white temple's shrined concupiscence,The Paphian goddess on her obscene throne,Binding all chastity to violence,All innocence to lust that feels no shame -Venus Mylitta born of filth and flame.So must they haunt her marble portico,The devotees of Paphos, passion-paleAs moonlight streaming through the stormy snow;Dark eyes desirous of the stranger sail,The gods shall bring across the Cyprian Sea,With him elected to their mastery.<...
Madison Julius Cawein
To A Poet - (To Edmund Gosse)
Still towards the steep Parnassian wayThe moon-led pilgrims wend,Ah, who of all that start to-dayShall ever reach the end?Year after year a dream-fed bandThat scorn the vales below,And scorn the fatness of the landTo win those heights of snow, -Leave barns and kine and flocks behind,And count their fortune fair,If they a dozen leaves may bindOf laurel in their hair.Like us, dear Poet, once you trodThat sweet moon-smitten way,With mouth of silver sought the godAll night and all the day;Sought singing, till in rosy fireThe white Apollo came,And touched your brow, and wreathed your lyre,And named you by his name;And led you, loving, by the handTo those grave laurelled bowers,Where k...
Richard Le Gallienne