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An Animal In The Moon.
[1]While one philosopher[2] affirmsThat by our senses we're deceived,Another[3] swears, in plainest terms,The senses are to be believed.The twain are right. PhilosophyCorrectly calls us dupes whene'erUpon mere senses we rely.But when we wisely rectifyThe raw report of eye or ear,By distance, medium, circumstance,In real knowledge we advance.These things hath nature wisely plann'd -Whereof the proof shall be at hand.I see the sun: its dazzling glowSeems but a hand-breadth here below;But should I see it in its home,That azure, star-besprinkled dome,Of all the universe the eye,Its blaze would fill one half the sky.The powers of trigonometryHave set my mind from blunder free.
Jean de La Fontaine
Two Sonnets: Harvard
At the meeting of the New York Harvard Club, February 21, 1878."CHRISTO ET ECCLESLE." 1700To GOD'S ANOINTED AND HIS CHOSEN FLOCKSo ran the phrase the black-robed conclave choseTo guard the sacred cloisters that aroseLike David's altar on Moriah's rock.Unshaken still those ancient arches mockThe ram's-horn summons of the windy foesWho stand like Joshua's army while it blowsAnd wait to see them toppling with the shock.Christ and the Church. Their church, whose narrow doorShut out the many, who if overboldLike hunted wolves were driven from the fold,Bruised with the flails these godly zealots bore,Mindful that Israel's altar stood of oldWhere echoed once Araunah's threshing-floor.1643 "VERITAS." 1878Truth: So th...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Les Casquets
From the depths of the waters that lighten and darkenWith change everlasting of life and of death,Where hardly by noon if the lulled ear hearkenIt hears the seas as a tired childs breath,Where hardly by night if an eye dare scan itThe storm lets shipwreck be seen or heard,As the reefs to the waves and the foam to the graniteRespond one merciless word,Sheer seen and far, in the seas live heaven,A seamews flight from the wild sweet land,White-plumed with foam if the wind wake, sevenBlack helms as of warriors that stir not stand.From the depths that abide and the waves that environSeven rocks rear heads that the midnight masks,And the strokes of the swords of the storm are as ironOn the steel of the wave-worn casques.Be nights dark word as th...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Arms And The Man. - The Two Leaders.
Two chieftains watch the battle's tide and listen as it rollsAnd only HEAVEN above can tell the tumult of their souls!Cornwallis saw the British power struck down by one fell blow,A Gallic spearhead on the lance that laid the Lion low.But the Father of his Country saw the future all unrolled,Independence blazed before him written down in text of gold,Like the Hebrew, on the mountain, looking forward then he sawThe Promised Land of Freedom blooming under Freedom's law;Saw a great Republic spurring in the lists where Nations ride,The peer of any Power in her majesty and pride;Saw that young Republic gazing through her helmet's gilded barsToward the West all luminous with th' light of coming stars;From Atlantic to Pacific saw her banne...
James Barron Hope
Hymn To Joy.
Joy, thou goddess, fair, immortal,Offspring of Elysium,Mad with rapture, to the portalOf thy holy fame we come!Fashion's laws, indeed, may sever,But thy magic joins again;All mankind are brethren ever'Neath thy mild and gentle reign. CHORUS.Welcome, all ye myriad creatures!Brethren, take the kiss of love!Yes, the starry realms aboveHide a Father's smiling features!He, that noble prize possessingHe that boasts a friend that's true,He whom woman's love is blessing,Let him join the chorus too!Aye, and he who but one spiritOn this earth can call his own!He who no such bliss can merit,Let him mourn his fate alone! CHORUS.All who Nature's tribes are swellingHomage pay to sympathy;
Friedrich Schiller
Stop at Hooam.
"Tha wodn't goa an leave me, Jim,All lonely by mysel?My een at th' varry thowts grow dim -Aw connot say farewell.Tha vow'd tha couldn't live unlessTha saw me every day,An' said tha knew noa happinessWhen aw wor foorced away.An th' tales tha towld, I know full weel,Wor true as gospel then;What is it, lad, 'at ma's thee feelSoa strange - unlike thisen?Ther's raam enuff, aw think tha'll find,I'th taan whear tha wor born,To mak a livin, if tha'll mindTo ha' faith i' to-morn.Aw've mony a time goan to mi warkThroo claads o' rain and sleet;All's seem'd soa dull, soa drear, an' dark,It ommust mud be neet.But then, when braikfast time's come raand,Aw've seen th' sun's cheerin ray,An' th' ...
John Hartley
The Philosopher's Oration.
(From 'A Faun's Holiday')Meanwhile, though nations in distressCower at a comet's lovelinessShaken across the midnight sky;Though the wind roars, and Victory,A virgin fierce, on vans of goldStoops through the cloud's white smother rolledOver the armies' shock and flowAcross the broad green hills below,Yet hovers and will not circle downTo cast t'ward one the leafy crown;Though men drive galleys' golden beaksTo isles beyond the sunset peaks,And cities on the sea beholdWhose walls are glass, whose gates are gold,Whose turrets, risen in an hour,Dazzle between the sun and shower,Whose sole inhabitants are kingsSix cubits high with gryphon's wingsAnd beard and mien more gloriousThan Midas or Assaracus;Though ...
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols
Napoleon III
His silent spirit from the placeSlid forth unseen; amid the throngOf those whose love outlived disgrace,Whose fealty to the last was strong.Midst homage, neath Fates adverse reign,Paid to the star shorn of its rays,How passed the Exile? Lingering fain,As never once in prouder days?The Mother and the Child were there,Discrowned and disinherited!No hand henceforth to right the heir;New griefs to bow the golden head.How passed Napoleon? Prizing more,Old fame in camp and council wonOr fearless Englands aegis, oerThe future of her allys son?Gate of that World we know not yet,What thou beheldst who may proclaim!Were spirit-ranks, in order set,Haunting thy portals, as he came,With voices murmuring, Our life ...
Mary Hannay Foott
The Mighty Must
Come mighty Must!Inevitable Shall!In thee I trust.Time weaves my coronal!Go mocking Is!Go disappointing Was!That I am thisYe are the cursed cause!Yet humble Second shall be First,I ween;And dead and buried be the curstHas Been!Oh weak Might Be!Oh May, Might, Could, Would, Should!How powerless yeFor evil or for good!In every senseYour moods I cheerless call,Whate'er your tenseYe are Imperfect, all!Ye have deceived the trust I've shownIn ye!Away! The Mighty Must aloneShall be!
William Schwenck Gilbert
The Two Jars
"Never fear!" said The Brass to the ClayOf two Jars that the flood bore away:"Keep you close to my side!"But the porcelain replied,"I'll be smashed if beside you I stay."Our Friend Our Enemy
Walter Crane
The Night Of Death.
Twas a night of dreadful horror, - Death was sweeping through the land;And the wings of dark destruction Were outstretched from strand to strandStrong men's hearts grew faint with terror, As the tempest and the wavesWrecked their homes and swept them downward, Suddenly to yawning graves.'Mid the wastes of ruined households, And the tempest's wild alarms,Stood a terror-stricken mother With a child within her arms.Other children huddled 'round her, Each one nestling in her heart;Swift in thought and swift in action, She at least from one must part.Then she said unto her daughter, "Strive to save one child from death.""Which one?" said the anxious daughter, As she stood with b...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
The Big Bear Creek
The waters of the Big Bear creekGlide slowly on their way;The western lakes they surely seek,Which they will reach some day;But sluggishly they seek their end--They scarcely seem to move;Yet through the fields and round each bendTheir progress daily prove.By debris borne upon their breast,And strewn along each shore,They slowly move, but never rest,Yet turbid evermore.But when they reach the Johnson bendAnd the Sni Chartna meet,The turbid and the sky-blue blend--The union is complete.And soon is lost all trace of mud;Of azure tint the whole;With heaven's own hue the rolling floodHas gained the long-sought goal.So is it with the soul renewedWhile on its heaven-bound way,With grace...
Joseph Horatio Chant
The Old Burying-Ground
Our vales are sweet with fern and rose,Our hills are maple-crowned;But not from them our fathers choseThe village burying-ground.The dreariest spot in all the landTo Death they set apart;With scanty grace from Natures hand,And none from that of Art.A winding wall of mossy stone,Frost-flung and broken, linesA lonesome acre thinly grownWith grass and wandering vines.Without the wall a birch-tree showsIts drooped and tasselled head;Within, a stag-horned sumach grows,Fern-leafed, with spikes of red.There, sheep that graze the neighboring plainLike white ghosts come and go,The farm-horse drags his fetlock chain,The cow-bell tinkles slow.Low moans the river from its bed,The distant pines re...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Fancy And The Poet.
POET.Enchanting spirit! at thy votive shrineI lowly bend one simple wreath to twine;O come from thy ideal world and flingThy airy fingers o'er my rugged string;Sweep the dark chords of thought and give to earthThe wild sweet song that tells thy heavenly birth--FANCY.Happiness, when from earth she fled, I passed on her heaven-ward flight,--"Take this wreath," the spirit said, "And bathe it in floods of light;To the sons of sorrow this token give,And bid them follow my steps and live!"I took the wreath from her radiant hand, Each flower was a silver star;I turned this dark earth to a fairy land, When I hither drove my car;But I wove the wreath round my tresses bright,And man only saw its...
Susanna Moodie
Questions Of Life
A bending staff I would not break,A feeble faith I would not shake,Nor even rashly pluck awayThe error which some truth may stay,Whose loss might leave the soul withoutA shield against the shafts of doubt.And yet, at times, when over allA darker mystery seems to fall,(May God forgive the child of dust,Who seeks to know, where Faith should trust!)I raise the questions, old and dark,Of Uzdom's tempted patriarch,And, speech-confounded, build againThe baffled tower of Shinar's plain.I am: how little more I know!Whence came I? Whither do I go?A centred self, which feels and is;A cry between the silences;A shadow-birth of clouds at strifeWith sunshine on the hills of life;A shaft from Nature's quiver castInto...
The Unattainable.
I yearn for the Unattainable;For a glimpse of a brighter day, When hatred and strife, With their legions rife,Shall forever have passed away; When pain shall cease, And the dawn of peaceCome down from heaven above,And man can meet his fellow-manIn the spirit of Christian Love.I yearn for the Unattainable;For a Voice that may long be still, To compel the mind, As heaven designed,To work the Eternal Will; When the brute that sleeps In the heart's still deepsWill be changed to Pity's dove,And man can meet his fellow-manIn the spirit of Perfect Love.
Charles Sangster
Oh Thou Of Little Faith!
Sad-hearted, be at peace: the snowdrop lies Buried in sepulchre of ghastly snow; But spring is floating up the southern skies, And darkling the pale snowdrop waits below. Let me persuade: in dull December's day We scarce believe there is a month of June; But up the stairs of April and of May The hot sun climbeth to the summer's noon. Yet hear me: I love God, and half I rest. O better! God loves thee, so all rest thou. He is our summer, our dim-visioned Best;-- And in his heart thy prayer is resting now.
George MacDonald
Laying Up Treasure
From the Mahabharata.Before the Ender comes, whose charioteerIs swift or slow Disease, lay up each yearThy harvests of well-doing, wealth that kingsNor thieves can take away. When all the thingsThou tallest thine, goods, pleasures, honors fall,Thou in thy virtue shalt survive them all