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A Happy New Year
11.30 P.M., DEC. 31Friend, when the year is on the wing,'Tis held a fair and comely thingTo turn reflective glancesOver the days' forbidden Scroll,See if we're better on the whole,And average our chances.Yet 'tis an awful thing to dragEach separate deed from out the bagThat up till now has hidden 't,And bring before the shuddering viewAll that we swore we wouldn't do,Or should have done, but didn't.The broken code, the baffled lawsOur little private faults and flaws,And every naughty habit,Come whistling through the Waste of Life,Until one longs to take a knife,Feel for his heart, and stab it.Unchanged, exultant, one and allRise up spontaneous to the call,And bring their stings behind ...
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
Fortune
Fortune may pass us by:Follow her flying feet.Love, all we ask, deny:Never admit defeat.Take heart again and try.Never say die.
Madison Julius Cawein
Let Your Light So Shine.
Sometimes, O Lord, thou lightest in my head A lamp that well might pharos all the lands;Anon the light will neither rise nor spread: Shrouded in danger gray the beacon stands!A pharos? Oh dull brain! poor dying lamp Under a bushel with an earthy smell!Mouldering it stands, in rust and eating damp, While the slow oil keeps oozing from its cell!For me it were enough to be a flower Knowing its root in thee, the Living, hid,Ordained to blossom at the appointed hour, And wake or sleep as thou, my Nature, bid;But hear my brethren in their darkling fright! Hearten my lamp that it may shine abroadThen will they cry--Lo, there is something bright! Who kindled it if not the shining God?
George MacDonald
Oyvind's Song (From A Happy Boy)
Lift thy head, thou undaunted youth!Though some hope may now break, forsooth,Brighter a new one and higherShall throe eye fill with its fire.Lift thy head to the vision clear!Something near thee is calling: "Here!" -Something with myriad voicing,Ever in courage rejoicing.Lift thy head, for an azure heightRears within thee a vault of light;Music of harps there is ringing,Jubilant, rapturous singing.Lift thy head and thy longing sing!None shall conquer the growing spring;Where there is life-making power,Time shall set free the flower.Lift thy head and thyself baptizeIn the hopes that radiant rise,Heaven to earth foreshowing,And in each life-spark glowing!
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
On Bancroft Height.
On Bancroft height Aurora's face Shines brighter than a star,As stepping forth in dewy grace, The gates of day unbar;And lo! the firmament, the hills, And the vales that intervene -Creation's self with gladness thrills To greet the matin queen.On Bancroft height the atmosphere Is but an endless waftOf life's elixir, pure and clear As mortal ever quaffed;And such the sweet salubrity Of air and altitude,Is banished many a malady And suffering subdued.On Bancroft height the sunset glow When day departing diesOutrivals all that tourists know Of famed Italian skies;And happy dwellers round about Who view the scene arightIn admiration grow devout And laud the Lo...
Hattie Howard
The Widow On Windermere Side
IHow beautiful when up a lofty heightHonour ascends among the humblest poor,And feeling sinks as deep! See there the doorOf One, a Widow, left beneath a weightOf blameless debt. On evil Fortune's spiteShe wasted no complaint, but strove to makeA just repayment, both for conscience-sakeAnd that herself and hers should stand uprightIn the world's eye. Her work when daylight failedPaused not, and through the depth of night she keptSuch earnest vigils, that belief prevailedWith some, the noble Creature never slept;But, one by one, the hand of death assailedHer children from her inmost heart bewept.IIThe Mother mourned, nor ceased her tears to flow,Till a winter's noonday placed her buried SonBefore her eyes, last child...
William Wordsworth
Spires
Spires of Grace Church,For you the workers of the worldTravailed with the mountains...Aborting their own dreamsTill the dream of you arose -Beautiful, swaddled in stone -Scorning their hands.
Lola Ridge
Friar Anselmo.
Friar Anselmo (God's grace may he win!)Committed one sad day a deadly sin;Which being done he drew back, self-abhorred,From the rebuking presence of the Lord,And, kneeling down, besought, with bitter cry,Since life was worthless grown, that he might die.All night he knelt, and, when the morning broke,In patience still he waits death's fatal stroke.When all at once a cry of sharp distressAroused Anselmo from his wretchedness;And, looking from the convent window high,He saw a wounded traveller gasping lieJust underneath, who, bruised and stricken sore,Had crawled for aid unto the convent door.The friar's heart with deep compassion stirred,When the poor wretch's groans for help were heardWith gentle ...
Horatio Alger, Jr.
The Giver.
To give a thing and take againIs counted meanness among men;To take away what once is givenCannot then be the way of heaven!But human hearts are crumbly stuff,And never, never love enough,Therefore God takes and, with a smile,Puts our best things away a while.Thereon some weep, some rave, some scorn,Some wish they never had been born;Some humble grow at last and still,And then God gives them what they will.
Glad Sight Wherever New With Old
Glad sight wherever new with oldIs joined through some dear homeborn tie;The life of all that we beholdDepends upon that mystery.Vain is the glory of the sky,The beauty vain of field and grove,Unless, while with admiring eyeWe gaze, we also learn to love.
The Daily Interview
Such a sensation Sunday's preacher made."Christian!" he cried, "what is your stock- in-trade?Alas! Too often nil. No time to pray;No interview with Christ from day to day,A hurried prayer, maybe, just gabbled through;A random text -- for any one will do."Then gently, lovingly, with look intense,He leaned towards us --"Is this common sense?No person in his rightful mind will tryTo run his business so, lest by-and-byThe thing collapses, smirching his good name,And he, insolvent, face the world with shame."I heard it all; and something inly saidThat all was true. The daily toil and pressHad crowded out my hopes of holiness.Still, my old self rose, reasoning:How can you,With strenuous work to do --Real slogging work -- say, ...
Fay Inchfawn
Youth Renewed
When one who has wandered out of the way Which leads to the hills of joy,Whose heart has grown both cold and grey, Though it be but the heart of a boy--When such a one turns back his feet From the valley of shadow and pain,Is not the sunshine passing sweet, When a man grows young again?How gladly he mounts up the steep hillside, With strength that is born anew,And in his veins, like a full springtide, The blood streams through and through.And far above is the summit clear, And his heart to be there is fain,And all too slowly it comes more near When a man grows young again.He breathes the pure sweet mountain breath, And it widens all his heart,And life seems no more kin to death, Nor de...
Robert Fuller Murray
From The Phi Beta Kappa Poem
Ill fits the abstemious Muse a crown to weaveFor living brows; ill fits them to receive:And yet, if virtue abrogate the law,One portrait--fact or fancy--we may draw;A form which Nature cast in the heroic mouldOf them who rescued liberty of old;He, when the rising storm of party roared,Brought his great forehead to the council board,There, while hot heads perplexed with fears the state,Calm as the morn the manly patriot sate;Seemed, when at last his clarion accents broke,As if the conscience of the country spoke.Not on its base Monadnoc surer stood,Than he to common sense and common good:No mimic; from his breast his counsel drew,Believed the eloquent was aye the true;He bridged the gulf from th' alway good and wiseTo that within the visio...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Men Of Genius
Silent, the Lord of the worldEyes from the heavenly height,Girt by his far-shining train,Us, who with banners unfurldFight lifes many-chancd fightMadly below, in the plain.Then saith the Lord to his own:See ye the battle below?Turmoil of death and of birth!Too long let we them groan.Haste, arise ye, and go;Carry my peace upon earth.Gladly they rise at his call;Gladly they take his command;Gladly descend to the plain.Alas! How few of them all,Those willing servants, shall standIn their Masters presence again!Some in the tumult are lostBaffled, bewilderd, they stray.Some as prisoners draw breath.Others, the bravest, are crossd,On the height of their bold-followd way,By the swift...
Matthew Arnold
Intolerance, A Satire.
"This clamor which pretends to be raised for the safety of religion has almost worn put the very appearance of it, and rendered us not only the most divided but the most immoral people upon the face of the earth." ADDISON, Freeholder, No. 37.Start not, my friend, nor think the Muse will stainHer classic fingers with the dust profaneOf Bulls, Decrees and all those thundering scrollsWhich took such freedom once with royal souls,[1]When heaven was yet the pope's exclusive trade,And kings were damned as fast as now they're made,No, no--let Duigenan search the papal chairFor fragrant treasures long forgotten there;And, as the witch of sunless Lapland thinksThat little swarthy gnomes delight in stinks,Let sall...
Thomas Moore
To Liberty
Here's to our Goddess, Liberty,Idol of bronze and stone!May she awake to life some dayAnd let her charms be known.
Oliver Herford
Behold The Earth
Behold the earth swung in among the starsFit home for gods if men were only kind -Do thou thy part to shape it to those ends,By shaping thine own life to perfectness.Seek nothing for thyself or thine own kinThat robs another of one hope or joy,Let no man toil in poverty and painTo give thee unearned luxury and ease.Feed not the hungry servitor with stones,That idle guests may fatten on thy bread.Look for the good in stranger and in foe,Nor save thy praises for the cherished few;And let the weakest sinner find in theeAn impetus to reach receding heights.Behold the earth swung in among the stars -Fit home for gods; wake thou the God withinAnd by the broad example of thy loveCommunicate Omnipotence to men.All men are unawakened gods: ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Doubt And Prayer
Tho Sin too oft, when smitten by Thy rod,Rail at Blind Fate with many a vain AlasFrom sin thro sorrow into Thee we passBy that same path our true forefathers trod;And let not Reason fail me, nor the sodDraw from my death Thy living flower and grass,Before I learn that Love, which is, and wasMy Father, and my Brother, and my God!Steel me with patience! soften me with grief!Let blow the trumpet strongly while I pray,Till this embattled wall of unbeliefMy prison, not my fortress, fall away!Then, if Thou willest, let my day be brief,So Thou wilt strike Thy glory thro the day.
Alfred Lord Tennyson