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Russell Kincaid
In the last spring I ever knew, In those last days, I sat in the forsaken orchard Where beyond fields of greenery shimmered The hills at Miller's Ford; Just to muse on the apple tree With its ruined trunk and blasted branches, And shoots of green whose delicate blossoms Were sprinkled over the skeleton tangle, Never to grow in fruit. And there was I with my spirit girded By the flesh half dead, the senses numb Yet thinking of youth and the earth in youth, - Such phantom blossoms palely shining Over the lifeless boughs of Time. O earth that leaves us ere heaven takes us! Had I been only a tree to shiver With dreams of spring and a leafy youth, Then I had fallen in the cyclone ...
Edgar Lee Masters
To The Countess Of Blessington.
1.You have asked for a verse: - the requestIn a rhymer 'twere strange to deny;But my Hippocrene was but my breast,And my feelings (its fountain) are dry.2.Were I now as I was, I had sungWhat Lawrence has painted so well;[607]But the strain would expire on my tongue,And the theme is too soft for my shell.3.I am ashes where once I was fire,And the bard in my bosom is dead;What I loved I now merely admire,And my heart is as grey as my head.4.My Life is not dated by years -There are moments which act as a plough,And there is not a furrow appearsBut is deep in my soul as my brow.5.Let the young and the brilliant aspireTo sing what I gaze on in...
George Gordon Byron
Pied Beauty
Glory be to God for dappled things -For skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow;For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim:Fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls; finches' wings;Landscape plotted and pieced - fold, fallow, and plough;And àll tràdes, their gear and tackle and trim.All things counter, original, spare, strange;Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change: Praise him.
Gerard Manley Hopkins
The Vision.
Duan First.[1] The sun had clos'd the winter day, The curlers quat their roaring play, An' hunger'd maukin ta'en her way To kail-yards green, While faithless snaws ilk step betray Whare she has been. The thresher's weary flingin'-tree The lee-lang day had tired me; And when the day had closed his e'e Far i' the west, Ben i' the spence, right pensivelie, I gaed to rest. There, lanely, by the ingle-cheek, I sat and ey'd the spewing reek, That fill'd, wi' hoast-provoking smeek, The auld clay biggin'; An' heard the restless rattons squeak About the riggin'. All in this mottie, misty clime, I backward m...
Robert Burns
The Toast.
Fill me with the rosy-wine, Call a toast, a toast divine; Give the Poet's darling flame, Lovely Jessy be the name; Then thou mayest freely boast, Thou hast given a peerless toast.
William Tell. - A Sonnet.
Chains may subdue the feeble spirit, but thee,Tell, of the iron heart! they could not tame!For thou wert of the mountains; they proclaimThe everlasting creed of liberty.That creed is written on the untrampled snow,Thundered by torrents which no power can hold,Save that of God, when he sends forth his cold,And breathed by winds that through the free heaven blow.Thou, while thy prison walls were dark around,Didst meditate the lesson Nature taught,And to thy brief captivity was broughtA vision of thy Switzerland unbound.The bitter cup they mingled, strengthened theeFor the great work to set thy country free.
William Cullen Bryant
The Murdered Traveller.
When spring, to woods and wastes around,Brought bloom and joy again,The murdered traveller's bones were found,Far down a narrow glen.The fragrant birch, above him, hungHer tassels in the sky;And many a vernal blossom sprung,And nodded careless by.The red-bird warbled, as he wroughtHis hanging nest o'erhead,And fearless, near the fatal spot,Her young the partridge led.But there was weeping far away,And gentle eyes, for him,With watching many an anxious day,Were sorrowful and dim.They little knew, who loved him so,The fearful death he met,When shouting o'er the desert snow,Unarmed, and hard beset;Nor how, when round the frosty poleThe northern dawn was red,The mountain wolf and wil...
Catterskill Falls.
Midst greens and shades the Catterskill leaps,From cliffs where the wood-flower clings;All summer he moistens his verdant steepsWith the sweet light spray of the mountain springs;And he shakes the woods on the mountain side,When they drip with the rains of autumn-tide.But when, in the forest bare and old,The blast of December calls,He builds, in the starlight clear and cold,A palace of ice where his torrent falls,With turret, and arch, and fretwork fair,And pillars blue as the summer air.For whom are those glorious chambers wrought,In the cold and cloudless night?Is there neither spirit nor motion of thoughtIn forms so lovely, and hues so bright?Hear what the gray-haired woodmen tellOf this wild stream and its rocky dell.
A Dream Of Autumn.
Mellow hazes, lowly trailing Over wood and meadow, veiling Somber skies, with wildfowl sailing Sailor-like to foreign lands; And the north-wind overleaping Summer's brink, and floodlike sweeping Wrecks of roses where the weeping Willows wring their helpless hands. Flared, like Titan torches flinging Flakes of flame and embers, springing From the vale the trees stand swinging In the moaning atmosphere; While in dead'ning-lands the lowing Of the cattle, sadder growing, Fills the sense to overflowing With the sorrow of the year. Sorrowfully, yet the sweeter Sings the brook in rippled meter Under boughs that lithely teeter Lorn birds, ...
James Whitcomb Riley
Autumn
Mild is the parting year, and sweetThe odour of the falling spray;Life passes on more rudely fleet,And balmless is its closing day.I wait its close, I court its gloom,But mourn that never must there fallOr on my breast or on my tombThe tear that would have soothed it all.
Walter Savage Landor
Rabbi Ben Ezra
I.Grow old along with me!The best is yet to be,The last of life, for which the first was made:Our times are in His handWho saith A whole I planned,Youth shows but half; trust God: see all nor be afraid!II.Not that, amassing flowers,Youth sighed Which rose make ours,Which lily leave and then as best recall?Not that, admiring stars,It yearned Nor Jove, nor Mars;Mine be some figured flame which blends, transcends them all!III.Not for such hopes and fearsAnnulling youths brief years,Do I remonstrate: folly wide the mark!Rather I prize the doubtLow kinds exist without,Finished and finite clods, untroubled by a sparkIV.Poor vaunt of life indeed,Were man but formed to feedOn j...
Robert Browning
Open The Door To Me, Oh!
I. Oh, open the door, some pity to show, Oh, open the door to me, Oh![1] Tho' thou has been false, I'll ever prove true, Oh, open the door to me, Oh!II. Cauld is the blast upon my pale cheek, But caulder thy love for me, Oh! The frost that freezes the life at my heart, Is nought to my pains frae thee, Oh!III. The wan moon is setting behind the white wave, And time is setting with me, Oh! False friends, false love, farewell! for mair I'll ne'er trouble them, nor thee, Oh!IV. She has open'd the door, she has open'd it wide; She sees his pale corse on the plain, Oh! My true love! she cried, and sank down by his ...
Marmion: Introduction To Canto III.
Like April morning clouds, that pass,With varying shadow, o'er the grass,And imitate, on field and furrow,Life's chequered scene of joy and sorrow;Like streamlet of the mountain North,Now in a torrent racing forth,Now winding slow its silver train,And almost slumbering on the plain;Like breezes of the Autumn day,Whose voice inconstant dies away,And ever swells again as fast,When the ear deems its murmur past;Thus various, my romantic themeFlits, winds, or sinks, a morning dream.Yet pleased, our eye pursues the traceOf light and shade's inconstant race;Pleased, views the rivulet afar,Weaving its maze irregular;And pleased, we listen as the breezeHeaves its wild sigh through Autumn trees;Then, wild as cloud, or stream, or ...
Walter Scott
Sonnets I - Desponding Father! Mark This Altered Bough,
Desponding Father! mark this altered bough,So beautiful of late, with sunshine warmed,Or moist with dews; what more unsightly now,Its blossoms shriveled, and its fruit, if formed,Invisible? yet Spring her genial browKnits not o'er that discolouring and decayAs false to expectation. Nor fret thouAt like unlovely process in the MayOf human life: a Stripling's graces blow,Fade and are shed, that from their timely fall(Misdeem it not a cankerous change) may growRich mellow bearings, that for thanks shall call:In all men, sinful is it to be slowTo hope in Parents, sinful above all.
William Wordsworth
Memorials Of A Tour On The Continent, 1820 - XXXVII. - Desultory Stanzas - Upon Receiving The Preceding Sheets From The Press
Is then the final page before me spread,Nor further outlet left to mind or heart?Presumptuous Book! too forward to be read,How can I give thee licence to depart?One tribute more: unbidden feelings startForth from their coverts; slighted objects rise;My spirit is the scene of such wild artAs on Parnassus rules, when lightning flies,Visibly leading on the thunder's harmonies.All that I saw returns upon my view,All that I heard comes back upon my ear,All that I felt this moment doth renew;And where the foot with no unmanly fearRecoiled--and wings alone could travel--thereI move at ease; and meet contending themesThat press upon me, crossing the careerOf recollections vivid as the dreamsOf midnight, cities, plains, forests, and mighty s...
A Sonnet.
Sweet summer queen, with trailing robe of green,What spell has thou to bind the heart to thee?Thy throne is built upon the sun-lit sea,Where break the waves in clouds of silver sheenAnd oft at dawn like some resplendent queen,Thou sittest on the hills in majesty;And all the flowers wake at thy decree.But now farewell to all thy joys serene;The autumn comes with swift-winged, silent flight,And he will woo thee with his fiery breath;In crimson robes and hues of flashing goldHe'll clothe thee, and thy beauty in the nightWill take a richer glow. But wintry deathWill come and wrap thee in his fold.
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Autumn it was when droop'd the sweetest flow'rs,And rivers, swoll'n with pride, o'erlook'd the banks;Poor grew the day of summer's golden hours,And void of sap stood Ida's cedar-ranks. The pleasant meadows sadly lay In chill and cooling sweats By rising fountains, or as they Fear'd winter's wastfull threats.The Shepherd's Pipe.
William Browne
A Day
Talk not of sad November, when a dayOf warm, glad sunshine fills the sky of noon,And a wind, borrowed from some morn of June,Stirs the brown grasses and the leafless spray.On the unfrosted pool the pillared pinesLay their long shafts of shadow: the small rill,Singing a pleasant song of summer still,A line of silver, down the hill-slope shines.Hushed the bird-voices and the hum of bees,In the thin grass the crickets pipe no more;But still the squirrel hoards his winter store,And drops his nut-shells from the shag-bark trees.Softly the dark green hemlocks whisper: highAbove, the spires of yellowing larches show,Where the woodpecker and home-loving crowAnd jay and nut-hatch winters threat defy.O gracious beauty, ever new a...
John Greenleaf Whittier