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The Grey Rock
Poets with whom I learned my trade,Companions of the Cheshire Cheese,Heres an old story Ive re-made,Imagining twould better pleaseYour ears than stories now in fashion,Though you may think I waste my breathPretending that there can be passionThat has more life in it than death,And though at bottling of your wineThe bow-legged Goban had no say;The morals yours because its mine.When cups went round at close of day,Is not that how good stories run?Somewhere within some hollow hill,If books speak truth in Slievenamon,But let that be, the gods were stillAnd sleepy, having had their meal,And smoky torches made a glareOn painted pillars, on a dealOf fiddles and of flutes hung thereBy the ancient holy hands that broug...
William Butler Yeats
Bermuda.
O charming blossom of the sea Atlantic waters bosomed in!Abiding-place of gayety, Elysian bower of "Cora Linn,"The sprightly, lively débiteuseRecounting all she sees and does.Oh, how it makes the northern heart, With sluggish current half-congealed,In ecstasy and vigor start To read about this tropic field;The garden of luxuriousness,In winter wearing summer's dress.With gelid sap and frozen gum In maple trees and hackmatack,While waiting for the spring to come Of life's necessities we lack;And sip the nectar that we findIn luscious fruit with golden rind.But down the street we dread to walk, For all the teachings of our youthReceive an agonizing shock; Do tem...
Hattie Howard
Chrystmasse Of Olde
God rest you, Chrysten gentil men,Wherever you may be,--God rest you all in fielde or hall,Or on ye stormy sea;For on this morn oure Chryst is bornThat saveth you and me.Last night ye shepherds in ye eastSaw many a wondrous thing;Ye sky last night flamed passing brightWhiles that ye stars did sing,And angels came to bless ye nameOf Jesus Chryst, oure Kyng.God rest you, Chrysten gentil men,Faring where'er you may;In noblesse court do thou no sport,In tournament no playe,In paynim lands hold thou thy handsFrom bloudy works this daye.But thinking on ye gentil LordThat died upon ye tree,Let troublings cease and deeds of peaceAbound in Chrystantie;For on this morn ye Chryst is bornThat save...
Eugene Field
Conquest
Talk not of strength, until your heart has knownAnd fought with weakness through long hours alone.Talk not of virtue, till your conquering soulHas met temptation and gained full control.Boast not of garments, all unscorched by sin,Till you have passed, unscathed, through fires within.Oh, poor that pride the unscarred soldier shows,Who safe in camp, has never faced his foes.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
On the Death of a Noble Lady
Time, when thou shalt bring again Pallas from the Trojan plain, Portia from the Roman's hall, Brynhild from the fiery wall, Eleanor, whose fearless breath Drew the venom'd fangs of Death, And Philippa doubly brave Or to conquer or to save-- When thou shalt on one bestow All their grace and all their glow, All their strength and all their state, All their passion pure and great, Some far age may honour then Such another queen of men.
Henry John Newbolt
Odes Of Anacreon - Ode XIII.
I will, I will, the conflict's past,And I'll consent to love at last.Cupid has long, with smiling art,Invited me to yield my heart;And I have thought that peace of mindShould not be for a smile resigned;And so repelled the tender lure,And hoped my heart would sleep secure.But, slighted in his boasted charms,The angry infant flew to arms;He slung his quiver's golden frame,He took his bow; his shafts of flame,And proudly summoned me to yield,Or meet him on the martial field.And what did I unthinking do?I took to arms, undaunted, too;Assumed the corslet, shield, and spear,And, like Pelides, smiled at fear.Then (hear it, All ye powers above!)I fought with Love! I fought with Love!And now his arrows all were shed,...
Thomas Moore
The Dryad
My dryad hath her hiding placeAmong ten thousand trees. She flies to cover At step of a lover,And where to find her lovely faceOnly the woodland bees Ever discover,Bringing her honeyFrom meadows sunny, Cowslip and clover.Vainly on beech and oak I knockAmid the silent boughs; Then hear her laughter, The moment after,Making of me her laughing-stockWithin her hidden house.The young moon with her wand of pearlTaps on her hidden door, Bids her beauty flower In that woodland bower,All white like a mortal girl,With moonshine hallowed o'er.Yet were there thrice ten thousand treesTo hide her face from me, Not all her fleeing Should 'scape my seeing,
Richard Le Gallienne
A Garden Party in the Temple
On hospitable thoughts intent To me the Inner Temple sent An invitation, A garden party 'twas to be, And I accepted readily And with elation; Good reason too, but oft the seeds Of reason flower in senseless deeds. I stood as savage as a bear, For not a human being there Knew I from Adam I heard around in various tones, "So glad to see you, Mr. Jones;" "Good morning, Madam." It seemed so painfully absurd To stand and never speak a word. I brought my doom upon myself, And there I was upon the shelf In melancholy. Why, say you, did I go at all? I once met Chloris at a ball, ...
James Williams
Why Be At Pains? - Wooer's Song
Why be at pains that I should knowYou sought not me?Do breezes, then, make features glowSo rosily?Come, the lit port is at our back,And the tumbling sea;Elsewhere the lampless uphill trackTo uncertainty!O should not we two waifs join hands?I am alone,You would enrich me more than landsBy being my own.Yet, though this facile moment flies,Close is your tone,And ere to-morrow's dewfall driesI plough the unknown.
Thomas Hardy
Mary's Dream
The moon had climbed the eastern hill Which rises o'er the sands of Dee, And from its highest summit shed A silver light on tower and tree, When Mary laid her down to sleep (Her thoughts on Sandy far at sea); When soft and low a voice was heard, Saying, 'Mary, weep no more for me.' She from her pillow gently raised Her head, to see who there might be, And saw young Sandy, shivering stand With visage pale and hollow e'e. 'Oh Mary dear, cold is my clay; It lies beneath the stormy sea; Far, far from thee, I sleep in death. Dear Mary, weep no more for me. 'Three stormy nights and stormy days We tossed upon the raging main. And long we strove our bark to sa...
Louisa May Alcott
Poem: Helas!
To drift with every passion till my soulIs a stringed lute on which all winds can play,Is it for this that I have given awayMine ancient wisdom, and austere control?Methinks my life is a twice-written scrollScrawled over on some boyish holidayWith idle songs for pipe and virelay,Which do but mar the secret of the whole.Surely there was a time I might have trodThe sunlit heights, and from life's dissonanceStruck one clear chord to reach the ears of God:Is that time dead? lo! with a little rodI did but touch the honey of romanceAnd must I lose a soul's inheritance?
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
Jealousy. (Prose)
It wad be a poor shop, wad this world, if it worn't for love! But even love has its drawbacks. If it worn't for love ther'd be noa jaylussy - Shakspere calls jaylussy a green-eyed monster, an' it may be for owt aw know, an' aw dooan't think 'at them 'at entertain it have mich white i' theirs. If ther's owt aw think fooilish, it is for a husband an' wife to be jaylus o' one another; for it spoils all ther spooart, an' maks a lot for other fowk; an' aw'm allus a bit suspicious abaat 'em, for aw've fun it to be th' case 'at them 'at do reight thersens are allus th' last to believe owt wrang abaat others.Aw once knew a chap 'at wor jaylus, an' his wife had a sore time wi' him. If shoo spake to her next-door neighbor, it wor ommost as mich as her life war worth, an' shoo wor forced to give ovver gooin' to th' chapel, becos if shoo ...
John Hartley
The Old Huntsman
There's a keen and grim old huntsmanOn a horse as white as snow;Sometimes he is very swiftAnd sometimes he is slow.But he never is at fault,For he always hunts at viewAnd he rides without a haltAfter you.The huntsman's name is Death,His horse's name is Time;He is coming, he is comingAs I sit and write this rhyme;He is coming, he is coming,As you read the rhyme I write;You can hear the hoofs' low drummingDay and night.You can hear the distant drummingAs the clock goes tick-a-tack,And the chiming of the hoursIs the music of his pack.You may hardly note their growlingUnderneath the noonday sun,But at night you hear them howlingAs they run.And they never check or falterFor they...
Arthur Conan Doyle
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXXI.
Ov' è la fronte che con picciol cenno.HE ENUMERATES AND EULOGISES THE GRACES OF LAURA. Where is the brow whose gentlest beckonings ledMy raptured heart at will, now here, now there?Where the twin stars, lights of this lower sphere,Which o'er my darkling path their radiance shed?Where is true worth, and wit, and wisdom fled?The courteous phrase, the melting accent, where?Where, group'd in one rich form, the beauties rare,Which long their magic influence o'er me shed?Where is the shade, within whose sweet recessMy wearied spirit still forgot its sighs,And all my thoughts their constant record found?Where, where is she, my life's sole arbitress?--Ah, wretched world! and wretched ye, mine eyes(Of her pure light bereft) which a...
Francesco Petrarca
Squire Percy's Pride.
The Squire was none of your common menWhose ancestors nobody knows,But visible was his lineageIn the lines of his Roman nose,That turned in the true patrician curve -In the curl of his princely lips,In his slightly insolent eyelids,In his pointed finger-tips.Very erect and grand looked the SquireAs he walked o'er his broad estate,For he felt that the earth was honoredIn bearing his honorable weight;Proudly he strolled through his wooded parkDeer-haunted and gloomily grand,Or gazed from his pillared porticoesOn his far-outlying land.In a tiny whitewashed cottage,Half-covered with roses wild,His cheerful-faced old gardener dweltAlone with his motherless child;The Squire owned the very floor he trod,The gr...
Marietta Holley
Honeymoon Scene (From The Drama Of Mizpah)
AHASUERASWhat were thy thoughts, sweet Esther? Something passedAcross thy face, that for a moment veiledThy soul from mine, and left me desolate.Thy thoughts were not of me?ESTHER Ay, ALL of thee!I wondered, if in truth, thou wert contentWith me - thy choice. Was there no other oneOf all who passed before thee at thy courtWhose memory pursues thee with regret?AHASUERASI do confess I much regret that dayAnd wish I could relive it.ESTHER Oh! My lord!AHASUERASYea! I regret those hours I wasted onThe poor procession that preceded thee.Hadst thou come first, then all the added wealth Of one long day of loving thee were mine -A boundless for...
The Dog.
Of all the speechless friends of man The faithful dog I deemDeserving from the human clan The tenderest esteem:This feeling creature form'd to love, To watch, and to defend,Was given to man by powers above, A guardian, and a friend!I sing, of all e'er known to live The truest friend canine;And glory if my verse may give, Brave Fido! it is thine.A dog of many a sportive trick, Tho' rough and large of limb.Fido would chase the floating stick When Lucy cried, "go swim."And what command could Lucy give, Her dog would not obey?For her it seemed his pride to live, Blest in her gentle sway!For conscious of her every care He strain'd each feeling nerve,To...
William Hayley