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London Voluntaries - To Charles Whibley - III - Scherzando
Down through the ancient StrandThe spirit of October, mild and boonAnd sauntering, takes his wayThis golden end of afternoon,As though the corn stood yellow in all the land,And the ripe apples dropped to the harvest-moon.Lo! the round sun, half-down the western slope -Seen as along an unglazed telescope -Lingers and lolls, loth to be done with day:Gifting the long, lean, lanky streetAnd its abounding confluences of beingWith aspects generous and bland;Making a thousand harnesses to shineAs with new ore from some enchanted mine,And every horse's coat so full of sheenHe looks new-tailored, and every 'bus feels clean,And never a hansom but is worth the feeing;And every jeweller within the paleOffers a real Arabian Night for sale;...
William Ernest Henley
The Casterbridge Captains
(KHYBER PASS, 1842)A TRADITION OF J. B. L-, T. G. B-, AND J. L-.Three captains went to Indian wars,And only one returned:Their mate of yore, he singly woreThe laurels all had earned.At home he sought the ancient aisleWherein, untrumped of fame,The three had sat in pupilage,And each had carved his name.The names, rough-hewn, of equal size,Stood on the panel still;Unequal since. "'Twas theirs to aim,Mine was it to fulfil!"- "Who saves his life shall lose it, friends!"Outspake the preacher then,Unweeting he his listener, whoLooked at the names again.That he had come and they'd been stayed,'Twas but the chance of war:Another chance, and they'd sat here,And he had lain afar.
Thomas Hardy
To Laura In Death. Sestina I.
Mia benigna fortuna e 'l viver lieto.IN HIS MISERY HE DESIRES DEATH THE MORE HE REMEMBERS HIS PAST CONTENTMENT AND COMFORT. My favouring fortune and my life of joy,My days so cloudless, and my tranquil nights,The tender sigh, the pleasing power of song,Which gently wont to sound in verse and rhyme,Suddenly darken'd into grief and tears,Make me hate life and inly pray for death!O cruel, grim, inexorable Death!How hast thou dried my every source of joy,And left me to drag on a life of tears,Through darkling days and melancholy nights.My heavy sighs no longer meet in rhyme,And my hard martyrdom exceeds all song!Where now is vanish'd my once amorous song?To talk of anger and to treat with death;Where the fond...
Francesco Petrarca
Reinforcements For Lord Wellington.
suosque tibi commendat, Troja Penates hos cape fatorum comites. VERGIL.1813.As recruits in these times are not easily gotAnd the Marshal must have them--pray, why should we not,As the last and, I grant it, the worst of our loans to him,Ship off the Ministry, body and bones to him?There's not in all England, I'd venture to swear,Any men we could half so conveniently spare;And tho' they've been helping the French for years past,We may thus make them useful to England at last.Castlereagh in our sieges might save some disgraces,Being used to the taking and keeping of places;And Volunteer Canning, still ready for joining,Might show off his talent for sly under-mining.Could th...
Thomas Moore
October
October woods whereinThe boy's dream comes to pass,And Nature squanders on the boy her pomp,And crowns him with a more than royal crown,And unimagined splendor waits his steps.The gazing urchin walks through tents of gold,Through crimson chambers, porphyry and pearl,Pavilion on pavilion, garlanded,Incensed and starred with lights and airs and shapes,Color and sound, music to eye and ear,Beyond the best conceit of pomp or power.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
To E---[1]
Let Folly smile, to view the namesOf thee and me, in Friendship twin'd;Yet Virtue will have greater claimsTo love, than rank with vice combin'd.And though unequal is thy fate,Since title deck'd my higher birth;Yet envy not this gaudy state,Thine is the pride of modest worth.Our souls at least congenial meet,Nor can thy lot my rank disgrace;Our intercourse is not less sweet,Since worth of rank supplies the place.
George Gordon Byron
Astrophel and Stella - Eleuenth Song.
Who is it that this darke nightVnderneath my window playneth?It is one who from thy sightBeing, ah exil'd, disdaynethEuery other vulgar light.Why, alas, and are you he?Be not yet those fancies changed?Deare, when you find change in me,Though from me you be estranged,Let my chaunge to ruin be.Well, in absence this will dy;Leaue to see, and leaue to wonder.Absence sure will helpe, if ICan learne how my selfe to sunderFrom what in my hart doth ly.But time will these thoughts remoue;Time doth work what no man knoweth.Time doth as the subiect proue;With time still the affection growethIn the faithful turtle-doue.What if we new beauties see,Will they not stir new affection?I will thinke they...
Philip Sidney
The Naulahka
There was a strife 'twixt man and maid,Oh, that was at the birth of time!But what befell 'twixt man and maid,Oh, that's beyond the grip of rhyme.'Twas "Sweet, I must not bide with you,"And, "Love, I cannot bide alone";For both were young and both were true.And both were hard as the nether stone.Beware the man who's crossed in love;For pent-up steam must find its vent.Stand back when he is on the move,And lend him all the Continent.Your patience, Sirs. The Devil took me upTo the burned mountain over Sicily(Fit place for me) and thence I saw my Earth,(Not all Earth's splendour, 'twas beyond my need,)And that one spot I love, all Earth to me,And her I love, my Heaven. What said I?My love was safe from all the powers of Hell...
Rudyard
Camp Follower's Song, Gomal River
We have left Gul Kach behind us, Are marching on Apozai, -Where pleasure and rest are waiting To welcome us by and by.We're falling back from the Gomal, Across the Gir-dao plain,The camping ground is deserted, We'll never come back again.Along the rocks and the defiles, The mules and the camels wind.Good-bye to Rahimut-Ullah, The man who is left behind.For some we lost in the skirmish, And some were killed in the fight,But he was captured by fever, In the sentry pit, at night.A rifle shot had been swifter, Less trouble a sabre thrust,But his Fate decided fever, And each man dies as he must.Behind us, red in the distance. The wavering flames rise high,
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Phyllis
Phyllis, ah, Phyllis, my life is a gray day,Few are my years, but my griefs are not few,Ever to youth should each day be a May-day,Warm wind and rose-breath and diamonded dew--Phyllis, ah, Phyllis, my life is a gray day.Oh for the sunlight that shines on a May-day!Only the cloud hangeth over my life.Love that should bring me youth's happiest heydayBrings me but seasons of sorrow and strife;Phyllis, ah, Phyllis, my life is a gray day.Sunshine or shadow, or gold day or gray day,Life must be lived as our destinies rule;Leisure or labor or work day or play day--Feasts for the famous and fun for the fool;Phyllis, ah, Phyllis, my life is a gray day.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Old Men
Old and alone, sit we,Caged, riddle-rid men;Lost to Earth's "Listen!" and "See!"Thought's "Wherefore?" and "When?"Only far memories strayOf a past once lovely, but nowWasted and faded away,Like green leaves from the bough.Vast broods the silence of night,The ruinous moonLifts on our faces her light,Whence all dreaming is gone.We speak not; trembles each head;In their sockets our eyes are still;Desire as cold as the dead;Without wonder or will.And One, with a lanthorn, draws near,At clash with the moon in our eyes:"Where art thou?" he asks: "I am here,"One by one we arise.And none lifts a hand to withholdA friend from the touch of that foe:Heart cries unto heart, "Thou art old!"Ye...
Walter De La Mare
Babby Burds.
Aw wander'd aght one summer's morn,Across a meadow newly shorn;Th' sun wor shinin breet and clear,An fragrant scents rose up i'th' air,An all wor still.When, as my steps wor idly rovin,Aw coom upon a seet soa lovin!It fill'd mi heart wi' tender feelin,As daan aw sank beside it, kneelinO'th' edge o'th' hill.It wor a little skylark's nest,An two young babby burds, undrest,Wor gapin wi' ther beaks soa wide,Callin for mammy to provideTher mornin's meal;An high aboon ther little hooam,Th' saand o' daddy's warblin coom;Ringin soa sweetly o' mi ear,Like breathins throo a purer sphere,He sang soa weel.Ther mammy, a few yards away,Wor hoppin on a bit o' hay;Too feeard to coom, too bold to flee;An wat...
John Hartley
Fools' Paradise. Dream The First.
I have been, like Puck, I have been, in a trice,To a realm they call Fool's Paradise,Lying N.N.E. of the Land of Sense,And seldom blest with a glimmer thence.But they wanted not in this happy place,Where a light of its own gilds every face;Or if some wear a shadowy brow,'Tis the wish to look wise,--not knowing how.Self-glory glistens o'er all that's there,The trees, the flowers have a jaunty air;The well-bred wind in a whisper blows,The snow, if it snows, is couleur de rose,The falling founts in a titter fall,And the sun looks simpering down on all.Oh, 'tisn't in tongue or pen to traceThe scenes I saw in that joyous place.There were Lords and Ladies sitting together,In converse sweet, "What charming weather!--
The Pier-Glass
Lost manor where I walk continuallyA ghost, while yet in woman's flesh and blood;Up your broad stairs mounting with outspread fingersAnd gliding steadfast down your corridorsI come by nightly custom to this room,And even on sultry afternoons I comeDrawn by a thread of time-sunk memory.Empty, unless for a huge bed of stateShrouded with rusty curtains drooped awry(A puppet theatre where malignant fancyPeoples the wings with fear). At my right handA ravelled bell-pull hangs in readinessTo summon me from attic glooms aboveService of elder ghosts; here at my leftA sullen pier-glass cracked from side to sideScorns to present the face as do new mirrorsWith a lying flush, but shows it melancholyAnd pale, as faces grow that look in mirrors.<...
Robert von Ranke Graves
St. Launce's Revisited
Slip back, Time!Yet again I am nearingCastle and keep, uprearing Gray, as in my prime. At the innSmiling close, why is itNot as on my visit When hope and I were twin? Groom and jadeWhom I found here, moulder;Strange the tavern-holder, Strange the tap-maid. Here I hiredHorse and man for bearingMe on my wayfaring To the door desired. Evening gloomedAs I journeyed forwardTo the faces shoreward, Till their dwelling loomed. If againTowards the Atlantic sea thereI should speed, they'd be there Surely now as then? . . . Why waste thought,When I know them vanishedUnder earth; yea, banished Ever into nought.
Birthright
Lord Rameses of Egypt sighedBecause a summer evening passed;And little Ariadne criedThat summer fancy fell at lastTo dust; and young Verona diedWhen beauty's hour was overcast.Theirs was the bitterness we knowBecause the clouds of hawthorn keepSo short a state, and kisses goTo tombs unfathomably deep,While Rameses and RomeoAnd little Ariadne sleep.
John Drinkwater
Nothing And Something.
It is nothing to me, the beauty said,With a careless toss of her pretty head;The man is weak if he can't refrainFrom the cup you say is fraught with pain.It was something to her in after years,When her eyes were drenched with burning tears,And she watched in lonely grief and dread,And startled to hear a staggering tread.It is nothing to me, the mother said;I have no fear that my boy will treadIn the downward path of sin and shame,And crush my heart and darken his name.It was something to her when that only sonFrom the path of right was early won,And madly cast in the flowing bowlA ruined body and sin-wrecked soul.It is nothing to me, the young man cried:In his eye was a flash of scorn and pride;I heed not the dreadful th...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Our Oldest Friend
I give you the health of the oldest friendThat, short of eternity, earth can lend, -A friend so faithful and tried and trueThat nothing can wean him from me and you.When first we screeched in the sudden blazeOf the daylight's blinding and blasting rays,And gulped at the gaseous, groggy air,This old, old friend stood waiting there.And when, with a kind of mortal strife,We had gasped and choked into breathing life,He watched by the cradle, day and night,And held our hands till we stood upright.From gristle and pulp our frames have grownTo stringy muscle and solid bone;While we were changing, he altered not;We might forget, but he never forgot.He came with us to the college class, -Little cared he for the steward's pa...
Oliver Wendell Holmes