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Abuse Of The Gospel.
Too many, Lord, abuse thy grace,In this licentious day;And while they boast they see thy face,They turn their own away.Thy book displays a gracious lightThat can the blind restore;But these are dazzled by the sight,And blinded still the more.The pardon, such presume upon,They do not beg, but steal;And when they plead it at thy throne,Oh! wheres the Spirits seal?Was it for this, ye lawless tribe,The dear Redeemer bled?Is this the grace the saints imbibeFrom Christ the living head?Ah, Lord, we know thy chosen fewAre fed with heavenly fare;But these, the wretched husks they chewProclaim them what they are.The liberty our hearts imploreIs not to live in sin;...
William Cowper
On Seeing Mrs. ** Perform In The Character Of ****
For you, bright fair, the nine address their lays,And tune my feeble voice to sing thy praise.The heartfelt power of every charm divine,Who can withstand their all-commanding shine?See how she moves along with every grace,While soul-brought tears steal down each shining face.She speaks! 'tis rapture all, and nameless bliss,Ye gods! what transport e'er compared to this.As when in Paphian groves the Queen of LoveWith fond complaint addressed the listening Jove,'Twas joy, and endless blisses all around,And rocks forgot their hardness at the sound.Then first, at last even Jove was taken in,And felt her charms, without disguise, within.
Oliver Goldsmith
The Thorn Tree
The night is sad with silver and the day is glad with gold,And the woodland silence listens to a legend never old,Of the Lady of the Fountain, whom the faery people know,With her limbs of samite whiteness and her hair of golden glow,Whom the boyish South Wind seeks for and the girlish-stepping Rain;Whom the sleepy leaves still whisper men shall never see again:She whose Vivien charms were mistress of the magic Merlin knew,That could change the dew to glowworms and the glowworms into dew.There's a thorn tree in the forest, and the faeries know the tree,With its branches gnarled and wrinkled as a face with sorcery;But the Maytime brings it clusters of a rainy fragrant white,Like the bloom-bright brows of beauty or a hand of lifted light.And all day the silence whispers ...
Madison Julius Cawein
From Ibn Jemin
Two things thou shalt not long for, if thou love a mind serene;--A woman to thy wife, though she were a crowned queen;And the second, borrowed money,--though the smiling lender sayThat he will not demand the debt until the Judgment Day.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Parasite
They brought to the little Princess, from her earliest hour of birth,The lovely things, the beautiful things, the soft things of earth.They covered her floor with crimson, they wrapped her in eiderdown;They hung the windows with cloth of gold, lest her eyes look down;(Lest the highway show an unlovely thingAnd her eyes look down.)They brought rare toys to her cradle, rich gems to her maidenhood;All that she saw was beautiful, all that she heard was good.When tumult rose in the city they bade her minstrels sing;They drowned with the sound of music a people's clamouring;(Lest she turn and hark to the highway,And hear an unlovely thing.)But there came a day of terror, when a cry too sharp and longTore through the streets of the city, through...
Theodosia Garrison
Feroke
The rice-birds fly so white, so silver white,The velvet rice-flats lie so emerald green,My heart inhales, with sorrowful delight,The sweet and poignant sadness of the scene.The swollen tawny river seeks the sea,Its hungry waters, never satisfied,Beflecked with fallen log and torn-up tree,Engulph the fisher-huts on either side.The current brought a stranger yesterday,And laid him on the sand beneath a palm,His worn young face was partly torn away,His eyes, that saw the world no more, were calmWe could not close his eyelids, stiff with blood, -But, oh, my brother, I had changed with theeFor I am still tormented in the flood,Whilst thou hast done thy work, and reached the sea.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Sullen Moods
Love, do not count your labour lost Though I turn sullen, grim, retiredEven at your side; my thought is crossed With fancies by old longings fired.And when I answer you, some days Vaguely and wildly, do not fearThat my love walks forbidden ways, Breaking the ties that hold it here.If I speak gruffly, this mood is Mere indignation at my ownShortcomings, plagues, uncertainties; I forget the gentler tone.'You,' now that you have come to be My one beginning, prime and end,I count at last as wholly 'me,' Lover no longer nor yet friend.Friendship is flattery, though close hid; Must I then flatter my own mind?And must (which laws of shame forbid) Blind love of you make self-love b...
Robert von Ranke Graves
Epistle To Major Logan.
Hail, thairm-inspirin', rattlin' Willie! Though fortune's road be rough an' hilly To every fiddling, rhyming billie, We never heed, But tak' it like the unback'd filly, Proud o' her speed. When idly goavan whyles we saunter Yirr, fancy barks, awa' we canter Uphill, down brae, till some mishanter, Some black bog-hole, Arrests us, then the scathe an' banter We're forced to thole. Hale be your heart! Hale be your fiddle! Lang may your elbuck jink and diddle, To cheer you through the weary widdle O' this wild warl', Until you on a crummock driddle A gray-hair'd carl. Come wealth, come poortith, late or soon, Heaven send your hear...
Robert Burns
Patience In Princes.
Kings must not use the axe for each offence:Princes cure some faults by their patience.
Robert Herrick
Copan
Around its walls the forests of the west Gloom, as about some mystery's final pale Might lie its multifold exterior veil. Sculptured with signs and meanings unconfessed, Its lordly fanes and palaces attest A past before whose wall of darkness fail Reason and fancy, finding not the tale Erased by time from history's palimpsest. Within this place, that from the gloom of Eld Still meets the light, a people came and went Like whirls of dust between its columns blown - An alien race, whose record, shadow-held, Is sealed with those of others long forespent That died in sunless planets lost and lone.
Clark Ashton Smith
Amour 47
The golden Sunne vpon his fiery wheelesThe horned Ram doth in his course awake,And of iust length our night and day doth make,Flinging the Fishes backward with his heeles:Then to the Tropicke takes his full Careere,Trotting his sun-steeds till the Palfrays sweat,Bayting the Lyon in his furious heat,Till Virgins smyles doe sound his sweet reteere.But my faire Planet, who directs me still,Vnkindly such distemperature doth bring,Makes Summer Winter, Autumne in the Spring,Crossing sweet nature by vnruly will. Such is the sunne who guides my youthfull season, Whose thwarting course depriues the world of reason.
Michael Drayton
Reverie Of Mahomed Akram At The Tamarind Tank
The Desert is parched in the burning sunAnd the grass is scorched and white.But the sand is passed, and the march is done,We are camping here to-night. I sit in the shade of the Temple walls, While the cadenced water evenly falls, And a peacock out of the Jungle calls To another, on yonder tomb. Above, half seen, in the lofty gloom, Strange works of a long dead people loom,Obscene and savage and half effaced -An elephant hunt, a musicians' feast -And curious matings of man and beast;What did they mean to the men who are long since dust? Whose fingers traced, In this arid waste,These rioting, twisted, figures of love and lust.Strange, weird things that no man may say,Things Humanity hides away; - ...
Song.
Low laughed the Columbine,Trembled her petals fine As the breeze blew;In her dove-heart there stirredMurmurs the dull bee heard,And Love, Life's wild white bird, Straightway she knew.Resting her lilac cheekGently, in aspect meek, On the gray stone,The morning-glory, free,Welcomed the yellow bee,Heard the near-rolling sea Murmur and moan.Calm lay the tawny sandStretching a long wet hand To the far wave.Swift to her warm waiting breastLonging to be possessedLeaps 'neath his billowy crest Her Lover brave.
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Sunset On The River
I.A Sea of onyx are the skies,Cloud-islanded with fire;Such nacre-colored flame as dyesA sea-shell's rosy spire;And at its edge one star sinks slow,Burning, into the overglow.II.Save for the cricket in the grass,Or passing bird that twitters,The world is hushed. Like liquid glassThe soundless river glittersBetween the hills that hug and holdIts beauty like a hoop of gold.III.The glory deepens; and, meseems,A vasty canvas, paintedWith revelations of God's dreamsAnd visions symbol-sainted,The west is, that each night-cowled hillKneels down before in worship still.IV.There is no thing to wake unrest;No sight or sound to jangleThe peace that evening in the bre...
At Waking
When night was lifting,And dawn had crept under its shade,Amid cold clouds driftingDead-white as a corpse outlaid,With a sudden scareI seemed to beholdMy Love in bareHard lines unfold.Yea, in a moment,An insight that would not dieKilled her old endowmentOf charm that had capped all nigh,Which vanished to noneLike the gilt of a cloud,And showed her but oneOf the common crowd.She seemed but a sampleOf earth's poor average kind,Lit up by no ampleEnrichments of mien or mind.I covered my eyesAs to cover the thought,And unrecognizeWhat the morn had taught.O vision appallingWhen the one believed-in thingIs seen falling, falling,With all to which hope can cling.Of...
Thomas Hardy
Gone.
Went up a year this evening!I recollect it well!Amid no bells nor bravosThe bystanders will tell!Cheerful, as to the village,Tranquil, as to repose,Chastened, as to the chapel,This humble tourist rose.Did not talk of returning,Alluded to no timeWhen, were the gales propitious,We might look for him;Was grateful for the rosesIn life's diverse bouquet,Talked softly of new speciesTo pick another day.Beguiling thus the wonder,The wondrous nearer drew;Hands bustled at the moorings --The crowd respectful grew.Ascended from our visionTo countenances new!A difference, a daisy,Is all the rest I knew!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
A Spirit's Voice.
It is the dawn! the rosy day awakes;From her bright hair pale showers of dew she shakes,And through the heavens her early pathway takes; Why art thou sleeping?It is the noon! the sun looks laughing downOn hamlet still, on busy shore, and town,On forest glade, and deep dark waters lone; Why art thou sleeping?It is the sunset! daylight's crimson veilFloats o'er the mountain tops, while twilight paleCalls up her vaporous shrouds from every vale; Why art thou sleeping?It is the night! o'er the moon's livid brow,Like shadowy locks, the clouds their darkness throw,All evil spirits wake to wander now; Why art thou sleeping?
Frances Anne Kemble
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXII.
Ripensando a quel ch' oggi il ciel onora.HE WOULD DIE OF GRIEF WERE SHE NOT SOMETIMES TO CONSOLE HIM BY HER PRESENCE. To that soft look which now adorns the skies,The graceful bending of the radiant head,The face, the sweet angelic accents fled,That soothed me once, but now awake my sighsOh! when to these imagination flies,I wonder that I am not long since dead!'Tis she supports me, for her heavenly treadIs round my couch when morning visions rise!In every attitude how holy, chaste!How tenderly she seems to hear the taleOf my long woes, and their relief to seek!But when day breaks she then appears in hasteThe well-known heavenward path again to scale,With moisten'd eye, and soft expressive cheek!MOREHEAD....
Francesco Petrarca