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Accidents
There once was a lady from Guam,Who said, "Now the sea is so calm I will swim, for a lark"; But she met with a shark.Let us now sing the ninetieth psalm.
Unknown
When Earth's Last Picture Is Painted
When Earth's last picture is painted and the tubes are twisted and dried,When the oldest colours have faded, and the youngest critic has died,We shall rest, and, faith, we shall need it, lie down for an aeon or two,Till the Master of All Good Workmen shall put us to work anew.And those that were good shall be happy; they shall sit in a golden chair;They shall splash at a ten-league canvas with brushes of comets' hair.They shall find real saints to draw from, Magdalene, Peter, and Paul;They shall work for an age at a sitting and never be tired at all!And only The Master shall praise us, and only The Master shall blame;And no one shall work for money, and no one shall work for fame,But each for the joy of the working, and each, in his separate star,Shall draw the Thing ...
Rudyard
The Old Tune - Thirty-Sixth Variation
This shred of song you bid me bringIs snatched from fancy's embers;Ah, when the lips forget to sing,The faithful heart remembers!Too swift the wings of envious TimeTo wait for dallying phrases,Or woven strands of labored rhymeTo thread their cunning mazes.A word, a sigh, and lo, how plainIts magic breath disclosesOur life's long vista through a laneOf threescore summers' roses!One language years alone can teachIts roots are young affectionsThat feel their way to simplest speechThrough silent recollections.That tongue is ours. How few the wordsWe need to know a brother!As simple are the notes of birds,Yet well they know each other.This freezing month of ice and snowThat brings our lives...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
A Lament.
("Sentiers où l'herbe se balance.")[Bk. III. xi., July, 1853.]O paths whereon wild grasses wave!O valleys! hillsides! forests hoar!Why are ye silent as the grave?For One, who came, and comes no more!Why is thy window closed of late?And why thy garden in its sear?O house! where doth thy master wait?I only know he is not here.Good dog! thou watchest; yet no handWill feed thee. In the house is none.Whom weepest thou? child! My father. AndO wife! whom weepest thou? The Gone.Where is he gone? Into the dark. -O sad, and ever-plaining surge!Whence art thou? From the convict-bark.And why thy mournful voice? A dirge.EDWIN ARNOLD, C.S.I.
Victor-Marie Hugo
When I would muse in boyhood
When I would muse in boyhoodThe wild green woods among,And nurse resolves and fanciesBecause the world was young,It was not foes to conquer,Nor sweethearts to be kind,But it was friends to die forThat I would seek and find.I sought them far and found them,The sure, the straight, the brave,The hearts I lost my own to,The souls I could not save.They braced their belts about them,They crossed in ships the sea,They sought and found six feet of ground,And there they died for me.
Alfred Edward Housman
My Father-Land
Where is the minstrel's Father-land?Where the sparks of noble spirits flew,Where flowery wreaths for beauty grew,Where strong hearts glowed so glad and trueFor all things sacred, good and grand:There was my Father-land.How named the minstrel's Father-land?O'er slaughtered son 'neath tyrants' yokes,She weepeth now and foreign strokes;They called her once the Land of OaksLand of the Free the German Land:Thus was called my Father-land.Why weeps the minstrel's Father-land?Because while tyrant's tempest hailedThe people's chosen princes quailed,And all their sacred pledges failed;Because she could no ear command,Alas must weep my Father-land.Whom calls the minstrel's Father-land?She calls on heaven with wild alarm...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Leander To Hero.
I.Brows wan thro' blue-black tressesWet with sharp rain and kisses;Locks loose the sea-wind scatters,Like torn wings fierce for flight;Cold brows, whose sadness flatters,One kiss and then - good-night.II.Can this thy love undo meWhen in the heavy waves?Nay; it must make unto meTheir groaning backs but slaves!For its magic doth indue meWith strength o'er all their graves.III.Weep not as heavy-heartedBefore I go! For thouWilt follow as we parted -A something hollow-hearted,Dark eyes whence cold tears started,Gray, ghostly arms out-dartedTo take me, even as now,To drag me, their weak lover,To caves where sirens hover,Deep caves the dark waves cover,Down...
Madison Julius Cawein
Fear
Surely I must have ailedOn that dark night,Or my childish courage failedBecause there was no light;Or terror must have comeWith his chill wing,And made my angel dumb,Or found him slumbering.Because I could not sleepTerror began to wake,Close at my side to creepAnd sting me like a snake.And I was afraid of death,But when I thought of pain--O, language no word hathTo recall that thought again!Into my heart fear crawledAnd wreathed close around,Mortal, convulsive, cold,And I lay bound.Fear set before my eyesUnimaginable pain;Approaching agoniesSprang nimbly into my brain.Just as a thrilling windPlucks every mournful wire,So terror on my wild mindFingered, with ice and fire.O, ...
John Frederick Freeman
Daphne
Daphne knows, with equal ease,How to vex, and how to please;But the folly of her sexMakes her sole delight to vex.Never woman more devisedSurer ways to be despised;Paradoxes weakly wielding,Always conquer'd, never yielding.To dispute, her chief delight,Without one opinion right:Thick her arguments she lays on,And with cavils combats reason;Answers in decisive way,Never hears what you can say;Still her odd perverseness showsChiefly where she nothing knows;And, where she is most familiar,Always peevisher and sillier;All her spirits in a flameWhen she knows she's most to blame. Send me hence ten thousand miles,From a face that always smiles:None could ever act that part,But a fury in her heart.Ye ...
Jonathan Swift
Study In Solitude.
'Tis true, in midst of all, there may ariseFor man's society a sudden thirst,A sense of hopeless vacancy which driesThe spirit with a loneliness accurst,A longing irresistible to burstThe branchy brake with other birds to sing,Or, as, from where in solemn shades immerst,The beetle comes to wanton on the wingAround my lamplight flame - alas! poor, foolish thing.But here thou may'st associate, though alone,With worthiest men, the best of every age,Through whom the universe of thought has grownTo what it is - the noble, good, and sage.How vain the fret, how frivolous the rageFor social rank, when thus e'en monarchs deignIn close communion gladly to engage!Nay, more than monarchs - Still the Mantuan swainHis fadeless laurel wears - What...
W. M. MacKeracher
Casualties
Good things, that come of course, far less do pleaseThan those which come by sweet contingencies.
Robert Herrick
The Constant Lover
I see fair women all the day,They pass and pass - and go;I almost dream that they are shadesWithin a shadow-show.Their beauty lays no hand on me,They talk - - I hear no word;I ask my eyes if they have seen,My ears if they have heard.For why - within the north countreeA little maid, I know,Is waiting through the days for me,Drear days so long and slow.
Richard Le Gallienne
Fringed Gentian.
God made a little gentian;It tried to be a roseAnd failed, and all the summer laughed.But just before the snowsThere came a purple creatureThat ravished all the hill;And summer hid her forehead,And mockery was still.The frosts were her condition;The Tyrian would not comeUntil the North evoked it."Creator! shall I bloom?"
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Lines
TO THE MEMORY OF PATRICK KELLEY, WHO BY HIS MANY GOOD QUALITIES DURING SOME YEARS' RESIDENCE IN MY FAMILY, GREATLY ENDEARED HIMSELF TO ME AND MINE.From Erin's fair Isle to this country he came,And found brothers and sisters to welcome him here;Though then but a youth, yet robust seemed his frame,And life promised fair for many a long year.A place was soon found where around the same board,He with two of his sisters did constantly meet;And when his day's work had all been performed,At the same fireside he found a third seat.His faithfulness such, so true-hearted was he,That love in return could not be denied;As one of the family - he soon ceased to beThe stranger, who lately for work had applied.Youth passed into manhoo...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
A Light Exists In Spring
A light exists in springNot present on the yearAt any other period.When March is scarcely hereA color stands abroadOn solitary hillsThat science cannot overtake,But human nature feels.It waits upon the lawn;It shows the furthest treeUpon the furthest slope we know;It almost speaks to me.Then, as horizons step,Or noons report away,Without the formula of sound,It passes, and we stay:A quality of lossAffecting our content,As trade had suddenly encroachedUpon a sacrament.
The Old Ships
I have seen old ships sail like swans asleepBeyond the village which men still call Tyre,With leaden age o'ercargoed, dipping deepFor Famagusta and the hidden sunThat rings black Cyprus with a lake of fire;And all those ships were certainly so old -Who knows how oft with squat and noisy gun,Questing brown slaves or Syrian oranges,The pirate GenoeseHell-raked them till they rolledBlood, water, fruit and corpses up the hold.But now through friendly seas they softly run,Painted the mid-sea blue or shore-sea green,Still patterned with the vine and grapes in gold.But I have seenPointing her shapely shadows from the dawnAnd image tumbled on a rose-swept bayA drowsy ship of some yet older day;And, wonder's breath indrawn,Though...
James Elroy Flecker
Nightfall
Fold up the tent!The sun is in the West.To-morrow my untented soul will rangeAmong the blest. And I am well content, For what is sent, is sent, And God knows best.Fold up the tent,And speed the parting guest!The night draws on, though night and day are oneOn this long quest. This house was only lent For my apprenticement-- What is, is best.Fold up the tent!Its slack ropes all undone,Its pole all broken, and its cover rent,--Its work is done. But mine--tho' spoiled and spent Mine earthly tenement-- Is but begun.Fold up the tent!Its tenant would be gone,To fairer skies than mortal eyesMay look upon.All that I loved has passed,And left me at th...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Goodness And Greatness.
Only two virtues exist. Oh, would they were ever united!Ever the good with the great, ever the great with the good!
Friedrich Schiller