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To The King, Upon His Taking Of Leicester.
This day is yours, great Charles! and in this warYour fate, and ours, alike victorious are.In her white stole now Victory does restEnsphered with palm on your triumphant crest.Fortune is now your captive; other KingsHold but her hands; you hold both hands and wings.
Robert Herrick
The Human World.
Here is one picture of the human world:An unreaped field and Death, the harvester,Taking his rest beside a gathered sheafOf poppy and white lilies. At his sidePassion, with pilfered hour-glass in her handJarring the sluggish sands to haste their flow.
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
After Storm
Great clouds of sullen seal and goldBar bleak the tawny west,From which all day the-thunder rolled,And storm streamed, crest on crest.Now silvery in its deeps of bronzeThe new moon fills its sphere;And point by point the darkness donsIts pale stars there and here.But still behind the moon and stars,The peace of heaven, remainsSuspicion of the wrath that wars,That Nature now restrains.As, lined 'neath tiger eyelids, glareThe wild-beast eyes that sleep,So smoulders in its sunset lairThe rage that rent the deep.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Statues
Pythagoras planned it. Why did the people stare?His numbers, though they moved or seemed to moveIn marble or in bronze, lacked character.But boys and girls, pale from the imagined loveOf solitary beds, knew what they were,That passion could bring character enough,And pressed at midnight in some public placeLive lips upon a plummet-measured face.No! Greater than Pythagoras, for the menThat with a mallet or a chisel" modeled theseCalculations that look but casual flesh, put downAll Asiatic vague immensities,And not the banks of oars that swam uponThe many-headed foam at Salamis.Europe put off that foam when PhidiasGave women dreams and dreams their looking-glass.One image crossed the many-headed, satUnder the tropic shade, grew round and sl...
William Butler Yeats
Keeping Tryst
Who is the maid with silken hair By clear Maine Water roaming?For the fairy Queen is not so fair As she in the lonely gloamingIt is sweet Mysie of Bellee, John Millar's lovely daughter;She is waiting where the old elm tree Droops over the sweet Maine Water."The trysting time has come and past, The day is fast declining;Oh my true love, are you coming fast, For the star of love is shining?""The moon is bright, the ford is safe, The market folks crossed over;Oh, come to me, it is wearing late, And I wait for thee, my lover."I fear me there will be a storm, The clouds, with murky fingers,Are muffling the stars o'er far Galgorm, Where my own true lover lingers."She ...
Nora Pembroke
My Secret
I tell my secret? No indeed, not I:Perhaps some day, who knows?But not to-day; it froze, and blows, and snows,And you're too curious: fie!You want to hear it? well:Only, my secret's mine, and I won't tell. Or, after all, perhaps there's none:Suppose there is no secret after all,But only just my fun.To-day's a nipping day, a biting day;In which one wants a shawl,A veil, a cloak, and other wraps:I cannot ope to every one who taps,And let the draughts come whistling through my hall;Come bounding and surrounding me,Come buffeting, astounding me,Nipping and clipping through my wraps and all.I wear my mask for warmth: who ever showsHis nose to Russian snowsTo be pecked at by every wind that blows?You would not peck? I...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
For He Was A Jolly Good Fellow
They cheered him from the wharf, it was a glorious day:His hand went to his scarf, his thoughts were far away.Oh, he was Jolly Good, they sang it long and loud,The money lender stood unknown amongst the crowd.Hed taken him aside, while trembling fit to fall,No friendly eye espied the last farewell of all!He held a peevish kid, another at his knee;The wife whom he could bid farewell, eternallyStood nagging at his side in tones that none could hear,And deared him, tender eyed, when passengers came near(The cabin waits below the row and childrens squall,And not a soul to know the bitter farce of all).Their hearts were good as gold, each pocket spared a tray,They pooled them as of old to drink him on his way.His pile of luggage rose, as brave...
Henry Lawson
Snowed Under
Of a thousand things that the Year snowed under - The busy Old Year who has gone away -How many will rise in the Spring, I wonder, Brought to life by the sun of May?Will the rose-tree branches, so wholly hidden That never a rose-tree seems to be,At the sweet Spring's call come forth unbidden, And bud in beauty, and bloom for me?Will the fair green Earth, whose throbbing bosom Is hid like a maid's in her gown at night,Wake out of her sleep, and with blade and blossom Gem her garments to please my sight?Over the knoll in the valley yonder The loveliest buttercups bloomed and grew;When the snow has gone that drifted them under, Will they shoot up sunward, and bloom anew?When wild winds blew, and a sleet-storm pe...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Lines to a Portrait, by a Superior Person
When I bought you for a song,Years ago Lord knows how long!I was struck I may be wrongBy your features,And a something in your airThat I couldnt quite compareTo my other plain or fairFellow creatures.In your simple, oval frameYou were not well known to fame,But to me twas all the sameWhoeer drew you;For your face I cant forget,Though I oftentimes regretThat, somehow, I never yetSaw quite through you.Yet each morning, when I rise,I go first to greet your eyes;And, in turn, you scrutinizeMy presentment.And when shades of evening fall,As you hang upon my wall,Youre the last thing I recallWith contentment.It is weakness, yet I knowThat I never turned to goAnywhere, f...
Bret Harte
The Worm Will Turn
I'm a gentle, meek, and patient human worm; Unattractive, Rather active,With a sense of right, original but firm. I was taught to be forgiving, For my enemies to pray; But what's the use of living If you never can repayAll the little animosities that in your bosom burn -Oh, it's pleasant to remember that "the worm will turn."I'm so gentle and so patient and so meek, Unpretending, Unoffending.But if, perchance, you smite me on the cheek, I will never turn the other, As I was taught to do By a puritanic mother, Whose theology was blue.Your experience will widen when e...
Arthur Macy
Pablo De Sarasate.
I. Who comes, to-day, with sunlight on his face, And eyes of fire, that have a sorrow's trace, But are not sad with sadness of the years, Or hints of tears?II. He is a king, or I mistake the sign, A king of song, - a comrade of the Nine, - The Muses' brother, and their youngest one, This side the sun.III. See how he bends to greet his soul's desire, His violin, which trembles like a lyre, And seems to trust him, and to know his touch, Belov'd so much!IV. He stands full height; he draws it to his breast, Like one, in joy, who takes a wonder-guest, - ...
Eric Mackay
Starlight
Last night I lay in an open field And looked at the stars with lips sealed; No noise moved the windless air, And I looked at the stars with steady stare. There were some that glittered and some that shone With a soft and equal glow, and one That queened it over the sprinkled round, Swaying the host with silent sound. "Calm things," I thought, "in your cavern blue, I will learn and hold and master you; I will yoke and scorn you as I can, For the pride of my heart is the pride of a man." Grass to my cheek in the dewy field, I lay quite still with lips sealed, And the pride of a man and his rigid gaze Stalked like swords on heaven's ways. But through a sudden gate there st...
John Collings Squire, Sir
Renouncement
I must not think of thee; and, tired yet strong, I shun the thought that lurks in all delight-- The thought of thee--and in the blue Heaven's height,And in the sweetest passage of a song.Oh, just beyond the fairest thoughts that throng This breast, the thought of thee waits, hidden yet bright; But it must never, never come in sight;I must stop short of thee the whole day long.But when sleep comes to close each difficult day, When night gives pause to the long watch I keep, And all my bonds I needs must loose apart,Must doff my will as raiment laid away,-- With the first dream that comes with the first sleep I run, I run, I am gathered to thy heart.
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
To His Honoured Friend, M. John Weare, Councillor.
Did I or love, or could I others drawTo the indulgence of the rugged law,The first foundation of that zeal should beBy reading all her paragraphs in thee,Who dost so fitly with the laws unite,As if you two were one hermaphrodite.Nor courts[t] thou her because she's well attendedWith wealth, but for those ends she was intended:Which were, - and still her offices are known, -Law is to give to ev'ry one his own;To shore the feeble up against the strong,To shield the stranger and the poor from wrong.This was the founder's grave and good intent:To keep the outcast in his tenement,To free the orphan from that wolf-like man,Who is his butcher more than guardian;To dry the widow's tears, and stop her swoons,By pouring balm and oil into her...
Dirge
Stay, Death, Not mine the Christus-wandWherewith to charge thee and command:I plead. Most gently hold the handOf her thou leadest far away;Fear thou to let her naked feetTread ashes--but let mosses sweetHer footing tempt, where'er ye stray.Shun Orcus; win the moonlit landBelulled--the silent meadows lone,Where never any leaf is blownFrom lily-stem in Azrael's hand.There, till her love rejoin her lowly(Pensive, a shade, but all her own)On honey feed her, wild and holy;Or trance her with thy choicest charm.And if, ere yet the lover's free,Some added dusk thy rule decree--That shadow only let it beThrown in the moon-glade by the palm.
Herman Melville
Envoy
Oh, to be able to capture and bring And bind in the bonds of control, Some of the carols that warble and sing Down in the depths of my soul.
Freeman Edwin Miller
A Channel Passage
The damned ship lurched and slithered. Quiet and quickMy cold gorge rose; the long sea rolled; I knewI must think hard of something, or be sick;And could think hard of only one thing, YOU!You, you alone could hold my fancy ever!And with you memories come, sharp pain, and dole.Now there's a choice, heartache or tortured liver!A sea-sick body, or a you-sick soul!Do I forget you? Retchings twist and tie me,Old meat, good meals, brown gobbets, up I throw.Do I remember? Acrid return and slimy,The sobs and slobber of a last years woe.And still the sick ship rolls. 'Tis hard, I tell ye,To choose 'twixt love and nausea, heart and belly.
Rupert Brooke
A Hillside Thaw
To think to know the country and now knowThe hillside on the day the sun lets goTen million silver lizards out of snow!As often as I've seen it done beforeI can't pretend to tell the way it's done.It looks as if some magic of the sunLifted the rug that bred them on the floorAnd the light breaking on them made them run.But if I though to stop the wet stampede,And caught one silver lizard by the tail,And put my foot on one without avail,And threw myself wet-elbowed and wet-kneedIn front of twenty others' wriggling speed,In the confusion of them all aglitter,And birds that joined in the excited funBy doubling and redoubling song and twitter,I have no doubt I'd end by holding none.It takes the moon for this. The sun's a wizardBy a...
Robert Lee Frost