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The Stars Are Mansions Built By Nature's Hand
The stars are mansions built by Nature's hand,And, haply, there the spirits of the blestDwell, clothed in radiance, their immortal vest;Huge Ocean shows, within his yellow strand,A habitation marvelously planned,For life to occupy in love and rest;All that we see is dome, or vault, or nest,Or fortress, reared at Nature's sage command.Glad thought for every season! but the SpringGave it while cares were weighing on my heart,'Mid song of birds, and insects murmuring;And while the youthful year's prolific artOf bud, leaf, blade, and flower, was fashioningAbodes where self-disturbance hath no part.
William Wordsworth
On The Blank Leaf Of A Work By Hannah More. Presented By Mrs C----.
Thou flattering work of friendship kind, Still may thy pages call to mind The dear, the beauteous donor; Though sweetly female every part, Yet such a head, and more the heart, Does both the sexes honour. She showed her taste refined and just, When she selected thee, Yet deviating, own I must, For so approving me! But kind still, I'll mind still The giver in the gift; I'll bless her, and wiss her A Friend above the Lift.Mossgiel, April, 1786.
Robert Burns
The Domineering Eagle And The Inventive Bratling
O'er a small suburban boroughOnce an eagle used to fly,Making observations thoroughFrom his station in the sky,And presenting the appearanceOf an animated V,Like the gulls that lend coherenceUnto paintings of the sea.Looking downward at a church inThis attractive little shire,He beheld a smallish urchinShooting arrows at the spire;In a spirit of derision,"Look alive!" the eagle said;And, with infinite precision,Dropped a feather on his head.Then the boy, annoyed distinctlyBy the freedom of the bird,Voiced his anger quite succinctlyIn a single scathing word;And he sat him on a barrow,And he fashioned of this sameEagle's feather such an arrowAs was worthy of the name.Then he tried ...
Guy Wetmore Carryl
Renewal Of Strength.
The prison-house in which I live Is falling to decay,But God renews my spirit's strength, Within these walls of clay.For me a dimness slowly creeps Around earth's fairest light,But heaven grows clearer to my view, And fairer to my sight.It may be earth's sweet harmonies Are duller to my ear,But music from my Father's house Begins to float more near.Then let the pillars of my home Crumble and fall away;Lo, God's dear love within my soul Renews it day by day.
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Nursery Rhyme. CCCLXXV. Paradoxes.
My true love lives far from me, Perrie, Merrie, Dixie, Dominie. Many a rich present he sends to me, Petrum, Partrum, Paradise, Temporie, Perrie, Merrie, Dixie, Dominie. He sent me a goose, without a bone; He sent me a cherry, without a stone. Petrum, & c. He sent me a Bible, no man could read; He sent me a blanket, without a thread. Petrum, & c. How could there be a goose without a bone? How could there be a cherry without a stone? Petrum, & c. How could there be a Bible no man could read? How could there be a bla...
Unknown
The Unfinished Dream
Rare-sweet the air in that unimagined country - My spirit had wandered farFrom its weary body close-enwrapt in slumber Where its home and earth-friends are;A milk-like air - and of light all abundance; And there a river clearPainting the scene like a picture on its bosom, Green foliage drifting near.No sign of life I saw, as I pressed onward, Fish, nor beast, nor bird,Till I came to a hill clothed in flowers to its summit, Then shrill small voices I heard.And I saw from concealment a company of elf-folk With faces strangely fair,Talking their unearthly scattered talk together, A bind of green-grasses in their hair,Marvellously gentle, feater far than children, In gesture, mien and speech,...
Walter De La Mare
How Oft Has The Banshee Cried.
How oft has the Banshee cried, How oft has death untied Bright links that Glory wove, Sweet bonds entwined by Love!Peace to each manly soul that sleepeth;Rest to each faithful eye that weepeth; Long may the fair and brave Sigh o'er the hero's grave. We're fallen upon gloomy days![1] Star after star decays, Every bright name, that shed Light o'er the land, is fled.Dark falls the tear of him who mournethLost joy, or hope that ne'er returneth; But brightly flows the tear, Wept o'er a hero's bier. Quenched are our beacon lights-- Thou, of the Hundred Fights![2] Thou, on whose burning tongue ...
Thomas Moore
The Walk At Midnight
Soft, shadowy moon-beam! by the lightSleeps the wide meer serenely pale:How various are the sounds of night,Borne on the scarely-rising gale!The swell of distant brook is heard,Whose far-off waters faintly roll;And piping of the shrill small bird,Arrested by the wandring owl.Come hither! let us thread with careThe maze of this green path, which bindsThe beauties of the broad parterre,And thro yon fragrant alley winds.Or on this old bench will we sit,Round which the clustring woodine wreathes;While birds of night around us flit;And thro each lavish wood-walk breathes,Unto my ravishd senses, broughtFrom yon thick-woven odorous bowers,The still rich breeze, with incense fraughtOf glowing fruits and sp...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Chrysalis. (Little Poems In Prose.)
1. Long, long has the Orient-Jew spun around his helplessness the cunningly enmeshed web of Talmud and Kabbala.2. Imprisoned in dark corners of misery and oppression, closely he drew about him the dust-gray filaments, soft as silk and stubborn as steel, until he lay death-stiffened in mummied seclusion.3. And the world has named him an ugly worm, shunning the blessed daylight.4. But when the emancipating springtide breathes wholesome, quickening airs, when the Sun of Love shines out with cordial fires, lo, the Soul of Israel bursts her cobweb sheath, and flies forth attired in the winged beauty of immortality.
Emma Lazarus
A Girl's Garden
A neighbor of mine in the villageLikes to tell how one springWhen she was a girl on the farm, she didA childlike thing.One day she asked her fatherTo give her a garden plotTo plant and tend and reap herself,And he said, "Why not?"In casting about for a cornerHe thought of an idle bitOf walled-off ground where a shop had stood,And he said, "Just it."And he said, "That ought to make youAn ideal one-girl farm,And give you a chance to put some strengthOn your slim-jim arm."It was not enough of a gardenHer father said, to plow;So she had to work it all by hand,But she don't mind now.She wheeled the dung in a wheelbarrowAlong a stretch of road;But she always ran away and leftHer ...
Robert Lee Frost
La Scala Santa
Robusti sono i fatti.- Discorso del Terremoto,del S. Alessandro Sardo.Venetia, A.D. 1586.In San Gianni Lateran,Deyve cot a flight of shdairs,More woonderful ash nefer vas,As Latin pooks declares.For you kits your sins forgifen,If you glimes dem knee py knee;Its such a gitten up a stairs,I nefer yet did see.Now as Breitmann vas a vaitinAmong some demi reps,Ascensionem expectans,To see dem glime de steps,Dere came a sinful scoffer,Who his mind had firmly setTo go dem holy sdairs afoot,Und do it on a bet!Boot shoost as he vas startet,To make dis sassy go,Der Breitmann caught him py de neck,Und tripped him off his toe!Und den dere come de skience,A la prenez gardez v...
Charles Godfrey Leland
The Fugitive
In the hush of early evenThe clouds came flocking over,Till the last wind fell from heavenAnd no bird cried.Darkly the clouds were flocking,Shadows moved and deepened,Then paused; the poplar's rockingCeased; the light hung stillLike a painted thing, and deadly.Then from the cloud's side flickeredSharp lightning, thrusting madlyAt the cowering fields.Thrice the fierce cloud lighten'd,Down the hill slow thunder trembled;Day in her cave grew frightened,Crept away, and died.
John Frederick Freeman
All That I Was I Am
Hateful it seems now, yet was I not happy?Starved of the things I loved, I did not knowI loved them, and was happy lacking them.If bitterness comes now (and that is hell)It is when I forget that I was happy,Accusing Fate, that sits and nods and laughs,Because I was not born a bird or tree.Let accusation sleep, lest God's own fingerPoint angry from the cloud in which He hides.Who may regret what was, since it has madeHimself himself? All that I was I am,And the old childish joy now lives in meAt sight of a green field or a green tree.
Cave Of Staffa
We saw, but surely, in the motley crowd,Not One of us has felt the far-famed sight;How 'could' we feel it? each the other's blight,Hurried and hurrying, volatile and loud.O for those motions only that inviteThe Ghost of Fingal to his tuneful CaveBy the breeze entered, and wave after waveSoftly embosoming the timid light!And by 'one' Votary who at will might standGazing and take into his mind and heart,With undistracted reverence, the effectOf those proportions where the almighty handThat made the worlds, the sovereign Architect,Has deigned to work as if with human Art!
Loveliness.
I.When I fare forth to kiss the eyes of Spring,On ways, which arch gold sunbeams and pearl budsEmbraced, two whispers we search - wanderingBy goblin forests and by girlish floodsDeep in the hermit-holy solitudes -For stalwart Dryads romping in a ring;Firm limbs an oak-bark-brown, and hair - wild woodsHave perfumed - loops of radiance; and they,Most coyly pleasant, as we linger by,Pout dimpled cheeks, more rose than rosiest sky,Honeyed; and us good-hearted laughter flingLike far-out reefs that flute melodious spray.II.Then we surprise each Naiad ere she slips -Nude at her toilette - in her fountain's glass,With damp locks dewy, and large godlike hipsCool-glittering; but discovered, when - alas!From green, inde...
Madison Julius Cawein
September 1, 1802
We had a female Passenger who cameFrom Calais with us, spotless in array,A white-robed Negro, like a lady gay,Yet downcast as a woman fearing blame;Meek, destitute, as seemed, of hope or aimShe sate, from notice turning not away,But on all proffered intercourse did layA weight of languid speech, or to the sameNo sign of answer made by word or face:Yet still her eyes retained their tropic fire,That, burning independent of the mind,Joined with the lustre of her rich attireTo mock the Outcast. O ye Heavens, be kind!And feel, thou Earth, for this afflicted Race!
Summer Schemes
When friendly summer calls again,Calls againHer little fifers to these hills,We'll go we two to that arched faneOf leafage where they prime their billsBefore they start to flood the plainWith quavers, minims, shakes, and trills." We'll go," I sing; but who shall sayWhat may not chance before that day!And we shall see the waters spring,Waters springFrom chinks the scrubby copses crown;And we shall trace their oncreepingTo where the cascade tumbles downAnd sends the bobbing growths aswing,And ferns not quite but almost drown." We shall," I say; but who may singOf what another moon will bring!
Thomas Hardy
The Native Country
Where is that country? The unresting mindLike a lapwing nears and leaves it and returns.I know those unknown hill-springs where they rise,I know the answer of the elms to the windWhen the wind on their heaving bosom liesAnd sleeps. I know the grouping pines that crownThe long green hill and fling their darkness down,A never-dying shadow; and well I knowHow in the late months the whole wide woodland burnsUnsmoking, and the earth hangs still as still.I know the town, the hamlets and the loneShelterless cottage where the wind's least toneIs magnified, and his far-flung thundering shoutBrings near the incredible end of the world. I know!Even in sleep-walk I should linger aboutThose lanes, those streets sure-footed, and by the unfenced stream go,Hea...