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Easter
I have met them at close of dayComing with vivid facesFrom counter or desk among greyEighteenth-century houses.I have passed with a nod of the headOr polite meaningless words,Or have lingered awhile and saidPolite meaningless words,And thought before I had doneOf a mocking tale or a gibeTo please a companionAround the fire at the club,Being certain that they and IBut lived where motley is worn:All changed, changed utterly:A terrible beauty is born.That woman's days were spentIn ignorant good-will,Her nights in argumentUntil her voice grew shrill.What voice more sweet than hersWhen, young and beautiful,She rode to harriers?This man had kept a schoolAnd rode our winged horse;This other h...
William Butler Yeats
Story of Lilavanti
They lay the slender body down With all its wealth of wetted hair,Only a daughter of the town, But very young and slight and fair.The eyes, whose light one cannot see, Are sombre doubtless, like the tresses,The mouth's soft curvings seem to be A roseate series of caresses.And where the skin has all but dried (The air is sultry in the room)Upon her breast and either side, It shows a soft and amber bloom.By women here, who knew her life, A leper husband, I am told,Took all this loveliness to wife When it was barely ten years old.And when the child in shocked dismay Fled from the hated husband's careHe caught and tied her, so they say, Down to his bedside by her hair.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
What Shall We Do?
Here now forevermore our lives must part. My path leads there, and yours another way. What shall we do with this fond love, dear heart? It grows a heavier burden day by day. Hide it? In all earth's caverns, void and vast, There is not room enough to hide it, dear; Not even the mighty storehouse of the past Could cover it from our own eyes, I fear. Drown it? Why, were the contents of each ocean Merged into one great sea, too shallow then Would be its waters to sink this emotion So deep it could not rise to life again. Burn it? In all the furnace flames below, It would not in a thousand years expire. Nay! it would thrive, exult, expand, and grow, For from...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
In Time Of Sorrow
Despair is in the suns that shine, And in the rains that fall,This sad forsaken soul of mine Is weary of them all.They fall and shine on alien streets From those I love and know.I cannot hear amid the heats The North Sea's freshening flowThe people hurry up and down, Like ghosts that cannot lie;And wandering through the phantom town The weariest ghost am I.
Robert Fuller Murray
He Called Her In
IHe called her in from me and shut the door.And she so loved the sunshine and the sky! -She loved them even better yet than IThat ne'er knew dearth of them - my mother dead,Nature had nursed me in her lap instead:And I had grown a dark and eerie childThat rarely smiled,Save when, shut all alone in grasses high,Looking straight up in God's great lonesome skyAnd coaxing Mother to smile back on me.'Twas lying thus, this fair girl suddenlyCame to me, nestled in the fields besideA pleasant-seeming home, with doorway wide -The sunshine beating in upon the floorLike golden rain. -O sweet, sweet face above me, turn againAnd leave me! I had cried, but that an acheWithin my throat so gripped it I could makeNo sound but a thi...
James Whitcomb Riley
To Mary.
1.Rack'd by the flames of jealous rage,By all her torments deeply curst,Of hell-born passions far the worst,What hope my pangs can now assuage?2.I tore me from thy circling arms,To madness fir'd by doubts and fears,Heedless of thy suspicious tears,Nor feeling for thy feign'd alarms.3.Resigning every thought of bliss,Forever, from your love I go,Reckless of all the tears that flow,Disdaining thy polluted kiss.4.No more that bosom heaves for me,On it another seeks repose,Another riot's on its snows,Our bonds are broken, both are free.5.No more with mutual love we burn,No more the genial couch we bless,Dissolving in the fond caress;Our love o'erth...
George Gordon Byron
Sonnet CCXIV.
In dubbio di mio stato, or piango, or canto.TO HIS LONGING TO SEE HER AGAIN IS NOW ADDED THE FEAR OF SEEING HER NO MORE. Uncertain of my state, I weep and sing,I hope and tremble, and with rhymes and sighsI ease my load, while Love his utmost triesHow worse my sore afflicted heart to sting.Will her sweet seraph face again e'er bringTheir former light to these despairing eyes.(What to expect, alas! or how advise)Or must eternal grief my bosom wring?For heaven, which justly it deserves to win,It cares not what on earth may be their fate,Whose sun it was, where centred their sole gaze.Such terror, so perpetual warfare in,Changed from my former self, I live of lateAs one who midway doubts, and fears and strays.MACG...
Francesco Petrarca
A Wife And Another
"War ends, and he's returningEarly; yea,The evening next to-morrow's!" -- This I sayTo her, whom I suspiciously survey,Holding my husband's letterTo her view. -She glanced at it but lightly,And I knewThat one from him that day had reached her too.There was no time for scruple;SecretlyI filched her missive, conned it,Learnt that heWould lodge with her ere he came home to me.To reach the port before her,And, unscanned,There wait to intercept themSoon I planned:That, in her stead, I might before him stand.So purposed, so effected;At the innAssigned, I found her hidden:-O that sinShould bear what she bore when I entered in!Her heavy lids grew ladenWith ...
Thomas Hardy
Lines.
Day gradual fades, in evening gray,Its last faint beam hath fled,And sinks the sun's declining rayIn ocean's wavy bed.So o'er the loves and joys of youthThy waves, Indifference, roll;So mantles round our days of truthThat death-pool of the soul.Spreads o'er the heavens the shadowy nightHer dim and shapeless form,So human pleasures, frail and light,Are lost in passion's storm.So fades the sunshine of the breast,So passion's dreamings fall,So friendship's fervours sink to rest,Oblivion shrouds them all.
Joseph Rodman Drake
A Happy New Year
11.30 P.M., DEC. 31Friend, when the year is on the wing,'Tis held a fair and comely thingTo turn reflective glancesOver the days' forbidden Scroll,See if we're better on the whole,And average our chances.Yet 'tis an awful thing to dragEach separate deed from out the bagThat up till now has hidden 't,And bring before the shuddering viewAll that we swore we wouldn't do,Or should have done, but didn't.The broken code, the baffled lawsOur little private faults and flaws,And every naughty habit,Come whistling through the Waste of Life,Until one longs to take a knife,Feel for his heart, and stab it.Unchanged, exultant, one and allRise up spontaneous to the call,And bring their stings behind ...
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
Matty's Reason.
"Nah, Matty! what meeans all this fuss?Tha'rt as back'ard as back'ard can be;Ther must be some reason, becossIt used to be diff'rent wi' thee.Aw've nooaticed, 'at allus befoorIf aw kussed thi, tha smiled an lukt fain;Ther's summat nooan reight, lass, aw'm sewer,Tha seems i' soa gloomy a vein.If tha's met wi' a hansomer chap,Aw'm sewer aw'll net stand i' thi way;But tha mud get a war, lass, bi th' swap, -If tha'rt anxious aw'll nivver say nay.But tha knows 'at for monny a wickAw've been savin mi brass to get wed;An aw'd meant thee gooin wi' me to pickAght some chairs an a table an bed.Aw offer'd mi hand an mi heart;An tha seemed to be fain to ha booath;But if its thi wish we should part,To beg on thi, na...
John Hartley
Life's Burying-Ground.
My graveyard holds no once-loved human forms,Grown hideous and forgotten, left alone,But every agony my heart has known, -The new-born trusts that died, the drift of storms.I visit every day the shadowy grove;I bury there my outraged tender thought;I bring the insult for the love I sought,And my contempt, where I had tried to love.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
A Song. In Vain You Tell Your Parting Lover
In vain you tell your parting loverYou wish fair winds may waft him overAlas! what winds can happy proveThat bear me far from what I love?Alas! what dangers on the mainCan equal those that I sustainFrom slighted vows and cold disdain?Be gentle, and in pity chooseTo wish the wildest tempests loose,That thrown again upon the coastWhere first my shipwreck'd heart was lost,I may once more repeat my pain,Once more in dying notes complainOf slighted vows and cold disdain.
Matthew Prior
Love's Burial.
Let us clear a little space,And make Love a burial place.He is dead, dear, as you see,And he wearies you and me,Growing heavier, day by day,Let us bury him, I say.Wings of dead white butterflies,These shall shroud him, as he liesIn his casket rich and rare,Made of finest maiden-hair.With the pollen of the roseLet us his white eye-lids close.Put the rose thorn in his hand,Shorn of leaves - you understand.Let some holy water fallOn his dead face, tears of gall -As we kneel by him and say,"Dreams to dreams," and turn away.Those grave diggers, Doubt, Distrust,They will lower him to the dust.Let us part here with a kiss,You go that way, I go this.Si...
Sursum Corda
Weary hearts! weary hearts! by the cares of life oppressed,Ye are wand'ring in the shadows -- ye are sighing for a rest:There is darkness in the heavens, and the earth is bleak below,And the joys we taste to-day may to-morrow turn to woe. Weary hearts! God is Rest.Lonely hearts! lonely hearts! this is but a land of grief;Ye are pining for repose -- ye are longing for relief:What the world hath never given, kneel and ask of God above,And your grief shall turn to gladness, if you lean upon His love. Lonely hearts! God is Love.Restless hearts! restless hearts! ye are toiling night and day,And the flowers of life, all withered, leave but thorns along your way:Ye are waiting, ye are waiting, till your toilings all shall cease,And you...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Excuse
I too have sufferd: yet I knowShe is not cold, though she seems so:She is not cold, she is not light;But our ignoble souls lack might.She smiles and smiles, and will not sigh,While we for hopeless passion die;Yet she could love, those eyes declare,Were but men nobler than they are.Eagerly once her gracious kenWas turnd upon the sons of men.But light the serious visage grew,She lookd, and smiled, and saw them through.Our petty souls, our strutting wits,Our labourd puny passion-fits,Ah, may she scorn them still, till weScorn them as bitterly as she!Yet oh, that Fate would let her seeOne of some worthier race than we;One for whose sake she once might proveHow deeply she who scorns can love....
Matthew Arnold
At Twilight Time
At twilight time when tolls the chime, And saddest notes are falling,A lonely bird with plaintive word Across the dusk is calling.Vain doth it wait for one dear mate, That ne'er shall know the morrow;Then sinks to rest with drooping crest In one long dream of sorrow.Dearest, when night is here, To thee I'm calling,Sadly as tear on tear Is slowly falling,Oh, fold me near, more near - In love enthralling!Here on thy breast, While life shall last,With thee I stay. Here will I restTill night is past, And comes the day!
Arthur Macy
Scene In Gethsemane.
The moon was shining yet. The Orient's brow,Set with the morning star, was not yet dim;And the deep silence which subdues the breathLike a strong feeling, hung upon the worldAs sleep upon the pulses of a child.'Twas the last watch of night. Gethsemane,With its bath'd leaves of silver, seem'd dissolv'dIn visible stillness, and as Jesus' voiceWith its bewildering sweetness met the earOf his disciples, it vibrated onLike the first whisper in a silent world.They came on slowly. Heaviness oppress'dThe Saviour's heart, and when the kindnessesOf his deep love were pour'd, he felt the needOf near communion, for his gift of strengthWas wasted by the spirit's weariness.He left them there, and went a little on,And in the depth of that hush'd silentn...
Nathaniel Parker Willis