Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 67 of 189
Previous
Next
Regrets
As, when the seaward ebbing tide doth pour Out by the low sand spaces,The parting waves slip back to clasp the shore With lingering embraces,--So in the tide of life that carries me From where thy true heart dwells,Waves of my thoughts and memories turn to thee With lessening farewells;Waving of hands; dreams, when the day forgets; A care half lost in cares;The saddest of my verses; dim regrets; Thy name among my prayers.I would the day might come, so waited for, So patiently besought,When I, returning, should fill up once more Thy desolated thought;And fill thy loneliness that lies apart In still, persistent pain.Shall I content thee, O thou broken heart, As the tide comes...
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXVI.
Soleasi nel mio cor star bella e viva.SINCE HER DEATH, NOTHING IS LEFT TO HIM BUT GRIEF. She stood within my heart, warm, young, alone,As in a humble home a lady bright;By her last flight not merely am I grownMortal, but dead, and she an angel quite.A soul whence every bliss and hope is flown,Love shorn and naked of its own glad light,Might melt with pity e'en a heart of stone:But none there is to tell their grief or write;These plead within, where deaf is every earExcept mine own, whose power its griefs so marThat nought is left me save to suffer here.Verily we but dust and shadows are!Verily blind and evil is our will!Verily human hopes deceive us still!MACGREGOR. 'Mid life's bright glow ...
Francesco Petrarca
To ----
What recks the sun, how weep the heavy flowers All the sad night, when he is far away?What recks he, how they mourn, through those dark hours, Till back again he leads the smiling day?As lifts each watery bloom its tearful eye, And blesses from its lowly seat, the god,In his great glory he goes through the sky, And recks not of the blessing from the sod.And what is it to thee, oh, thou, my fate! That all my hope, and joy, remains with thee?That thy departing, leaves me desolate, That thy returning, brings back life to me?I blame not thee, for all the strife, and woe, That for thy sake daily disturbs my life;I blame not thee, that Heaven has made me so, That all the love I can, is woe, and strife.I...
Frances Anne Kemble
She Is Far From The Land.
She is far from the land where her young hero sleeps, And lovers are round her, sighing:But coldly she turns from their gaze, and weeps, For her heart in his grave is lying.She sings the wild song of her dear native plains, Every note which he loved awaking;--Ah! little they think who delight in her strains, How the heart of the Minstrel is breaking.He had lived for his love, for his country he died, They were all that to life had entwined him;Nor soon shall the tears of his country be dried, Nor long will his love stay behind him.Oh! make her a grave where the sunbeams rest, When they promise a glorious morrow;They'll shine o'er her sleep, like a smile from the West, From her own loved island of sorrow.
Thomas Moore
J. H. On The Death Of His Wife.
Oh, when I found that Death had setHis awful stamp on thee,Deserted on Life's stormy shore,I thought that Time could have in storeNot one more shaft for me.Long I had watched thy lingering bloomThat brightened 'mid decay;And then its eloquent appealWould ask my heart if death could stealSuch loveliness away.And oh! could pure unsullied worthOr peerless beauty save,We had not stood as mourners here,And shed the unavailing tearO'er thy untimely grave.But we have seen thee lowly laid,And I am here alone;Each morn I shuddering wake to feelThe consciousness around me steal,That all my hopes are flown.All, did I say? Ingrate indeed!Oh, be the thought forgiven;Has he not hopes and inte...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
Till The End.
I should not dare to leave my friend,Because -- because if he should dieWhile I was gone, and I -- too late --Should reach the heart that wanted me;If I should disappoint the eyesThat hunted, hunted so, to see,And could not bear to shut untilThey "noticed" me -- they noticed me;If I should stab the patient faithSo sure I 'd come -- so sure I 'd come,It listening, listening, went to sleepTelling my tardy name, --My heart would wish it broke before,Since breaking then, since breaking then,Were useless as next morning's sun,Where midnight frosts had lain!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Stanzas. (Translations From The Hebrew Poets Of Medaeval Spain.)
"With tears thy grief thou dost bemoan,Tears that would melt the hardest stone,Oh, wherefore sing'st thou not the vine?Why chant'st thou not the praise of wine?It chases pain with cunning art,The craven slinks from out thy heart."But I: Poor fools the wine may cheat,Lull them with lying visions sweet.Upon the wings of storms may bearThe heavy burden of their care.The father's heart may harden so,He feeleth not his own child's woe.No ocean is the cup, no sea,To drown my broad, deep misery.It grows so rank, you cut it all,The aftermath springs just as tall.My heart and flesh are worn away,Mine eyes are darkened from the day.The lovely morning-red beholdWave to the breeze her flag of gold.
Emma Lazarus
The Dead
How shall the living be comforted for the deadWhen they are gone, and nothing's left behindBut a vague music of the words they saidAnd a fast-fading image in the mind?Let no forgetting sully that dim grace;Our heart's infirmity is too easily wonTo set a new love in the old love's placeAnd seek fresh vanity under the sun.Time brings to us at last, as night the stars,The starry silence of eternity:For there is no discharge in our long wars,Nor balm for wounds, nor love's security.Be patient to the end, and you shall sleepPillowed on heartsease and forget to weep.
William Kerr
Lament VI
Dear little Slavic Sappho, we had thought,Hearing thy songs so sweetly, deftly wrought,That thou shouldst have an heritage one dayBeyond thy father's lands: his lute to play.For not an hour of daylight's joyous roundBut thou didst fill it full of lovely sound,Just as the nightingale doth scatter pleasureUpon the dark, in glad unstinted measure.Then Death came stalking near thee, timid thing,And thou in sudden terror tookest wing.Ah, that delight, it was not overlongAnd I pay dear with sorrow for brief song.Thou still wert singing when thou cam'st to die;Kissing thy mother, thus thou saidst good-bye: "My mother, I shall serve thee now no moreNor sit about thy table's charming store;I must lay down my keys to go from here,To leave th...
Jan Kochanowski
In Autumn
The leaves are many under my feet, And drift one way.Their scent of death is weary and sweet. A flight of them is in the greyWhere sky and forest meet.The low winds moan for dead sweet years; The birds sing all for pain,Of a common thing, to weary ears,-- Only a summer's fate of rain,And a woman's fate of tears.I walk to love and life alone Over these mournful places,Across the summer overthrown, The dead joys of these silent faces,To claim my own.I know his heart has beat to bright Sweet loves gone by.I know the leaves that die to-night Once budded to the sky,And I shall die from his delight.O leaves, so quietly ending now, You have heard cuckoos sing.And I ...
Oh My Heart Is Sad And Weary
'Oh my heart is sad and weary Everywhere I roam, Longing for the old plantation And for the old folks at home.'
Louisa May Alcott
When The Sad Word. By Paul, The Silentiary.
When the sad word, "Adieu," from my lip is nigh falling, And with it, Hope passes away,Ere the tongue hath half breathed it, my fond heart recalling That fatal farewell, bids me stay,For oh! 'tis a penance so weary One hour from thy presence to be,That death to this soul were less dreary, Less dark than long absence from thee.Thy beauty, like Day, o'er the dull world breaking. Brings life to the heart it shines o'er,And, in mine, a new feeling of happiness waking, Made light what was darkness before.But mute is the Day's sunny glory,While thine hath a voice, on whose breath, More sweet than the Syren's sweet story,My hopes hang, through life and through death!
Memories
They come, as the breeze comes over the foam,Waking the waves that are sinking to sleep --The fairest of memories from far-away home,The dim dreams of faces beyond the dark deep.They come as the stars come out in the sky,That shimmer wherever the shadows may sweep,And their steps are as soft as the sound of a sighAnd I welcome them all while I wearily weep.They come as a song comes out of the pastA loved mother murmured in days that are dead,Whose tones spirit-thrilling live on to the last,When the gloom of the heart wraps its gray o'er the head.They come like the ghosts from the grass shrouded graves,And they follow our footsteps on life's winding way;And they murmur around us as murmur the wavesThat sigh on the shore at the dying ...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Wistful Lady
'Love, while you were away there came to me - From whence I cannot tell -A plaintive lady pale and passionless,Who bent her eyes upon me critically,And weighed me with a wearing wistfulness, As if she knew me well.""I saw no lady of that wistful sort As I came riding home.Perhaps she was some dame the Fates constrainBy memories sadder than she can support,Or by unhappy vacancy of brain, To leave her roof and roam?""Ah, but she knew me. And before this time I have seen her, lending earTo my light outdoor words, and pondering each,Her frail white finger swayed in pantomime,As if she fain would close with me in speech, And yet would not come near."And once I saw her beckoning with her hand A...
Thomas Hardy
On The Rhine
Vain is the effort to forget.Some day I shall be cold, I know,As is the eternal moon-lit snowOf the high Alps, to which I go:But ah, not yet! not yet!Vain is the agony of grief.Tis true, indeed, an iron knotTies straitly up from mine thy lot,And were it snapt, thou lovst me not!But is despair relief?Awhile let me with thought have done;And as this brimmd unwrinkled RhineAnd that far purple mountain lineLie sweetly in the look divineOf the slow-sinking sun;So let me lie, and calm as theyLet beam upon my inward viewThose eyes of deep, soft, lucent hue,Eyes too expressive to be blue,Too lovely to be grey.Ah Quiet, all things feel thy balm!Those blue hills too, this rivers flow,Were re...
Matthew Arnold
By A Blest Husband Guided, Mary Came
By a blest Husband guided, Mary cameFrom nearest kindred, Vernon her new name;She came, though meek of soul, in seemly prideOf happiness and hope, a youthful Bride.O dread reverse! if aught 'be' so, which provesThat God will chasten whom he dearly loves.Faith bore her up through pains in mercy given,And troubles that were each a step to Heaven:Two Babes were laid in earth before she died;A third now slumbers at the Mother's side;Its Sister-twin survives, whose smiles affordA trembling solace to her widowed Lord.Reader! if to thy bosom cling the painOf recent sorrow combated in vain;Or if thy cherished grief have failed to thwartTime still intent on his insidious part,Lulling the mourner's best good thoughts asleep,Pilfering regrets ...
William Wordsworth
Friendship.
ON A SUN-PORTRAIT OF HER HUSBAND, SENT BY HIS WIFE TO THEIR FRIEND.Beautiful eyes, - and shall I see no moreThe living thought when it would leap from them,And play in all its sweetness 'neath their lids?Here was a man familiar with fair heightsThat poets climb. Upon his peace the tearsAnd troubles of our race deep inroads made,Yet life was sweet to him; he kept his heartAt home. Who saw his wife might well have thought, -"God loves this man. He chose a wife for him, -The true one!" O sweet eyes, that seem to live,I know so much of you, tell me the rest!Eyes full of fatherhood and tender careFor small, young children. Is a message hereThat you would fain have sent, but had not time?If such there be, I promise, by long loveAnd perfec...
Jean Ingelow
The Death Of Autumn.
Discrowned and desolate,And wandering with dim eyes and faded hair,Singing sad songs to comfort her despair, Grey Autumn meets her fate. Forsaken and aloneShe haunts the ruins of her queenly state,Like banished Eve at Eden's flaming gate, Making perpetual moan. Crazed with her grief she movesAlong the banks of the frost-charmed rills,And all the hollows of the wooded hills, Searching for her lost loves. From verdurous base to cope,The sunny hill-sides, and sweet pasture lands,Where bubbling brooks reach ever-dimpled hands Along the amber slope,-- And valleys drowsed between,In the ...
Kate Seymour Maclean