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Fishers Of Men
Long, long ago He said,He who could wake the dead, And walk upon the sea-- "Come, follow Me."Leave your brown nets and bringOnly your hearts to sing, Only your souls to pray, Rise, come away."Shake out your spirit-sails,And brave those wilder gales, And I will make you then Fishers of men."Was this, then, what He meant?Was this His high intent, After two thousand years Of blood and tears?God help us, if we fightFor right, and not for might. God help us if we seek To shield the weak.Then, though His heaven be farFrom this blind welter of war, He'll bless us, on the sea From Calvary.
Alfred Noyes
To The Lady Fleming
On Seeing The Foundation Preparing For The Erection Of Rydal Chapel, Westmoreland.IBlest is this Isle, our native Land;Where battlement and moated gateAre objects only for the handOf hoary Time to decorate;Where shady hamlet, town that breathesIts busy smoke in social wreaths,No rampart's stern defense require,Nought but the heaven-directed spire,And steeple tower (with pealing bellsFar-heard) our only citadels.IIO Lady! from a noble lineOf chieftains sprung, who stoutly boreThe spear, yet gave to works divineA bounteous help in days of yore,(As records mouldering in the DellOf Nightshade haply yet may tell;)Thee kindred aspirations movedTo build, within a vale beloved,For Him upon who...
William Wordsworth
Pericles
Well and wisely said the Greek,Be thou faithful, but not fond;To the altar's foot thy fellow seek,--The Furies wait beyond.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Angels of Sunderland. In Memoriam, June 16th, 1893.
On the sixteenth of June, eighteen eighty-three,The children of Sunderland hastened to see,Strange wonders performed by a mystic man,Believing, - as only young children can.And merry groups chattered, as hand in hand,They careered through the streets of Sunderland.In holiday dress, and with faces clean,And hearts as light as the lightest, I ween; -The hall was soon crowded, and wondering eyes,Expressed their delight at each fresh surprise;The sight of their bright, eager faces was grand, -Such a mass of fair blossoms of Sunderland.With wonder and laughter the moments fly,And the wizard at last bade them all good-bye,But not till he promised that each one there,In his magical fortune should have a share; -Such a wonderful man with su...
John Hartley
Two Sermons.
Between the rail of woven brass,That hides the "Strangers' Pew,"I hear the gray-haired vicar passFrom Section One to Two.And somewhere on my left I see--Whene'er I chance to look--A soft-eyed, girl St. Cecily,Who notes them--in a book.Ah, worthy GOODMAN,--sound divine!Shall I your wrath incur,If I admit these thoughts of mineWill sometimes stray--to her?I know your theme, and I revere;I hear your precepts tried;Must I confess I also hearA sermon at my side?Or how explain this need I feel,--This impulse prompting meWithin my secret self to kneelTo Faith,--to Purity!
Henry Austin Dobson
At Bologna, In Remembrance Of The Late Insurrections, 1837 - II - Continued - Hard Task! Exclaim The Undisciplined, To Lean
Hard task! exclaim the undisciplined, to leanOn Patience coupled with such slow endeavour,That long-lived servitude must last for ever.Perish the groveling few, who, prest betweenWrongs and the terror of redress, would weanMillions from glorious aims. Our chains to severLet us break forth in tempest now or never!What, is there then no space for golden meanAnd gradual progress? Twilight leads to day,And, even within the burning zones of earth,The hastiest sunrise yields a temperate ray;The softest breeze to fairest flowers gives birth:Think not that Prudence dwells in dark abodes,She scans the future with the eye of gods.
Great Spirits Supervive.
Our mortal parts may wrapp'd in sear-cloths lie:Great spirits never with their bodies die.
Robert Herrick
Mountain Pictures
I. Franconia from the PemigewassetOnce more, O Mountains of the North, unveilYour brows, and lay your cloudy mantles byAnd once more, ere the eyes that seek ye fail,Uplift against the blue walls of the skyYour mighty shapes, and let the sunshine weaveIts golden net-work in your belting woods,Smile down in rainbows from your falling floods,And on your kingly brows at morn and eveSet crowns of fire! So shall my soul receiveHaply the secret of your calm and strength,Your unforgotten beauty interfuseMy common life, your glorious shapes and huesAnd sun-dropped splendors at my bidding come,Loom vast through dreams, and stretch in billowy lengthFrom the sea-level of my lowland home!They rise before me! Last nights thunder-gustRoared...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Inscription On A Fountain
For Dorothea L. Dix.Stranger and traveller,Drink freely and bestowA kindly thought on herWho bade this fountain flow,Yet hath no other claimThan as the ministerOf blessing in God's name.Drink, and in His peace g
A Childs Future
What will it please you, my darling, hereafter to be?Fame upon land will you look for, or glory by sea?Gallant your life will be always, and all of it free.Free as the wind when the heart of the twilight is stirredEastward, and sounds from the springs of the sunrise are heard:Free, and we know not another as infinite word.Darkness or twilight or sunlight may compass us round,Hate may arise up against us, or hope may confound;Love may forsake us; yet may not the spirit be bound.Free in oppression of grief as in ardour of joyStill may the soul be, and each to her strength as a toy:Free in the glance of the man as the smile of the boy.Freedom alone is the salt and the spirit that givesLife, and without her is nothing that verily lives:...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Letter to Sainte-Beuve
On the old oak benches, more shiny and polishedthan links of a chain that were, each day, burnishedrubbed by our human flesh, we, still un-bearded,trailed our ennui, hunched, round-shouldered,under the four-square heaven of solitude,where a child drinks studys tart ten-year brew.It was in those days, outstanding and memorable,when the teachers, forced to loosen our classicalfetters, yet all still hostile to your rhyming,succumbed to the pressure of our mad duelling,and allowed a triumphant, mutinous, pupilto make Triboulet howl in Latin, at will.Which of us in those days of pale adolescencedidnt share the weary torpor of confinement,eyes lost in the dreary blue of a summer skyor the snowfalls whiteness, we were dazzled by,ears pricked, eager...
Charles Baudelaire
The Pillar Of Trajan
Where towers are crushed, and unforbidden weedsO'er mutilated arches shed their seeds;And temples, doomed to milder change, unfoldA new magnificence that vies with old;Firm in its pristine majesty hath stoodA votive Column, spared by fire and flood:And, though the passions of man's fretful raceHave never ceased to eddy round its base,Not injured more by touch of meddling handsThan a lone obelisk, 'mid Nubian sands,Or aught in Syrian deserts left to saveFrom death the memory of the good and brave.Historic figures round the shaft embostAscend, with lineaments in air not lost:Still as he turns, the charmed spectator seesGroup winding after group with dream-like ease;Triumphs in sunbright gratitude displayed,Or softly stealing into modest sha...
Canzone XII.
Una donna più bella assai che 'l sole.GLORY AND VIRTUE. A lady, lovelier, brighter than the sun,Like him superior o'er all time and space,Of rare resistless grace,Me to her train in early life had won:She, from that hour, in act, and word and thought,--For still the world thus covets what is rare--In many ways though broughtBefore my search, was still the same coy fair:For her alone my plans, from what they were,Grew changed, since nearer subject to her eyes;Her love alone could spurMy young ambition to each hard emprize:So, if in long-wish'd port I e'er arrive,I hope, for aye through her,When others deem me dead, in honour to survive.Full of first hope, burning with youthful love,She, at her will, ...
Francesco Petrarca
On Mr Howard's Account Of Lazarettos
Mortal! who, armed with holy fortitude,The path of good right onward hast pursued;May HE, to whose eternal throne on highThe sufferers of the earth with anguish cry,Be thy protector! On that dreary roadThat leads thee patient to the last abodeOf wretchedness, in peril and in pain,May HE thy steps direct, thy heart sustain!'Mid scenes, where pestilence in darkness flies;In caverns, where deserted misery lies;So safe beneath His shadow thou may'st go,To cheer the dismal wastes of human woe.O CHARITY! our helpless nature's pride,Thou friend to him who knows no friend beside,Is there in morning's breath, or the sweet galeThat steals o'er the tired pilgrim of the vale,Cheering with fragrance fresh his weary frame,Aught like the incense of thy ...
William Lisle Bowles
Charity
Bear and forbear, I counsel thee,Forgive and be forgiven,For Charity is the golden keyThat opens the gate of heaven.
Hanford Lennox Gordon
The Miracle
Up from the templed city of the Jews,The road ran straight and whiteTo Jericho, the City of the Palms,The City of Delight.Down that still road from far Judean hillsThe shepherds drove their sheepAt silver dawn - at stirring of the birds -When men were all asleep.Full many went that weary way at noon,Or rested by the trees,Romans and slaves, Gentiles and bearded priests,Sinners and Pharisees.But when the pink clouds drifted far and high,Like rose leaves blowing past,When in the west where one star blessed the skyThe gates of day shut fast.All travellers journeyed home, and the moonlightWashed the road fresh and sweet,Until it seemed a gleaming ivory path,Waiting for royal feet.* * * ...
Virna Sheard
The Invitation: To Tom Hughes
Come away with me, Tom,Term and talk are done;My poor lads are reaping,Busy every one.Curates mind the parish,Sweepers mind the court;We'll away to SnowdonFor our ten days' sport;Fish the August eveningTill the eve is past,Whoop like boys, at poundersFairly played and grassed.When they cease to dimple,Lunge, and swerve, and leap,Then up over Siabod,Choose our nest, and sleep.Up a thousand feet, Tom,Round the lion's head,Find soft stones to leewardAnd make up our bed.Eat our bread and bacon,Smoke the pipe of peace,And, ere we be drowsy,Give our boots a grease.Homer's heroes did so,Why not such as we?What are sheets and servants?Superfluity!Pray for wives and childrenSa...
Charles Kingsley
What The Voice Said
Maddened by Earth's wrong and evil,"Lord!" I cried in sudden ire,"From Thy right hand, clothed with thunder,Shake the bolted fire!"Love is lost, and Faith is dying;With the brute the man is sold;And the dropping blood of laborHardens into gold."Here the dying wail of Famine,There the battle's groan of pain;And, in silence, smooth-faced MammonReaping men like grain."'Where is God, that we should fear Him?'Thus the earth-born Titans say'God! if Thou art living, hear us!'Thus the weak ones pray.""Thou, the patient Heaven upbraiding,"Spake a solemn Voice within;"Weary of our Lord's forbearance,Art thou free from sin?"Fearless brow to Him uplifting,Canst thou for His thunders call,Kno...