Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 677 of 739
Previous
Next
Anacreontic
Let us, my Friends, our mirth forbear,While yonder Censor mounts the chair:His form erect, his stately pace,His huge, white wig, his solemn face,His scowling brows, his ken severe,His haughty pleasure-chiding sneer,Some high Philosopher declare:Hush! let us hear him from the chair:'Ye giddy youths! I hate your mirth;How ill-beseeming sons of earth!Know ye not well the fate of man?That death is certain, life a span?That merriment soon sinks in sorrow,Sunshine to-day, and clouds to-morrow?Hearken then, fools! to Reason's voice,That bids ye mourn, and not rejoice?'Such gloomy thoughts, grave Sage! are thine,Now, gentle Friends! attend to mine. Since mortals must die, Since life's but a span, ...
Thomas Oldham
The Happy Couple.
After these vernal rainsThat we so warmly sought,Dear wife, see how our plainsWith blessings sweet are fraught!We cast our distant gazeFar in the misty blue;Here gentle love still strays,Here dwells still rapture true.Thou seest whither goYon pair of pigeons white,Where swelling violets blowRound sunny foliage bright.'Twas there we gather'd firstA nosegay as we roved;There into flame first burstThe passion that we proved.Yet when, with plighted troth,The priest beheld us fareHome from the altar both,With many a youthful pair,Then other moons had birth,And many a beauteous sun,Then we had gain'd the earthWhereon life's ra...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Dawn.
I cannot echo the old wish to die at morn, as darkness strays! We have been glad together greeting some new-born radiant days, The earth would hold me, every day familiar things Would weigh me fast, The stir, the touch of morn, the bird that on swift wings Goes flitting past. Some flower would lift to me its tender tear-wet face, and send its breath To whisper of the earth, its beauty and its grace, And combat death. It would be light, and I would see in thy dear eyes The sorrow grow. Love, could I lift my own, undimmed, to paradise And leave thee so! A thousand cords would hold me down to this low sphere, When thou didst grieve; Ah! should death come upo...
Jean Blewett
Death.
Death! that struck when I was most confiding.In my certain faith of joy to be,Strike again, Time's withered branch dividingFrom the fresh root of Eternity!Leaves, upon Time's branch, were growing brightly,Full of sap, and full of silver dew;Birds beneath its shelter gathered nightly;Daily round its flowers the wild bees flew.Sorrow passed, and plucked the golden blossom;Guilt stripped off the foliage in its prideBut, within its parent's kindly bosom,Flowed for ever Life's restoring tide.Little mourned I for the parted gladness,For the vacant nest and silent song,Hope was there, and laughed me out of sadness;Whispering, "Winter will not linger long!"And, behold! with tenfold increase blessing,Spring adorned the beau...
Emily Bronte
Ballad Of Launcelot And Elaine
It was a hermit on Whitsunday That came to the Table Round. "King Arthur, wit ye by what Knight May the Holy Grail be found?" "By never a Knight that liveth now; By none that feasteth here." King Arthur marvelled when he said, "He shall be got this year." Then uprose brave Sir Launcelot And there did mount his steed, And hastened to a pleasant town That stood in knightly need. Where many people him acclaimed, He passed the Corbin pounte, And there he saw a fairer tower Than ever was his wont. And in that tower for many years A dolorous lady lay, Whom Queen Northgalis had bewitched, And also Queen le Fay. And Launcelot loosed her...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Secret.
Some things that fly there be, --Birds, hours, the bumble-bee:Of these no elegy.Some things that stay there be, --Grief, hills, eternity:Nor this behooveth me.There are, that resting, rise.Can I expound the skies?How still the riddle lies!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Melancholy.
Daughter of my nobler hope That dying gave thee birth, Sweet Melancholy! For memory of the dead, In her dear stead, 'Bide thou with me, Sweet Melancholy!As purple shadows to the tree,When the last sun-rays sadly slopeAthwart the bare and darkening earth, Art thou to me, Sweet Melancholy!
George Parsons Lathrop
Palestine
Old plant of Asia -Mutilated vineHolding earth's leaping sapIn every stem and shootThat lopped off, sprouts again -Why should you seek a plateau walled about,Whose garden is the world?
Lola Ridge
Burns
On receiving a sprig of heather in blossom.No more these simple flowers belongTo Scottish maid and lover;Sown in the common soil of song,They bloom the wide world over.In smiles and tears, in sun and showers,The minstrel and the heather,The deathless singer and the flowersHe sang of live together.Wild heather-bells and Robert BurnsThe moorland flower and peasant!How, at their mention, memory turnsHer pages old and pleasant!The gray sky wears again its goldAnd purple of adorning,And manhood's noonday shadows holdThe dews of boyhood's morning.The dews that washed the dust and soilFrom off the wings of pleasure,The sky, that flecked the, ground of toilWith golden threads of l...
John Greenleaf Whittier
To Anne. [1]
1Oh say not, sweet Anne, that the Fates have decreedThe heart which adores you should wish to dissever;Such Fates were to me most unkind ones indeed, -To bear me from Love and from Beauty for ever.2.Your frowns, lovely girl, are the Fates which aloneCould bid me from fond admiration refrain;By these, every hope, every wish were o'erthrown,Till smiles should restore me to rapture again.3.As the ivy and oak, in the forest entwin'd,The rage of the tempest united must weather;My love and my life were by nature design'dTo flourish alike, or to perish together.4.Then say not, sweet Anne, that the Fates have decreedYour lover should bid you a lasting adieu:Till Fate can ordain tha...
George Gordon Byron
To Greville Matheson Macdonald.
First, most, to thee, my son, I give this book In which a friend's and brother's verses blend With mine; for not son only--brother, friend,Art thou, through sonship which no veil can brookBetween the eyes that in each other look, Or any shadow 'twixt the hearts that tend Still nearer, with divine approach, to endIn love eternal that cannot be shook When all the shakable shall cease to be. With growing hope I greet the coming dayWhen from thy journey done I welcome theeWho sharest in the names of all the three, And take thee to the two, and humbly say, Let this man be the fourth with us, I pray.Casa Coraggio:May, 1883.
Casa Coraggio
Betrayal
She will not die, they say,She will but put her beauty by And hie away.Oh, but her beauty gone, how lonelyThen will seem all reverie, How black to me!All things will sad be madeAnd every hope a memory, All gladness dead.Ghosts of the past will knowMy weakest hour, and whisper to me, And coldly go.And hers in deep of sleep,Clothed in its mortal beauty I shall see, And, waking, weep.Naught will my mind then findIn man's false Heaven my peace to be: All blind, and blind.
Walter De La Mare
A Message to America
You have the grit and the guts, I know;You are ready to answer blow for blowYou are virile, combative, stubborn, hard,But your honor ends with your own back-yard;Each man intent on his private goal,You have no feeling for the whole;What singly none would tolerateYou let unpunished hit the state,Unmindful that each man must shareThe stain he lets his country wear,And (what no traveller ignores)That her good name is often yours.You are proud in the pride that feels its might;From your imaginary heightMen of another race or hueAre men of a lesser breed to you:The neighbor at your southern gateYou treat with the scorn that has bred his hate.To lend a spice to your disrespectYou call him the "greaser". But reflect!The g...
Alan Seeger
Her Praise
She is foremost of those that I would hear praised.I have gone about the house, gone up and downAs a man does who has published a new bookOr a young girl dressed out in her new gown,And though I have turned the talk by hook or crookUntil her praise should be the uppermost theme,A woman spoke of some new tale she had read,A man confusedly in a half dreamAs though some other name ran in his head.She is foremost of those that I would hear praised.I will talk no more of books or the long warBut walk by the dry thorn until I have foundSome beggar sheltering from the wind, and thereManage the talk until her name come round.If there be rags enough he will know her nameAnd be well pleased remembering it, for in the old days,Though she had young mens p...
William Butler Yeats
Rizpah
Said one who led the spears of swarthy Gad,To Jesses mighty son: My Lord, O King,I, halting hard by Gibeons bleak-blown hillThree nightfalls past, saw dark-eyed Rizpah, cladIn dripping sackcloth, pace with naked feetThe flinty rock where lie unburied yetThe sons of her and Saul; and he whose postOf watch is in those places desolate,Got up, and spake unto thy servant hereConcerning her yea, even unto me:Behold, he said, the woman seeks not rest,Nor fire, nor food, nor roof, nor any hauntWhere sojourns man; but rather on yon rockAbideth, like a wild thing, with the slain,And watcheth them, lest evil wing or pawShould light upon the comely faces dead,To spoil them of their beauty. Three long moonsHath Rizpah, daughter of Aiah, dwelt
Henry Kendall
Sonnet VI
Give me the treble of thy horns and hoofs,The ponderous undertones of 'bus and tram,A garret and a glimpse across the roofsOf clouds blown eastward over Notre Dame,The glad-eyed streets and radiant gatheringsWhere I drank deep the bliss of being young,The strife and sweet potential flux of thingsI sought Youth's dream of happiness among!It walks here aureoled with the city-light,Forever through the myriad-featured massFlaunting not far its fugitive embrace, -Heard sometimes in a song across the night,Caught in a perfume from the crowds that pass,And when love yields to love seen face to face.
The Last Chrysanthemum
Why should this flower delay so longTo show its tremulous plumes?Now is the time of plaintive robin-song,When flowers are in their tombs.Through the slow summer, when the sunCalled to each frond and whorlThat all he could for flowers was being done,Why did it not uncurl?It must have felt that fervid callAlthough it took no heed,Waking but now, when leaves like corpses fall,And saps all retrocede.Too late its beauty, lonely thing,The season's shine is spent,Nothing remains for it but shiveringIn tempests turbulent.Had it a reason for delay,Dreaming in witlessnessThat for a bloom so delicately gayWinter would stay its stress?- I talk as if the thing were bornWith sense to work its mind;<...
Thomas Hardy
Broken-Hearted.
"Cross my hands upon my breast,"Read her last behest."Turn my cheek upon the pillow,As resting from life's stormy billowWith sleep's fine zest!""Cross my hands upon my breast,"Read her last behest,"That the patient bones may lieIn form of thanks eternally,Grimly expressed!"We clasped her hands upon her breast:Oh mockery at misery's hest!We hid in flowers her body's grief, -Counting by many a rose and leafHer days unblessed!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop