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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
The Last Blossom
Though young no more, we still would dreamOf beauty's dear deluding wiles;The leagues of life to graybeards seemShorter than boyhood's lingering miles.Who knows a woman's wild caprice?'It played with Goethe's silvered hair,And many a Holy Father's "niece"Has softly smoothed the papal chair.When sixty bids us sigh in vainTo melt the heart of sweet sixteen,We think upon those ladies twainWho loved so well the tough old Dean.We see the Patriarch's wintry face,The maid of Egypt's dusky glow,And dream that Youth and Age embrace,As April violets fill with snow.Tranced in her lord's Olympian smileHis lotus-loving Memphian lies, -The musky daughter of the Nile,With plaited hair and almond eyes.Might...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Snowfall
"She can't be unhappy," you said,"The smiles are like stars in her eyes,And her laugh is thistledownAround her low replies.""Is she unhappy?" you said,But who has ever knownAnother's heartbreak,All he can know is his own;And she seems hushed to me,As hushed as thoughHer heart were a hunter's fireSmothered in snow.
Sara Teasdale
A Trampwoman's Tragedy
IFrom Wynyard's Gap the livelong day,The livelong day,We beat afoot the northward wayWe had travelled times before.The sun-blaze burning on our backs,Our shoulders sticking to our packs,By fosseway, fields, and turnpike tracksWe skirted sad Sedge-Moor.IIFull twenty miles we jaunted on,We jaunted on, -My fancy-man, and jeering John,And Mother Lee, and I.And, as the sun drew down to west,We climbed the toilsome Poldon crest,And saw, of landskip sights the best,The inn that beamed thereby.IIIFor months we had padded side by side,Ay, side by sideThrough the Great Forest, Blackmoor wide,And where the Parret ran.We'd faced the gusts on Mendip ridge,Had crossed the Yeo unhel...
Thomas Hardy
The Broken Field
My soul is a dark ploughed fieldIn the cold rain;My soul is a broken fieldPloughed by pain.Where grass and bending flowersWere growing,The field lies broken nowFor another sowing.Great Sower when you treadMy field again,Scatter the furrows thereWith better grain.
The Hour And The Ghost
BRIDEO love, love, hold me fast,He draws me away from thee;I cannot stem the blast,Nor the cold strong sea:Far away a light shinesBeyond the hills and pines;It is lit for me. BRIDEGROOMI have thee close, my dear,No terror can come near;Only far off the northern light shines clear. GHOSTCome with me, fair and false,To our home, come home.It is my voice that calls:Once thou wast not afraidWhen I woo'd, and said,'Come, our nest is newly made'--Now cross the tossing foam. BRIDEHold me one moment longer,He taunts me with the past,His clutch is waxing stronger,Hold me fast, hold me fast.He draws me from thy heart,And I cannot withhold:
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Villanelle
We said farewell, my youth and I,When all fair dreams were gone or going,And Loves red lips were cold and dry.When white blooms fell from tree-tops high,Our Austral winters way of snowing,We said farewell, my youth and I.We did not sigh, what use to sighWhen Death passed as a mower mowing,And Loves red lips were cold and dry?But hearing Lifes stream thunder by,That sang of old through flowers flowing,We said farewell, my youth and I.There was no hope in the blue sky,No music in the low winds blowing,And Loves red lips were cold and dry.My hair is black as yet, then whySo sad! I know not, only knowingWe said farewell, my youth and I.All are not buried when they die;Dead souls there are t...
Victor James Daley
Widow La Rue
IWhat will happen, Widow La Rue?For last night at three o'clockYou woke and saw by your window againAmid the shadowy locust groveThe phantom of the old soldier:A shadow of blue, like mercury light -What will happen, Widow La Rue? * * * * *What may not happenIn this place of summer loneliness?For neither the sunlight of July,Nor the blue of the lake,Nor the green boundaries of cool woodlands,Nor the song of larks and thrushes,Nor the bravuras of bobolinks,Nor scents of hay new mown,Nor the ox-blood sumach cones,Nor the snow of nodding yarrow,Nor clover blossoms on the dizzy crestOf the bluff by the lakeCan take away the lonelinessOf this July by the lake!
Edgar Lee Masters
To W. B. - From The Brake The Nightingale
From the brake the NightingaleSings exulting to the Rose;Though he sees her waxing paleIn her passionate repose,While she triumphs waxing frail,Fading even while she glows;Though he knowsHow it goes -Knows of last year's NightingaleDead with last year's Rose.Wise the enamoured Nightingale,Wise the well-beloved Rose!Love and life shall still prevail,Nor the silence at the closeBreak the magic of the taleIn the telling, though it shows -Who but knowsHow it goes! -Life a last year's Nightingale,Love a last year's Rose.
William Ernest Henley
From Faust. Dedication.
Ye shadowy forms, again ye're drawing near,So wont of yore to meet my troubled gaze!Were it in vain to seek to keep you here?Loves still my heart that dream of olden days?Oh, come then! and in pristine force appear,Parting the vapor mist that round me plays!My bosom finds its youthful strength again,Feeling the magic breeze that marks your train.Ye bring the forms of happy days of yore,And many a shadow loved attends you too;Like some old lay, whose dream was well nigh o'er,First-love appears again, and friendship true;Upon life's labyrinthine path once moreIs heard the sigh, and grief revives anew;The friends are told, who, in their hour of pride,Deceived by fortune, vanish'd from my side.No long...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Perdita
The sea coast of BohemiaIs pleasant to the viewWhen singing larks spring from the grassTo fade into the blue,And all the hawthorn hedges breakIn wreaths of purest snow,And yellow daffodils are out,And roses half in blow.The sea-coast of BohemiaIs sad as sad can be,The prince has taen our flower of maidsAcross the violet sea;Our Perdita has gone with him,No more we dance the roundUpon the green in joyous play,Or wake the tabors sound.The sea-coast of BohemiaHas many wonders seen,The shepherd lass wed with a king,The shepherd with a queen;But such a wonder as my loveWas never seen before,It is my joy and sorrow nowTo love her evermore.The sea-coast of BohemiaIs haunted by a...
James Hebblethwaite
Ex Tenebra.
Ex Tenebra. The winds have shower'd their rains upon the sod, And flowers and trees have murmur'd as with lips. The very silence has appeal'd to God. In man's behalf, though smitten by His rod, 'Twould seem as if the blight of some eclipse Had dull'd the skies, - as if, on mountain tips, The winds of Heaven had spurn'd the life terrene, And clouds were foundering like benighted ships. But what is this, exultant, unforseen, Which cleaves the dark? A fearful, burning thing! Is it the moon? Or Saturn's scarlet ring
Eric Mackay
New-Year's Eve
Good old days--dear old daysWhen my heart beat high and bold--When the things of earth seemed full of life,And the future a haze of gold!Oh, merry was I that winter night,And gleeful our little one's din,And tender the grace of my darling's faceAs we watched the new year in.But a voice--a spectre's, that mocked at love--Came out of the yonder hall;"Tick-tock, tick-tock!" 't was the solemn clockThat ruefully croaked to all.Yet what knew we of the griefs to beIn the year we longed to greet?Love--love was the theme of the sweet, sweet dreamI fancied might never fleet!But the spectre stood in that yonder gloom,And these were the words it spake,"Tick-tock, tick-tock"--and they seemed to mockA heart about to break....
Eugene Field
The Love Song Of Har Dyal
Alone upon the housetops to the NorthI turn and watch the lightnings in the sky,The glamour of thy footsteps in the North.Come back to me, Beloved, or I die.Below my feet the still bazar is laid,Far, far below the weary camels lie,The camels and the captives of thy raid.Come back to me, Beloved, or I die!My father's wife is old and harsh with years,And drudge of all my father's house am I,My bread is sorrow and my drink is tears.Come back to me, Beloved, or I die!
Rudyard
To .......
Sweet lady, look not thus again: Those bright, deluding smiles recallA maid remember'd now with pain, Who was my love, my life, my all!Oh! while this heart bewildered took Sweet poison from her thrilling eye,Thus would she smile and lisp and look, And I would hear and gaze and sigh!Yes, I did love her--wildly love-- She was her sex's best deceiver!And oft she swore she'd never rove-- And I was destined to believe her!Then, lady, do not wear the smile Of one whose smile could thus betray;Alas! I think the lovely wile Again could steal my heart away.For, when those spells that charmed my mind On lips so pure as thine I see,I fear the heart which she resigned Will err again an...
Thomas Moore
Seven Laments For The War-Dead
1Mr. Beringer, whose sonfell at the Canal that strangers dugso ships could cross the desert,crosses my path at Jaffa Gate.He has grown very thin, has lostthe weight of his son.That's why he floats so lightly in the alleysand gets caught in my heart like little twigsthat drift away.2As a child he would mash his potatoesto a golden mush.And then you die.A living child must be cleanedwhen he comes home from playing.But for a dead manearth and sand are clear water, in whichhis body goes on being bathed and purifiedforever.3The Tomb of the Unknown Soldieracross there. On the enemy's side. A good landmarkfor gunners of the future.Or the war monument in Londonat Hyde P...
Yehuda Amichai
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 eyelids 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 to him and say,"Dreams to dreams," and turn away.Those gravediggers, Doubt, Distrust,They will lower him to the dust.Let us part here with a kiss -You go that way, I go this.Sin...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Outside The Casement
A Reminiscence Of The WarWe sat in the roomAnd praised her whomWe saw in the portico-shade outside:She could not hearWhat was said of her,But smiled, for its purport we did not hide.Then in was broughtThat message, fraughtWith evil fortune for her out there,Whom we loved that dayMore than any could say,And would fain have fenced from a waft of care.And the question pressedLike lead on each breast,Should we cloak the tidings, or call her and tell?It was too intenseA choice for our sense,As we pondered and watched her we loved so well.Yea, spirit failed usAt what assailed us;How long, while seeing what soon must come,Should we counterfeitNo knowledge of it,And stay the ...