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A Short Hymn To Lar.
Though I cannot give thee firesGlittering to my free desires;These accept, and I'll be free,Offering poppy unto thee.
Robert Herrick
The Cicalas: An Idyll
Scene: AN ENGLISH GARDEN BY STARLIGHTPersons: A LADY AND A POET THE POET Dimly I see your face: I hear your breath Sigh faintly, as a flower might sigh in death And when you whisper, you but stir the air With a soft hush like summer's own despair. THE LADY (aloud) O Night divine, O Darkness ever blest, Give to our old sad Earth eternal rest. Since from her heart all beauty ebbs away, Let her no more endure the shame of day. THE POET A thousand ages have not made less bright The stars that in this fountain shine to-night: Your eyes in shadow still betray the gleam That every son of man desires in dream. ...
Henry John Newbolt
Geraldine
Just as the sun went bathing in a seaOf liquid amber, flecked with caps of gold, I toldThe sweet old story unto Geraldine, my Queen,Who long hath made the whole of life for me.But though she smiled upon me yesterday,And heaven seemed near because she was so kind, I findShe held me but as one of many men; and thenDismissed me in her proud, yet gracious way.Ah, Geraldine! my lady of sweet arts,There waits for thee not very far away, a dayWhen thou shalt waken out of tranquil sleep, and weepSuch bitter tears as spring from anguished hearts.Thou shalt look in thy mirror with dismayTo find upon each feature of thy face, the traceOf time, the lover who shall follow thee, and seeThy rare youth slipping suddenly away.So self-ass...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Paradisum Amissam, Lib. II [1]
Quales aerii montis de vertice nubesCum surgunt, et jam Boreae tumida ora quierunt,Caelum hilares abdit spissa caligine vultus,Nimbosumque nives aut imbres cogitat aether:Tum si jucundo tandem sol prodeat ore,Et croceo montes et pascua lumine tingat,Gaudent omnia, aves mulcent concentibus agros,Balatuque ovium colles vallesque resultant.
William Cowper
Day
The gray dawn on the mountain topIs slow to pass away.Still lays him by in sluggish dreams,The golden God of day.And then a light along the hills,Your laughter silvery gay;The Sun God wakes, a bluebird trills,You come and it is day.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
After The Battles Are Over.
[Read at Re-union of the G. A. T., Madison, Wis., July 4, 1872.]After the battles are over, And the war drums cease to beat,And no more is heard on the hillside The sound of hurrying feet,Full many a noble action, That was done in the days of strife,By the soldier is half forgotten, In the peaceful walks of life.Just as the tangled grasses, In Summer's warmth and light,Grow over the graves of the fallen And hide them away from sight,So many an act of valor, And many a deed sublime,Fade from the mind of the soldier, O'ergrown by the grass of time.Not so should they be rewarded, Those noble deeds of old;They should live forever and ever, When the heroes' hearts are cold...
A Line-Storm Song
The line-storm clouds fly tattered and swift.The road is forlorn all day,Where a myriad snowy quartz stones lift,And the hoof-prints vanish away.The roadside flowers, too wet for the bee,Expend their bloom in vain.Come over the hills and far with me,And be my love in the rain.The birds have less to say for themselvesIn the wood-world's torn despairThan now these numberless years the elves,Although they are no less there:All song of the woods is crushed like someWild, earily shattered rose.Come, be my love in the wet woods, come,Where the boughs rain when it blows.There is the gale to urge behindAnd bruit our singing down,And the shallow waters aflutter with windFrom which to gather your gown.What matter if we...
Robert Lee Frost
To The King, Upon His Welcome To Hampton Court. Set And Sung.
Welcome, great Cæsar, welcome now you areAs dearest peace after destructive war:Welcome as slumbers, or as beds of easeAfter our long and peevish sicknesses.O pomp of glory! Welcome now, and comeTo repossess once more your long'd-for home.A thousand altars smoke: a thousand thighsOf beeves here ready stand for sacrifice.Enter and prosper; while our eyes do waitFor an ascendent throughly auspicate:Under which sign we may the former stoneLay of our safety's new foundation:That done, O Cæsar! live and be to usOur fate, our fortune, and our genius;To whose free knees we may our temples tieAs to a still protecting deity:That should you stir, we and our altars tooMay, great Augustus, go along with you.Chor. Long live the King! and ...
Proem.
Oh, for a soul that fulfillsmusic like that of a bird!thrilling with rapture the hills,heedless if any one heard.Or, like the flower that bloomslone in the midst of the trees,filling the woods with perfumes,careless if any one sees.Or, like the wandering wind,over the meadows that swings,bringing wild sweets to mankind,knowing not that which it brings.Oh, for a way to impart!.beauty, no matter how hard!like unto nature, whose artnever once dreams of reward.
Madison Julius Cawein
Saturn
Now were the Titans gathered round their king, In a waste region slipping tow'rd the verge Of drear extremities that clasp the world - A land half-moulded by the hasty gods, And left beneath the bright scorn of the stars, Grotesque, misfeatured, blackly gnarled with stone; Or worn and marred from conflict with the deep Conterminate, of Chaos. Here they stood, Old Saturn midmost, like a central peak Among the lesser hills that guard its base. Defeat, that gloamed within each countenance Like the first tinge of death, upon a sun Gathering like some dusk vapor, found them cold, Clumsy of limb, and halting as with weight Of threatened worlds and trembling firmaments. A wind cried round them like a trumpet-...
Clark Ashton Smith
Sonnet XXXII.
S' amore o morte non dà qualche stroppio.HE ASKS FROM A FRIEND THE LOAN OF THE WORKS OF ST. AUGUSTIN. If Love or Death no obstacle entwineWith the new web which here my fingers fold,And if I 'scape from beauty's tyrant holdWhile natural truth with truth reveal'd I join,Perchance a work so double will be mineBetween our modern style and language old,That (timidly I speak, with hope though bold)Even to Rome its growing fame may shine:But, since, our labour to perfèct at lastSome of the blessed threads are absent yetWhich our dear father plentifully met,Wherefore to me thy hands so close and fastAgainst their use? Be prompt of aid and free,And rich our harvest of fair things shall be.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Fragment: To The Mind Of Man.
Thou living light that in thy rainbow huesClothest this naked world; and over SeaAnd Earth and air, and all the shapes that beIn peopled darkness of this wondrous worldThe Spirit of thy glory dost diffuse... truth ... thou Vital FlameMysterious thought that in this mortal frameOf things, with unextinguished lustre burnestNow pale and faint now high to Heaven upcurledThat eer as thou dost languish still returnestAnd everBefore the ... before the PyramidsSo soon as from the Earth formless and rudeOne living step had chased drear SolitudeThou wert, Thought; thy brightness charmed the lidsOf the vast snake Eternity, who keptThe tree of good and evil. -
Percy Bysshe Shelley
A New Century
An age too great for thought of ours to scan,A wave upon the sleepless sea of timeThat sinks and sleeps for ever, ere the chimePass that salutes with blessing, not with ban,The dark year dead, the bright year born for man,Dies: all its days that watched man cower and climb,Frail as the foam, and as the sun sublime,Sleep sound as they that slept ere these began.Our mother earth, whose ages none may tell,Puts on no change: time bids not her wax paleOr kindle, quenched or quickened, when the knellSounds, and we cry across the veering galeFarewell, and midnight answers us, Farewell;Hail, and the heaven of morning answers, Hail.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Paradox
I am the mother of sorrows,I am the ender of grief;I am the bud and the blossom,I am the late-falling leaf.I am thy priest and thy poet,I am thy serf and thy king;I cure the tears of the heartsick,When I come near they shall sing.White are my hands as the snowdrop;Swart are my fingers as clay;Dark is my frown as the midnight,Fair is my brow as the day.Battle and war are my minions,Doing my will as divine;I am the calmer of passions,Peace is a nursling of mine.Speak to me gently or curse me,Seek me or fly from my sight;I am thy fool in the morning,Thou art my slave in the night.Down to the grave will I take thee,Out from the noise of the strife;Then shalt thou see me and know me--...
Different Threats.
I ONCE into a forest farMy maiden went to seek,And fell upon her neck, when: "Ah!"She threaten'd, "I will shriek!"Then cried I haughtily: "I'll crushThe man that dares come near thee!""Hush!" whisper'd she: "My loved one, hush!Or else they'll overhear thee!"
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Conversation
We were a baker's dozen in the house - six women and six men Besides myself; and all of us had knownThose benefits supposed to come from school and church and brush and pen, And opportunities of being thrownIn contact with the cultured and the gifted people of the day. Being the thirteenth one among six pairsI deemed it wise to keep apart and let the others have their say: And from my vantage-place upon the stairs,Or in a corner, where I seemed to read, I listened for some word That would make life seem sweeter, or cast lightUpon the goal toward which all footsteps wend: and this was what I heard Throughout each day and half of every night.The men talked business, politics, and trade; They told of safe investments, and great chances...
The Exile.
Night waneth fast, the morning star Saddens with light the glimmering sea,Whose waves shall soon to realms afar Waft me from hope, from love, and thee.Coldly the beam from yonder sky Looks o'er the waves that onward stray;But colder still the stranger's eye To him whose home is far awayOh, not at hour so chill and bleak, Let thoughts of me come o'er thy breast;But of the lost one think and speak, When summer suns sink calm to rest.So, as I wander, Fancy's dream Shall bring me o'er the sunset seas,Thy look in every melting beam, Thy whisper in each dying breeze.
Thomas Moore
To A Poet
Thou who singest through the earth, All the earth's wild creatures fly thee,Everywhere thou marrest mirth. Dumbly they defy thee.There is something they deny thee.Pines thy fallen nature everFor the unfallen Nature sweet.But she shuns thy long endeavour, Though her flowers and wheatThrong and press thy pausing feet.Though thou tame a bird to love thee,Press thy face to grass and flowers,All these things reserve above thee Secrets in the bowers,Secrets in the sun and showers.Sing thy sorrow, sing thy gladness.In thy songs must wind and treeBear the fictions of thy sadness, Thy humanity.For their truth is not for thee.Wait, and many a secret nest,Many a hoarded winter-store
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell