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Old Ireland
Far hence, amid an isle of wondrous beauty,Crouching over a grave, an ancient, sorrowful mother,Once a queen - now lean and tatter'd, seated on the ground,Her old white hair drooping dishevel'd round her shoulders;At her feet fallen an unused royal harp,Long silent - she too long silent - mourning her shrouded hope and heir;Of all the earth her heart most full of sorrow, because most full of love.Yet a word, ancient mother;You need crouch there no longer on the cold ground, with forehead between your knees;O you need not sit there, veil'd in your old white hair, so dishevel'd;For know you, the one you mourn is not in that grave;It was an illusion - the heir, the son you love, was not really dead;The Lord is not dead - he is risen again, young and strong, in anot...
Walt Whitman
The Window On The Hill
Among the fields the camomileSeems blown mist in the lightning's glare:Cool, rainy odors drench the air;Night speaks above; the angry smileOf storm within her stare.The way that I shall take to-nightIs through the wood whose branches fillThe road with double darkness, till,Between the boughs, a window's lightShines out upon the hill.The fence; and then the path that goesAround a trailer-tangled rock,Through puckered pink and hollyhock,Unto a latch-gate's unkempt rose,And door whereat I knock.Bright on the oldtime flower placeThe lamp streams through the foggy pane;The door is opened to the rain:And in the door her happy faceAnd outstretched arms again.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Wind In The Hemlock
Steely stars and moon of brass,How mockingly you watch me pass!You know as well as I how soonI shall be blind to stars and moon,Deaf to the wind in the hemlock tree,Dumb when the brown earth weighs on me.With envious dark rage I bear,Stars, your cold complacent stare;Heart-broken in my hate look up,Moon, at your clear immortal cup,Changing to gold from dusky red,Age after age when I am deadTo be filled up with light, and thenEmptied, to be refilled again.What has man done that only heIs slave to death, so brutallyBeaten back into the earthImpatient for him since his birth?Oh let me shut my eyes, close outThe sight of stars and earth and beSheltered a minute by this tree.Hemlock, through your fragr...
Sara Teasdale
Weary.
Weary of dreaming what never comes true,Weary of thinking what never is new,Of endeav'ring, yet never succeeding to do.Weary of walking the dusty, old ways,Weary of saying what every one says,Weary of singing old, obsolete lays.Weary of laughing, to make others laugh,Weary of gleaning for nothing but chaff,Of giving the whole, and receiving but half.Weary of making, so shortly to mend,Weary of patching, to turn round and rend,Weary of earning only to spend.Weary of weeping when tears are so cheap,Weary of waking when longing to sleep,Of giving what nobody wishes to keep.Weary of drinking to thirst ere I've done,Weary of eating what satisfies none,Weary of doing what still is undone.Weary of glitte...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
The Second Hymn Of Callimachus. To Apollo
Hah! how the laurel, great Apollo's tree,And all the cavern shakes! Far off, far off,The man that is unhallow'd: for the god,The god approaches. Hark! he knocks; the gatesFeel the glad impulse, and the sever'd barsSubmissive clink against their brazen portals.Why do the Delian palms incline their boughs,Self-moved, and hovering swans, their throats releasedFrom native silence, carol sounds harmonious?Begin young men the hymn: let all your harpsBreak their inglorious silence, and the dance,In mystic numbers trod, explain the music,But first by ardent prayer and clear lustrationPurge the contagious spots of human weakness:Impure no mortal can behold Apollo.So may ye flourish favour'd by the god,In youth with happy nuptials, and in age...
Matthew Prior
After Long Grief
There is a place hung o'er of summer boughsAnd dreamy skies wherein the gray hawk sleeps;Where water flows, within whose lazy deeps,Like silvery prisms where the sunbeams drowse,The minnows twinkle; where the bells of cowsTinkle the stillness; and the bobwhite keepsCalling from meadows where the reaper reaps,And children's laughter haunts an oldtime house:A place where life wears ever an honest smellOf hay and honey, sun and elder-bloom, -Like some sweet, simple girl, - within her hair;Where, with our love for comrade, we may dwellFar from the city's strife, whose cares consume. -Oh, take my hand and let me lead you there.
Envoy
There clung three roses to a stem,Did all their hues of summer don,But came a wind and troubled them, And all were gone.I heard three bells in unisonClap out some transient heart's delight,Time and the hour brought silence on And the dark night.Doth not Orion even set!O love, love, prove true alone,Till youthful hearts ev'n love forget, Then, child, begone!
Walter De La Mare
The Changeling
"Ahoy, and ahoy!" 'Twixt mocking and merry -"Ahoy and ahoy, there, Young man of the ferry!"She stood on the steps In the watery gloom -That Changeling - "Ahoy, there!" She called him to come.He came on the green wave, He came on the grey,Where stooped that sweet lady That still summer's day.He fell in a dream Of her beautiful face,As she sat on the thwart And smiled in her place.No echo his oar woke, Float silent did they,Past low-grazing cattle In the sweet of the hay.And still in a dream At her beauty sat he,Drifting stern foremost Down - down to the sea.Come you, then: call, When the twilight apaceBrings shadow to brood On the lovelies...
Love In A Life
Room after room,I hunt the house throughWe inhabit together.Heart, fear nothing, for, heart, thou shalt find herNext time, herself! not the trouble behind herLeft in the curtain, the couchs perfume!As she brushed it, the cornice-wreath blossomed anew,Yon looking-glass gleaned at the wave of her feather.Yet the day wears,And door succeeds door;I try the fresh fortuneRange the wide house from the wing to the centre.Still the same chance! She goes out as I enter.Spend my whole day in the quest, who cares?But tis twilight, you see, with such suites to explore,Such closets to search, such alcoves to importune!
Robert Browning
Shooting Stars.
[FOR MY LITTLE CHILD ONLY.]("Tas de feux tombants.")[Bk. III. vii.]See the scintillating shower!Like a burst from golden mine -Incandescent coals that pourFrom the incense-bowl divine,And around us dewdrops, shaken,Mirror each a twinkling ray'Twixt the flowers that awakenIn this glory great as day.Mists and fogs all vanish fleetly;And the birds begin to sing,Whilst the rain is murm'ring sweetlyAs if angels echoing.And, methinks, to show she's gratefulFor this seed from heaven come,Earth is holding up a platefulOf the birds and buds a-bloom!
Victor-Marie Hugo
Sunset on the Mississippi.
O beautiful hills in the purple light, That shadow the western sky,I dream of you oft in the silent night, As the golden days go by.The river that flows at my longing feet Is tinged with a deeper glow;But the song that it sings is as sad to-day As it was in the long ago.The far-off clouds in the far-off sky Are tinted with gold and red;But the lesson they tell to the hearts of men Is a lesson that never is said.The star-crowned night in her sable plumes Is veiling the eastern sky,And she trails her robes in the dying fires That far in the west do lie.A single gem from her circlet old Is lost as she wanders by,And the beautiful star with its golden light Shines out in the lo...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
The Ploughboy.
I wonder what he is thinking In the ploughing field all day.He watches the heads of his oxen, And never looks this way.And the furrows grow longer and longer, Around the base of the hill,And the valley is bright with the sunset, Yet he ploughs and whistles still.I am tired of counting the ridges, Where the oxen come and go,And of thinking of all the blossoms That are trampled down below.I wonder if ever he guesses That under the ragged brimOf his torn straw hat I am peeping To steal a look at him.The spire of the church and the windows Are all ablaze in the sun.He has left the plough in the furrow, His summer day's work is done.And I hear him carolling softly
Kate Seymour Maclean
The Apparition
The Parthenon uplifted on its rock first challenging the view on the approach to Athens.Abrupt the supernatural Cross,Vivid in startled air,Smote the Emperor ConstantineAnd turned his soul's allegiance there.With other power appealing down,Trophy of Adam's best!If cynic minds you scarce convert,You try them, shake them, or molest.Diogenes, that honest heart,Lived ere your date began;Thee had he seen, he might have swervedIn mood nor barked so much at Man.
Herman Melville
To the Not Impossible Him
How shall I know, unless I go To Cairo and Cathay,Whether or not this blessed spot Is blest in every way?Now it may be, the flower for me Is this beneath my nose;How shall I tell, unless I smell The Carthaginian rose?The fabric of my faithful love No power shall dim or ravelWhilst I stay here,--but oh, my dear, If I should ever travel!
Edna St. Vincent Millay
The Lost Path
Alone they walked - their fingers knit together,And swaying listlessly as might a swingWherein Dan Cupid dangled in the weatherOf some sun-flooded afternoon of Spring.Within the clover-fields the tickled cricketLaughed lightly as they loitered down the lane,And from the covert of the hazel-thicketThe squirrel peeped and laughed at them again.The bumble-bee that tipped the lily-vasesAlong the road-side in the shadows dim,Went following the blossoms of their facesAs though their sweets must needs be shared with him.Between the pasture bars the wondering cattleStared wistfully, and from their mellow bellsShook out a welcoming whose dreamy rattleFell swooningly away in faint farewells.And though at last the gloom of night fe...
James Whitcomb Riley
The Wager
"We think by feeling. What else is there to know." Theodore Roethke"I can live an adventuresome life vicariously through my characters. It's inexpensive and a dandy form of ready made self-expression. The perfect sort of sublimation exists after all. For years I wore myself out trying to amass enough experience to commence serious writing. You know the having to see all and do all syndrome. I realize the pursuit of that plateaus sheer idiocy as it remains ever distant as one grows older."Wenceslaus at that point placed his pen down and turned to open a glossy picture print of a ship under full sail, a clipper mail packet on the China run over a century ago."Shakespeare never experienced the myriad situations he subjected his characters to - how could he - except perhaps subliminally. Jules Verne must ha...
Paul Cameron Brown
A Prayer
O Lord, the hard-won milesHave worn my stumbling feet:Oh, soothe me with thy smiles,And make my life complete.The thorns were thick and keenWhere'er I trembling trod;The way was long betweenMy wounded feet and God.Where healing waters flowDo thou my footsteps lead.My heart is aching so;Thy gracious balm I need.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Geate A-vallen To
In the zunsheen of our zummersWi the hay time now a-come,How busy wer we out a-vieldWi vew a-left at hwome,When waggons rumbled out ov yardRed wheeled, wi body blue,And back behind em loudly slammdThe geate avallen to.Drough daysheen ov how many yearsThe geate ha now a-swungBehind the veet o vull-grown menAnd vootsteps of the young.Drough years o days it swung to usBehind each little shoe,As we tripped lightly on avoreThe geate a-vallen to.In evenen time o starry nightHow mother zot at hwome,And kept her bleazen vier brightTill father should ha? come,An how she quickend up and smiledAn stirred her vier anew,To hear the trampen hoses stepsAn geate a-vallen to.There...
William Barnes