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The Passage-Birds.
Far, far away, over land and sea,When Winter comes with his cold, cold breath,And chills the flowers to the sleep of death, Far, far away over land and sea,Like a band of spirits the Passage-birds flee.Round the old grey spire in the evening calm, No more they circle in sportive glee,Hearing the hum of the vesper psalm,And the swell of the organ so far below; But far, far away, over land and sea,In the still mid-air the swift Passage-birds go. Over the earth that is scarcely seen Through the curtain of vapour that waves between,O'er city and hamlet, o'er hill and plain, O'er forest green, and o'er mountain hoar, They flit like shadows, and pass the shore,And wing their way o'er the pathless main....
Walter R. Cassels
A Study In The 'Nood'
He was bare we dont want to be rude(His condition was owing to drink)They say his condition was nood,Which amounts to the same thing, we think(We mean his condition, we think,Twas a naked condition, or nood,Which amounts to the same thing, we think)Uncovered he lay on the grassThat shrivelled and shrunk; and he stayedThree hot summer days, while the glassWas one hundred and ten in the shade.(We nearly remarked that he laid,But that was bad grammar we thoughtIt does sound bucolic, we thinkIt smacks of the barnyardOf farming of pullets in short.)Unheeded he lay on the dirt;Beside him a part of his dress,A tattered and threadbare old shirtWas raised as a flag of distress.(On a stick, like a flag of distressRev...
Henry Lawson
Thomas Starr King
The great work laid upon his twoscore yearsIs done, and well done. If we drop our tears,Who loved him as few men were ever loved,We mourn no blighted hope nor broken planWith him whose life stands rounded and approvedIn the full growth and stature of a man.Mingle, O bells, along the Western slope,With your deep toll a sound of faith and hope!Wave cheerily still, O banner, half-way down,From thousand-masted bay and steepled town!Let the strong organ with its loftiest swellLift the proud sorrow of the land, and tellThat the brave sower saw his ripened grain.O East and West! O morn and sunset twainNo more forever! has he lived in vainWho, priest of Freedom, made ye one, and toldYour bridal service from his lips of gold
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Pilgrims' Fast.
The historical incident related in this poem is recorded in Cheever's "JOURNAL OF THE PILGRIMS."'T was early morn, the low night-windHad fled the sun's fierce ray,And sluggishly the leaden wavesRolled over Plymouth Bay.No mist was on the mountain-top,No dew-drop in the vale;The thirsting Summer flowers had diedEre chilled by Autumn's wail.The giant woods with yellow leavesThe blighted turf had paved,And o'er the brown and arid fieldsNo golden harvest waved;But calm and blue the cloudless skyArched over earth and sea,As in their humble house of prayer,The Pilgrims bowed the knee.There gray-haired ministers of GodIn supplication bent,And artless words from childhood's lipsSought the Omni...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
Synnove's Song (From Synnove Solbakken)
Have thanks for all from our childhood's day,Our play together in woodland roaming.I thought that play would go on for aye,Though life should pass to its gloaming.I thought that play would go on for aye,From bowers leading of leafy birchesTo where the Solbakke houses lay,And where the red-painted church is.I sat and waited through evenings longAnd scanned the ridge with the spruces yonder;But darkening mountains made shadows throng,And you the way did not wander.I sat and waited with scarce a doubt:He'll dare the way when the sun's descended.The light shone fainter, was nearly out,The day in darkness had ended.My weary eye is so wont to gaze,To turn its look it is slow in learning;No other landmark it seeks, ...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Under Ben Bulben
ISwear by what the sages spokeRound the Mareotic LakeThat the Witch of Atlas knew,Spoke and set the cocks a-crow.Swear by those horsemen, by those womenComplexion and form prove superhuman,That pale, long-visaged companyThat air in immortalityCompleteness of their passions won;Now they ride the wintry dawnWhere Ben Bulben sets the scene.Here s the gist of what they mean.IIMany times man lives and diesBetween his two eternities,That of race and that of soul,And ancient Ireland knew it all.Whether man die in his bedOr the rifle knocks him dead,A brief parting from those dearIs the worst man has to fear.Though grave-diggers' toil is long,Sharp their spades, their muscles...
William Butler Yeats
Leonainie
Leonainie - Angels named her;And they took the lightOf the laughing stars and framed herIn a smile of white; And they made her hair of gloomy Midnight, and her eyes of bloomy Moonshine, and they brought her to meIn the solemn night. - -In a solemn night of summer,When my heart of gloomBlossomed up to greet the comerLike a rose in bloom; All forebodings that distressed me I forgot as Joy caressed me - (Lying Joy! that caught and pressed meIn the arms of doom!)Only spake the little lisperIn the Angel-tongue;Yet I, listening, heard her whisper -"Songs are only sung Here below that they may grieve you - Tales but told you to deceive you, - So must Leonainie leave you<...
James Whitcomb Riley
Daybreak
A wind came up out of the sea,And said, "O mists, make room for me."It hailed the ships, and cried, "Sail on,Ye mariners, the night is gone."And hurried landward far away,Crying, "Awake! it is the day."It said unto the forest, "Shout!Hang all your leafy banners out!"It touched the wood-bird's folded wing,And said, "O bird, awake and sing."And o'er the farms, "O chanticleer,Your clarion blow; the day is near."It whispered to the fields of corn,"Bow down, and hail the coming morn."It shouted through the belfry-tower,"Awake, O bell! proclaim the hour."It crossed the churchyard with a sigh,And said, "Not yet! in quiet lie."
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Dream Of Christ.
I saw her twins of eyelids listless swoon Mesmeric eyes,Like the mild lapsing of a lulling tune On wide surprise,While slow the graceful presence of a moon Mellowed the purple skies.And had she dreamed or had in fancy gone As one who soughtTo hail the influx of a godly dawn Of heavenly thought,Trod trembling o'er old sainted hill and lawn With intense angels fraught?Sailed thro' majestic domes of the deep night By isles of stars,Wand'ring like some pure blessing warm with light From worldly jarsTo the high halls of morning, pearly white, And heaped with golden bars.Past temples vast, deluged with sandy seas, Whose ruins standLike bleaching bones of dead monstrosities ...
Madison Julius Cawein
What The People Said
By the well, where the bullocks goSilent and blind and slow,By the field where the young corn diesIn the face of the sultry skies,They have heard, as the dull Earth hearsThe voice of the wind of an hour,The sound of the Great Queen's voice:"My God hath given me years,Hath granted dominion and power:And I bid you, O Land, rejoice."And the ploughman settles the shareMore deep in the grudging clod;For he saith: "The wheat is my care,And the rest is the will of God.He sent the Mahratta spearAs He sendeth the rain,And the Mlech, in the fated year,Broke the spear in twain.And was broken in turn. Who knowsHow our Lords make strife?It is good that the young wheat grows,For the bread is Life."Then, far and...
Rudyard
Sonnets: Idea XLIII
Why should your fair eyes with such sov'reign graceDisperse their rays on every vulgar spirit,Whilst I in darkness in the self-same place,Get not one glance to recompense my merit? So doth the plowman gaze the wand'ring star,And only rest contented with the light,That never learned what constellations are,Beyond the bent of his unknowing sight. O why should beauty, custom to obey,To their gross sense apply herself so ill!Would God I were as ignorant as they,When I am made unhappy by my skill, Only compelled on this poor good to boast! Heavens are not kind to them that know them most.
Michael Drayton
To Postumous In October
When you and I were younger the world was passing fair;Our days were sped with laughter, our steps were free as air;Life lightly lured us onward, and ceased not to unrollIn endless shining vistas a playground for the soul.But now no glory fires us; we linger in the cold,And both of us are weary, and both are growing old;Come, Postumus, and face it, and, facing it, confessYour years are half a hundred, and mine are nothing less.When you and I were twenty, my Postumus, we keptIn tidy rooms in College, and there we snugly slept.And still, when I am dreaming, the bells I can recallThat ordered us to chapel or welcomed us to hall.The towers repeat our voices, the grey and ancient CourtsAre filled with mirth and movement, and echo to our sports;Then riverw...
R. C. Lehmann
The Leader And The Bad Girl
Because he had sinned and suffered, because he loved the land,And because of his wonderful sympathy, he held mens hearts in his hand.Born and bred of the people, he knew their every whim,And because he had struggled through poverty he could draw the poor to him:Speaker and leader and poet, tall and handsome and strong,With the eyes of a dog for faith and truth that blazed at the thought of a wrong.They thought in his countrys crisis that his time had come at last,For they measured his brilliant future by the light of his brilliant past.At every monster meeting the thousands called his name,And a burst of triumphant cheering greeted him when he came.They had faith in the strength of a single man, when their fighting lines were weak,And a pregnant silence fell on all ...
My Heaven
Unhoused in deserts of accepted thought, And lost in jungles of confusing creeds, My soul strayed, homeless, finding its own needsUnsatisfied with what tradition taught.The pros and cons, the little ifs and ands, The but and maybe, and the this and that, On which the churches thicken and grow fat,I found but structures built on shifting sands.And all their heavens were strange and far away, And all their hells were made of human hate; And since for death I did not care to wait,A heaven I fashioned for myself one day.Of happy thoughts I built it stone by stone, With joy of life I draped each spacious room, With love's great light I drove away all gloom,And in the centre I made God a throne.And this...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Remembrance
There were many burning hours on the heart-sweet tide,And we passed away from ourselves, forgetting allThe immortal moods that faded, the god who died,Hastening away to the King on a distant call.There were ruby dews were shed when the heart was riven,And passionate pleading and prayers to the dead we had wronged;And we passed away unremembering and unforgiven,Hastening away to the King for the peace we longed.Love unremembered and heart-ache we left behind,We forsook them, unheeding, hastening away in our flight;We knew the hearts we had wronged of old we would findWhen we came to the fold of the King for rest in the night.
George William Russell
Hymn, Sung At Christmas By The Scholars Of St. Helenas Island, S.C.
Oh, none in all the world beforeWere ever glad as we!We're free on Carolina's shore,We're all at home and free.Thou Friend and Helper of the poor,Who suffered for our sake,To open every prison door,And every yoke to break!Bend low Thy pitying face and mild,And help us sing and pray;The hand that blessed the little child,Upon our foreheads lay.We hear no more the driver's horn,No more the whip we fear,This holy day that saw Thee bornWas never half so dear.The very oaks are greener clad,The waters brighter smile;Oh, never shone a day so gladOn sweet St. Helen's Isle.We praise Thee in our songs to-day,To Thee in prayer we call,Make swift the feet and straight the wayOf freedom unto all.Come once agai...
In Time Of Sorrow
Despair is in the suns that shine, And in the rains that fall,This sad forsaken soul of mine Is weary of them all.They fall and shine on alien streets From those I love and know.I cannot hear amid the heats The North Sea's freshening flowThe people hurry up and down, Like ghosts that cannot lie;And wandering through the phantom town The weariest ghost am I.
Robert Fuller Murray
Prayer
You are all that is lovely and light, Aziza whom I adore,And, waking, after the night, I am weary with dreams of you.Every nerve in my heart is tense and sore As I rise to another morning apart from you.I dream of your luminous eyes, Aziza whom I adore!Of the ruffled silk of your hair,I dream, and the dreams are lies.But I love them, knowing no more Will ever be mine of youAziza, my life's despair.I would burn for a thousand days,Aziza whom I adore,Be tortured, slain, in unheard of ways If you pitied the pain I bore.You pity! Your bright eyes, fastened on other things,Are keener to sting my soul, than scorpion stings!You are all that is lovely to me, All that is light,One w...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson