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Shoo's thi Sister.
(Written on seeing a wealthy Townsman rudely push a poor little girl off the pavement.)Gently, gently, shoo's thi sister,Tho' her clooas are nowt but rags;On her feet ther's monny a blister:See ha painfully shoo dragsHer tired limbs to some quiet corner:Shoo's thi sister - dunnot scorn her.Daan her cheeks noa tears are runnin,Shoo's been shov'd aside befoor;Used to scoffs, an sneers, an shunnin -Shoo expects it, 'coss shoo's poor;Schooil'd for years her grief to smother,Still shoo's human - tha'rt her brother.Tho' tha'rt donn'd i' fine black cloathin,A kid glove o' awther hand,Dunnot touch her roughly, loathin -Shoo's thi sister, understand:Th' wind maks merry wi' her tatters,Poor lost pilgrim! - but what mat...
John Hartley
Social Amenities
I am getting on well with this anecdote,When suddenly I recallThe many times I have told it of old,And all the worked-up phrases, and the dying fallOf voice, well timed in the crisis, the noteOf mock-heroic ingeniously struck -The whole thing sticks in my throat,And my face all tingles and pricks with shameFor myself and my hearers.These are the social pleasures, my God!But I finish the story triumphantly all the same.
Aldous Leonard Huxley
Opening Doors
He smashed his handin opening a door for her,and less pain thanembarrassment shrieked through him.Concealing both,grimacing as if theatrically,he asked himselfwho he thought he was to goaround openingdoors for anyone, much less for her.
Ben Jonson
The Recall
Return, they cry, ere yet your daySet, and the sky grow stern:Return, strayed souls, while yet ye mayReturn.But heavens beyond us yearn;Yea, heights of heaven above the swayOf stars that eyes discern.The soul whose wings from shoreward strayMakes toward her viewless bourneThough trustless faith and unfaith say,Return.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Student's Tale - The Wayside Inn - Part Second
THE COBBLER OF HAGENAUI trust that somewhere and somehowYou all have heard of Hagenau,A quiet, quaint, and ancient townAmong the green Alsatian hills,A place of valleys, streams, and mills,Where Barbarossa's castle, brownWith rust of centuries, still looks downOn the broad, drowsy land below,--On shadowy forests filled with game,And the blue river winding slowThrough meadows, where the hedges growThat give this little town its name.It happened in the good old times,While yet the Master-singers filledThe noisy workshop and the guildWith various melodies and rhymes,That here in Hagenau there dweltA cobbler,--one who loved debate,And, arguing from a postulate,Would say what others only felt;A man of foreca...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Pensive And Faltering
Pensive and faltering,The words, the dead, I write;For living are the Dead;(Haply the only living, only real,And I the apparition - I the spectre.)
Walt Whitman
To Lady Eleanor Butler And The Honourable Miss Ponsonby
A stream to mingle with your favorite DeeAlong the Vale of Meditation flows;So styled by those fierce Britons, pleased to seeIn Nature's face the expression of repose,Or, haply there some pious Hermit choseTo live and die, the peace of Heaven his aim,To whome the wild sequestered region owesAt this late day, its sanctifying name.Glyn Cafaillgaroch, in the Cambrian tongue,In ourse the Vale of Friendship, let this spotBe nam'd, where faithful to a low roof'd CotOn Deva's banks, ye have abode so long,Sisters in love, a love allowed to climbEv'n on this earth, above the reach of time.
William Wordsworth
Sonnet CLVIII.
Siccome eterna vita è veder Dio.ALL HIS HAPPINESS IS IN GAZING UPON HER. As life eternal is with God to be,No void left craving, there of all possess'd,So, lady mine, to be with you makes blest,This brief frail span of mortal life to me.So fair as now ne'er yet was mine to see--If truth from eyes to heart be well express'd--Lovely and blessèd spirit of my breast,Which levels all high hopes and wishes free.Nor would I more demand if less of hasteShe show'd to part; for if, as legends tellAnd credence find, are some who live by smell,On water some, or fire who touch and taste,All, things which neither strength nor sweetness give,Why should not I upon your dear sight live?MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
To A Friend Whose Work Has Come To Nothing
Now all the truth is out,Be secret and take defeatFrom any brazen throat,For how can you compete,Being honour bred, with oneWho, were it proved he lies,Were neither shamed in his ownNor in his neighbours eyes?Bred to a harder thingThan Triumph, turn awayAnd like a laughing stringWhereon mad fingers playAmid a place of stone,Be secret and exult,Because of all things knownThat is most difficult
William Butler Yeats
Sean O'Cosgair
Pity it was that you should ever stand In ship or boat, Or that you went afloat Inside that ship! The lusty steps you took! The ways and journeys you knew how to wend From London back to Beltra, And this end! You who could swim so well! What time you sported in the lifting tides The girls swam out to you, and held your sides When they were weary, for they knew they were Safe, because you were there. Your little-mother thought that this was true (And so she made no stir Till you were found), Although an hundred might be drownéd, you Would come back safe to her, And not be drowned!
James Stephens
Assumption
I.A mile of moonlight and the whispering wood:A mile of shadow and the odorous lane:One large, white star above the solitude,Like one sweet wish: and, laughter after pain,Wild-roses wistful in a web of rain.II.No star, no rose, to lesson him and lead;No woodsman compass of the skies and rocks,Tattooed of stars and lichens, doth love needTo guide him where, among the hollyhocks,A blur of moonlight, gleam his sweetheart's locks.III.We name it beauty that permitted part,The love-elected apotheosisOf Nature, which the god within the heart,Just touching, makes immortal, but by thisA star, a rose, the memory of a kiss.
Madison Julius Cawein
Verses To A Child
1O raise those eyes to me againAnd smile again so joyously,And fear not, love; it was not painNor grief that drew these tears from me;Beloved child, thou canst not tellThe thoughts that in my bosom dwellWhene'er I look on thee!2Thou knowest not that a glance of thineCan bring back long departed yearsAnd that thy blue eyes' magic shineCan overflow my own with tears,And that each feature soft and fairAnd every curl of golden hair,Some sweet remembrance bears.3Just then thou didst recall to meA distant long forgotten scene,One smile, and one sweet word from theeDispelled the years that rolled between;I was a little child again,And every after joy and painSeemed never to have b...
Anne Bronte
Haunted
The rabbit in his burrow keepsNo guarded watch, in peace he sleeps;The wolf that howls into the nightCowers to her lair at morning light;The simplest bird entwines a nestWhere she may lean her lovely breast,Couched in the silence of the bough;But thou, O man, what rest hast thou?The deepest solitude can bringOnly a subtler questioningIn thy divided heart; thy bedRecalls at dawn what midnight said;Seek how thou wilt to feign contentThy flaming ardour's quickly spent;Soon thy last company is gone,And leaves thee - with thyself - alone.Pomp and great friends may hem thee round,A thousand busy tasks be found;Earth's thronging beauties may beguileThy longing lovesick heart awhile;And pride, like clouds of sunset, ...
Walter De La Mare
Paradise: In A Symbol
(Lyra Eucharistica, second edition, 1865.)Golden-winged, silver-winged, Winged with flashing flame,Such a flight of birds I saw, Birds without a name:Singing songs in their own tongue (Song of songs) they came.One to another calling, Each answering each,One to another calling In their proper speech:High above my head they wheeled, Far out of reach.On wings of flame they went and came With a cadenced clang,Their silver wings tinkled, Their golden wings rang,The wind it whistled through their wings Where in Heaven they sang.They flashed and they darted Awhile before mine eyes,Mounting, mounting, mounting still In haste to scale the skies -
Christina Georgina Rossetti
To The Daily Mail
(Aug. 3, 1901) My dear "Daily Mail," - To-day you attain Your 1,650th number, Which, for the sake of talking, We will call your Jubilee. Congratulations, My dear Daily Mail, Congratulations! There are people in the world Who, In the time of your infancy, Gave you the usual three months. Most new papers Get three months on the day of their birth. For at the sight of a new sheet, Your wise man invariably taps his nose, Looks even wiser than is his wont, And says, "My dear Sir, I give it Three months." Well, My dear Daily Mail, You have survived the sentence of the wise, And I am given to u...
Thomas William Hodgson Crosland
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet X
Reason, in faith thou art well seru'd that stillWouldst brabbling be with Sense and Loue in me;I rather wisht thee clime the Muses hill;Or reach the fruite of Natures choycest tree;Or seek heau'ns course or heau'ns inside to see:Why shouldst thou toil our thorny soile to till?Leaue Sense, and those which Senses obiects be;Deale thou with powers of thoughts, leaue Loue to Will.But thou wouldst needs fight with both Loue and Sence,With sword of wit giuing wounds of dispraise,Till downe-right blowes did foyle thy cunning fence;For, soone as they strake thee with Stellas rayes,Reason, thou kneeld'st, and offred'st straight to proue,By reason good, good reason her to loue.
Philip Sidney
Memorials Of A Tour In Italy, 1837 - X. - Near Anio's Stream, I Spied A Gentle Dove
Near Anio's stream, I spied a gentle DovePerched on an olive branch, and heard her cooing'Mid new-born blossoms that soft airs were wooing,While all things present told of joy and love.But restless Fancy left that olive groveTo hail the exploratory Bird renewingHope for the few, who, at the world's undoing,On the great flood were spared to live and move.O bounteous Heaven! signs true as dove and boughBrought to the ark are coming evermore,Given though we seek them not, but, while we ploughThis sea of life without a visible shore,Do neither promise ask nor grace imploreIn what alone is ours, the living Now.
Time And The Lover.
Oh, Time! thy merits who can know?Thy real nature who discover?The absent lover calls thee slow, -"Too rapid," says the happy lover.With bloom thy cheeks are now refin'd,Now to thine eye the tear is given;At once too cruel and too kind, -A little hell, a little heaven.Go then, thou charming myst'ry, go! -Yes, tho' thou often dost amuse me,Tho' many a joy to thee I owe,At once I thank thee and abuse thee.
John Carr