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To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXIX.
Dolce mio caro e prezioso pegno.HE PRAYS HER TO APPEAR BEFORE HIM IN A VISION. Dear precious pledge, by Nature snatch'd away,But yet reserved for me in realms undying;O thou on whom my life is aye relying,Why tarry thus, when for thine aid I pray?Time was, when sleep could to mine eyes conveySweet visions, worthy thee;--why is my sighingUnheeded now?--who keeps thee from replying?Surely contempt in heaven cannot stay:Often on earth the gentlest heart is fainTo feed and banquet on another's woe(Thus love is conquer'd in his own domain),But thou, who seest through me, and dost knowAll that I feel,--thou, who canst soothe my pain,Oh! let thy blessed shade its peace bestow.WROTTESLEY.
Francesco Petrarca
Last Lines
No coward soul is mine,No trembler in the world's storm-troubled sphere:I see Heaven's glories shine,And faith shines equal, arming me from fear.O God within my breast,Almighty, ever-present Deity!Life, that in me has rest,As I, undying Life, have power in Thee!Vain are the thousand creedsThat move men's hearts: unutterably vain;Worthless as wither'd weeds,Or idlest froth amid the boundless main,To waken doubt in oneHolding so fast by Thine infinity;So surely anchor'd onThe steadfast rock of immortality.With wide-embracing loveThy Spirit animates eternal years,Pervades and broods above,Changes, sustains, dissolves, creates, and rears.Though earth and man were gone,And suns and universe...
Emily Bronte
Sonnets: Idea LXI
Since there's no help, come let us kiss and part,Nay I have done, you get no more of me;And I am glad, yea glad with all my heart,That thus so cleanly I myself can free; Shakes hands for ever, cancel all our vows,And when we meet at any time again,Be it not seen in either of our browsThat we one jot of former love retain. Now at the last gasp of Love's latest breath,When his pulse failing, Passion speechless lies,When Faith is kneeling by his bed of death,And Innocence is closing up his eyes: Now if thou wouldst, when all have given him over, From death to life thou might'st him yet recover!
Michael Drayton
Where the Dead Men Lie
Out on the wastes of the Never NeverThats where the dead men lie!There where the heat-waves dance foreverThats where the dead men lie!Thats where the Earths loved sons are keepingEndless tryst: not the west wind sweepingFeverish pinions can wake their sleepingOut where the dead men lie!Where brown Summer and Death have matedThats where the dead men lie!Loving with fiery lust unsatedThats where the dead men lie!Out where the grinning skulls bleach whitelyUnder the saltbush sparkling brightly;Out where the wild dogs chorus nightlyThats where the dead men lie!Deep in the yellow, flowing riverThats where the dead men lie!Under the banks where the shadows quiverThats where the dead men he!Where the platyp...
Barcroft Boake
On Reading "Gibbon's Rome."
And this man was "an infidel!" Ah, no!The tale's incredible it was not so.The untutored savage through the world may plod,Reckless of Heaven and ignorant of his God;But that a mind that's culled improvement's flowersFrom all her brightest amaranthine bowers,A mind whose keen and comprehensive glanceComprised at once a world should worship chance,Is strangely inconsistent seems to meThe very essence of absurdity;Who, from the exhaustless granary of Heaven,Receives the blessings so profusely given,Looks with a curious eye on Nature's face,Forever beaming with a new-born grace,And dares with impious voice aloud proclaimHe knows no Heaven but this no God but Fame.Lord, in refusing to acknowledge Thee,Vain man denies his own reality;But ...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXIV.
Questo nostro caduco e fragil bene.NATURE DISPLAYED IN HER EVERY CHARM, BUT SOON WITHDREW HER FROM SIGHT. This gift of beauty which a good men name,Frail, fleeting, fancied, false, a wind, a shade,Ne'er yet with all its spells one fair array'd,Save in this age when for my cost it came.Not such is Nature's duty, nor her aim,One to enrich if others poor are made,But now on one is all her wealth display'd,--Ladies, your pardon let my boldness claim.Like loveliness ne'er lived, or old or new,Nor ever shall, I ween, but hid so strange,Scarce did our erring world its marvel view,So soon it fled; thus too my soul must changeThe little light vouchsafed me from the skiesOnly for pleasure of her sainted eyes.MACGREGOR.
A Prayer For Grace In Death. First Reading.
S' avvien che spesso.What though strong love of life doth flatter me With hope of yet more years on earth to stay, Death none the less draws nearer day by day, Who to sad souls alone comes lingeringly.Yet why desire long life and jollity, If in our griefs alone to God we pray? Glad fortune, length of days, and pleasure slay The soul that trusts to their felicity.Then if at any hour through grace divine The fiery shafts of love and faith that cheer And fortify the soul, my heart assail,Since nought achieve these mortal powers of mine, Straight may I wing my way to heaven; for here With lengthening days good thoughts and wishes fail.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XIX.
Sennuccio mio, benchè doglioso e solo.ON THE DEATH OF HIS FRIEND SENNUCCIO. O friend! though left a wretched pilgrim here,By thee though left in solitude to roam,Yet can I mourn that thou hast found thy home,On angel pinions borne, in bright career?Now thou behold'st the ever-turning sphere,And stars that journey round the concave dome;Now thou behold'st how short of truth we come,How blind our judgment, and thine own how clear!That thou art happy soothes my soul oppress'd.O friend! salute from me the laurell'd band,Guitton and Cino, Dante, and the rest:And tell my Laura, friend, that here I stand,Wasting in tears, scarce of myself possess'd,While her blest beauties all my thoughts command.MOREHEAD....
To -----
Think not of it, sweet one, so;Give it not a tear;Sigh thou mayst, and bid it goAny, any where.Do not look so sad, sweet one,Sad and fadingly;Shed one drop then, it is gone,O 'twas born to die!Still so pale? then, dearest, weep;Weep, I'll count the tears,And each one shall be a blissFor thee in after years.Brighter has it left thine eyesThan a sunny rill;And thy whispering melodiesAre tenderer still.Yet, as all things mourn awhileAt fleeting blisses,E'en let us too! but be our dirgeA dirge of kisses.
John Keats
Orson's Farewell.
(ORSON GROUT),One of the victims of the Southern Prisons.Sit by me comrade, thou and I have stood Shoulder to shoulder on the battle-field,And bore us there like men of British blood, But comrade this is death, and I must yield.You have been leal, my friend, and true and tried In battle, in captivity of me;Since we went up to worship side by side O'er the green hills I never more shall see.From this dread prison pen, thou shalt go forth; But I, I know it, never more shall rise,Nor see my home in the cool pleasant North, Nor see again my wife's dark mournful eyes.Nor see my children, every shining head And merry eye, for what know they of grief;'Twill still their play to know that I...
Nora Pembroke
A Gravestone Upon The Floor In The Cloisters Of Worcester Cathedral
"Miserrimus," and neither name nor date,Prayer, text, or symbol, graven upon the stone;Nought but that word assigned to the unknown,That solitary word, to separateFrom all, and cast a cloud around the fateOf him who lies beneath. Most wretched one,'Who' chose his epitaph? Himself aloneCould thus have dared the grave to agitate,And claim, among the dead, this awful crown;Nor doubt that He marked also for his ownClose to these cloistral steps a burial-place,That every foot might fall with heavier tread,Trampling upon his vileness. Stranger, passSoftly! To save the contrite, Jesus bled.
William Wordsworth
Evening on the Broads
Over two shadowless waters, adrift as a pinnace in peril,Hangs as in heavy suspense, charged with irresolute light,Softly the soul of the sunset upholden awhile on the sterileWaves and wastes of the land, half repossessed by the night.Inland glimmer the shallows asleep and afar in the breathlessTwilight: yonder the depths darken afar and asleep.Slowly the semblance of death out of heaven descends on the deathlessWaters: hardly the light lives on the face of the deepHardly, but here for awhile. All over the grey soft shallowHover the colours and clouds of the twilight, void of a star.As a bird unfledged is the broad-winged night, whose winglets are callowYet, but soon with their plumes will she cover her brood from afar,Cover the brood of her worlds that cumber the ski...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
A Dirge
Death and a dirge at midnight; Yet never a soul in the houseHeard anything more than the throb and beat Of a beautiful waltz of Strauss.Dead, dead, dead, and staring, With a ghastly smile on its face;But the world saw only laughing eyes And roses, and billows of lace.Floating and whirling together, Into the beautiful night,How little you dreamed of the ghastly thing I was hiding away from your sight.Meeting your dark eyes' splendour, Feeling your warm, sweet breath,How could you know that my passionate heart Had died a horrible death?Died in its fever and fervour, Died in its beautiful bloom;And that waltz of Strauss was a funeral dirge, Leading the way to the tomb.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Sonnets LXIV - When I have seen by Times fell hand defacd
When I have seen by Times fell hand defacdThe rich-proud cost of outworn buried age;When sometime lofty towers I see down-razd,And brass eternal slave to mortal rage;When I have seen the hungry ocean gainAdvantage on the kingdom of the shore,And the firm soil win of the watery main,Increasing store with loss, and loss with store;When I have seen such interchange of state,Or state itself confounded, to decay;Ruin hath taught me thus to ruminateThat Time will come and take my love away.This thought is as a death which cannot chooseBut weep to have, that which it fears to lose.
William Shakespeare
Consolation
Mist clogs the sunshine.Smoky dwarf housesHem me round everywhere;A vague dejectionWeighs down my soul.Yet, while I languish,Everywhere countlessProspects unroll themselves,And countless beingsPass countless moods.Far hence, in Asia,On the smooth convent-roofs,On the gilt terraces,Of holy Lassa,Bright shines the sun.Grey time-worn marblesHold the pure Muses;In their cool gallery,By yellow Tiber,They still look fair.Strange unloved uproarShrills round their portal;Yet not on HeliconKept they more cloudlessTheir noble calm.Through sun-proof alleysIn a lone, sand-hemm'dCity of Africa,A blind, led beggar,Age-bow'd, asks alms.No bolder robberErst abode ambush'd...
Matthew Arnold
Mysterious.
The morning sun rose bright and fairUpon a lovely village where Prosperity abounded,And ceaseless hum of industryIn lines of friendly rivalry From day to day resounded.Its shaded avenues were wide,And closely bordered either side With cottages or mansions,Or marked by blocks of masonryThat might defy a century To loosen from their stanchions.Its peaceful dwellers daily viedTo make this spot, with anxious pride, A Paradise of beauty,Recounted its attractions o'er,And its adornment held no more A pleasure than a duty.But, ere the daylight passed away,That hamlet fair in ruins lay, Its hapless people scatteredLike playthings, at the cyclone's will,And scarce remained one do...
Hattie Howard
Amour 40
O thou vnkindest fayre! most fayrest shee,In thine eyes tryumph murthering my poore hart,Now doe I sweare by heauens, before we part,My halfe-slaine hart shall take reuenge on thee.Thy mother dyd her lyfe to death resigne,And thou an Angell art, and from aboue;Thy father was a man, that will I proue,Yet thou a Goddesse art, and so diuine.And thus, if thou be not of humaine kinde,A Bastard on both sides needes must thou be;Our Lawes allow no land to basterdy:By natures Lawes we thee a bastard finde. Then hence to heauen, vnkind, for thy childs part: Goe bastard goe, for sure of thence thou art.
On His Deceased Wife
Methought I saw my late espoused SaintBrought to me like Alcestis from the grave,Whom Joves great Son to her glad Husband gave,Rescu'd from death by force though pale and faint.Mine as whom washt from spot of child-bed taint,Purification in the old Law did save,And such, as yet once more I trust to haveFull sight of her in Heaven without restraint,Came vested all in white, pure as her mind:Her face was vail'd, yet to my fancied sight,Love, sweetness, goodness, in her person shin'dSo clear, as in no face with more delight.But O as to embrace me she enclin'dI wak'd, she fled, and day brought back my night.
John Milton