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On The Same Occasion - (On Seeing The Foundation Preparing For The Erection Of Rydal Chapel, Westmoreland)
Oh! gather whencesoe'er ye safely mayThe help which slackening Pity requires;Nor deem that he perforce must go astrayWho treads upon the footmarks of his sires.When in the antique age of bow and spearAnd feudal rapine clothed with iron mail,Came ministers of peace, intent to rearThe Mother Church in yon sequestered vale;Then, to her Patron Saint a previous riteResounded with deep swell and solemn close,Through unremitting vigils of the night,Till from his couch the wished-for Sun uprose.He rose, and straight, as by divine command,They, who had waited for that sign to traceTheir work's foundation, gave with careful handTo the high altar its determined place;Mindful of Him who in the Orient bornThere live...
William Wordsworth
Comfort.
Once through an autumn woodI roamed in tearful mood,By grief dismayed, doubting, and ill at ease;When from a leafless oak,Methought low murmurs broke,Complaining accents, as of words like these:"Incline thy mighty earGreat Mother Earth, and hearHow I, thy child, am sorely vexed and tossed;No one to heed my moan,I shudder here, aloneWith my destroyers, wind and snow, and frost.Then low and unawareThis answer cleaved the air,This tender answer, "Doubting one be still;Oh trust to me, and knowThe wind, the frost, the snow,Are but my servants sent to do my will."For the destroyer frost,His labor is not lost,Rid thee he shall of many noisome things;And thou shalt praise the snowWhen drinking far b...
Marietta Holley
Awake, Arise, Thy Light Is Come. (Air.--Stevenson.)
Awake, arise, thy light is come;[1] The nations, that before outshone thee,Now at thy feet lie dark and dumb-- The glory of the Lord is on thee!Arise--the Gentiles to thy ray, From every nook of earth shall cluster;And kings and princes haste to pay Their homage to thy rising lustre.[2]Lift up thine eyes around, and see O'er foreign fields, o'er farthest waters,Thy exiled sons return to thee, To thee return thy home-sick daughters.[3]And camels rich, from Midians' tents, Shall lay their treasures down before thee;And Saba bring her gold and scents, To fill thy air and sparkle o'er thee.[4]See, who are these that, like a cloud,[5] Are ...
Thomas Moore
Sonnet VII. To The Evening Rainbow.
Mild arch of promise! on the evening sky Thou shinest fair with many a lovely rayEach in the other melting. Much mine eye Delights to linger on thee; for the day,Changeful and many-weather'd, seem'd to smileFlashing brief splendor thro' its clouds awhile, That deepen'd dark anon and fell in rain:But pleasant is it now to pause, and viewThy various tints of frail and watery hue, And think the storm shall not return again.Such is the smile that Piety bestows On the good man's pale cheek, when he in peaceDeparting gently from a world of woes, Anticipates the realm where sorrows cease.
Robert Southey
Patria.[1]
("Là-haut, qui sourit.")[Bk. VII. vii., September, 1853.]Who smiles there? Is itA stray spirit,Or woman fair?Sombre yet soft the brow!Bow, nations, bow;O soul in air,Speak - what art thou?In grief the fair face seems -What means those sudden gleams?Our antique pride from dreamsStarts up, and beamsIts conquering glance, -To make our sad hearts dance,And wake in woods hushed longThe wild bird's song.Angel of Day!Our Hope, Love, Stay,Thy countenanceLights land and seaEternally,Thy name is FranceOr Verity.Fair angel in thy glassWhen vile things move or pass,Clouds in the skies amass;Terrible, alas!Thy stern commands are then:"Form your...
Victor-Marie Hugo
No Message
She heard the story of the end,Each message, too, she heard;And there was one for every friend;For her alone, no word.And shall she bear a heavier heart,And deem his love was fled;Because his soul from earth could partLeaving her name unsaid?No, No! Though neither sign nor soundA parting thought expressed,Not heedless passed the Homeward-BoundOf her he loved the best.Of voyage-perils, bravely borne,He would not tell the tale;Of shattered planks and canvas torn,And war with wind and gale.He waited, till the light-house starShould rise against the sky;And from the mainland, looming far,The forest scents blow by.He hoped to tell, assurance sweet!That pain and grief were oer,What bl...
Mary Hannay Foott
Abolition Of Slavery In The District Of Columbia, 1862
When first I saw our banner waveAbove the nation's council-hall,I heard beneath its marble wallThe clanking fetters of the slave!In the foul market-place I stood,And saw the Christian mother sold,And childhood with its locks of gold,Blue-eyed and fair with Saxon blood.I shut my eyes, I held my breath,And, smothering down the wrath and shameThat set my Northern blood aflame,Stood silent, where to speak was death.Beside me gloomed the prison-cellWhere wasted one in slow declineFor uttering simple words of mine,And loving freedom all too well.The flag that floated from the domeFlapped menace in the morning air;I stood a perilled stranger whereThe human broker made his home.For crime was virtue: Gown and SwordAnd Law t...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Be Quiet!
Soul, dost thou fearFor to-day or to-morrow?'Tis the part of a foolTo go seeking sorrow.Of thine own doingThou canst not contrive them.'Tis He that shall give them;Thou may'st not outlive them.So why cloud to-dayWith fear of the sorrow,That may or may notCome to-morrow?
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Greeting
I spread a scanty board too late;The old-time guests for whom I waitCome few and slow, methinks, to-day.Ah! who could hear my messagesAcross the dim unsounded seasOn which so many have sailed away!Come, then, old friends, who linger yet,And let us meet, as we have met,Once more beneath this low sunshine;And grateful for the good weve known,The riddles solved, the ills outgrown,Shake hands upon the border line.The favor, asked too oft before,From your indulgent ears, once moreI crave, and, if belated laysTo slower, feebler measures move,The silent, sympathy of loveTo me is dearer now than praise.And ye, O younger friends, for whomMy hearth and heart keep open room,Come smiling through the shadows long,<...
Translations. - Longing. (From Schiller.)
Ah, from out this valley hollow,By cold fogs always oppressed,Could I but the outpath follow--Ah, how were my spirit blest!Hills I see there, glad dominions,Ever young, and green for aye!Had I wings, oh, had I pinions,To the hills were I away!Harmonies I hear there ringing,Tones of sweetest heavenly rest;And the gentle winds are bringingBalmy odours to my breast!Golden fruits peep out there, glowingThrough the leaves to Zephyr's play;And the flowers that there are blowingWill become no winter's prey!Oh, what happy things are meetingThere, in endless sunshine free!And the airs on those hills greeting,How reviving must they be!But me checks yon raving riverThat betwixt doth chafe and roll;And its da...
George MacDonald
Reciprocity
I do not think that skies and meadows areMoral, or that the fixture of a starComes of a quiet spirit, or that treesHave wisdom in their windless silences.Yet these are things invested in my moodWith constancy, and peace, and fortitude,That in my troubled season I can cryUpon the wide composure of the sky,And envy fields, and wish that I might beAs little daunted as a star or tree.
John Drinkwater
The Baya: Or The Indian Bird.
Let the Nightingale still be renown'd for her song, The Eagle for strength, and for softness the Dove,Higher praise to the Baya of India belongs, For gentle docility, duty and love.The Baya, dear nymphs, is a delicate bird, Of intelligent zeal, in our climate unknown;A bird, in the service of lovers preferr'd To the turtle, that Venus regards as her own.The Baya not only will bear in his beak The letter a youth to his nymph would convey;But if from her person some jewel he seek, This bird, at his nod, gently plucks it away.It chanc'd in Circassia a lovely young maid, On her beautiful neck wore a crescent of gold,Hermossan, her lover, the trinket survey'd, And wish'd in his bosom the gem to infold....
William Hayley
O God, Wilt Thou Help Me In School?
I then acted as agent for the "Zion Record," published by Rev. R. A. Adams, 39 St. Catherine Street, Natchez, Miss., until August 20, 1902. Knowing that there was a dormitory to be built for girls at Alcorn, I went there, hoping to get work and to be there when school opened. On arriving, I failed to get employment. I had no money. The Boarding Hall was run by boys who stayed over summer. Finding I was unemployed, they refused to let me take meals with them. There I was - friendless and penniless - without a bite of bread and nowhere to lay my head. To drive the wolf of starvation away and to keep from being devoured, I made arrangements with President Lanier to cut wood for something to eat, until school opened Sept. 2, 1902. When school opened, the Faculty met the first day and distributed the positions to the...
Edward Smyth Jones
Rephan
Suggested by a very early recollection of a prose story by the noble woman and imaginative writer, Jane Taylor, of Norwich, (more correctly, of Ongar].- R. B.How I lived, ere my human life beganIn this world of yours, like you, made man,When my home was the Star of my God Rephan?Come then around me, close about,World-weary earth-born ones! Darkest doubtOr deepest despondency keeps you out?Nowise! Before a word I speak,Let my circle embrace your worn, your weak,Brow-furrowed old age, youths hollow cheek.Diseased in the body, sick in soul,Pinched poverty, satiate wealth, your wholeArray of despairs! Have I read the roll?All here? Attend, perpend! O StarOf my God Rephan, what wonders areIn thy brilliance...
Robert Browning
William Forster
The years are many since his handWas laid upon my head,Too weak and young to understandThe serious words he said.Yet often now the good man's lookBefore me seems to swim,As if some inward feeling tookThe outward guise of him.As if, in passion's heated war,Or near temptation's charm,Through him the low-voiced monitorForewarned me of the harm.Stranger and pilgrim! from that dayOf meeting, first and last,Wherever Duty's pathway lay,His reverent steps have passed.The poor to feed, the lost to seek,To proffer life to death,Hope to the erring, to the weakThe strength of his own faith.To plead the captive's right; removeThe sting of hate from Law;And soften in the fire of loveThe ...
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
The Two Loves
Smoothing soft the nestling headOf a maiden fancy-led,Thus a grave-eyed woman said:"Richest gifts are those we make,Dearer than the love we takeThat we give for love's own sake."Well I know the heart's unrest;Mine has been the common quest,To be loved and therefore blest."Favors undeserved were mine;At my feet as on a shrineLove has laid its gifts divine."Sweet the offerings seemed, and yetWith their sweetness came regret,And a sense of unpaid debt."Heart of mine unsatisfied,Was it vanity or prideThat a deeper joy denied?"Hands that ope but to receiveEmpty close; they only liveRichly who can richly give."Still," she sighed, with moistening eyes,"Love is sweet in any g...
Consolation In Bereavement.
'Tis not when we look on the dreamless dead,And feel that the spirit forever has fled;'Tis not when we're called to the voiceless tombBy the loved who were culled in their brightest bloom;'Tis not when the grave's last rite is o'er,And we know they are gone to return no more;But, oh! 'tis when Time with oblivious wingA balm to all other hearts may bring;When the dark, dark hours of grief are o'er,And we join the world we can love no more,That world whose grief for the absent onePassed like a cloud from an April sun;When, amid the mirth that salutes the ear,One tone is gone we had used to hear,One form is missed in that happy train,That will never exult in its sports again;We feel that death has indeed passed o'er,And a blank...