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O Lassie, Art Thou Sleeping Yet.
Tune - "Let me in this ae night."I. O Lassie, art thou sleeping yet, Or art thou waking, I would wit? For love has bound me hand and foot, And I would fain be in, jo. O let me in this ae night, This ae, ae, ae night; For pity's sake this ae night, O rise and let me in, jo!II. Thou hear'st the winter wind and weet! Nae star blinks thro' the driving sleet: Tak pity on my weary feet, And shield me frae the rain, jo.III. The bitter blast that round me blaws, Unheeded howls, unheeded fa's; The cauldness o' thy heart's the cause Of a' my grief and pain, jo. O let me in ...
Robert Burns
Solution
I am the Muse who sung alwayBy Jove, at dawn of the first day.Star-crowned, sole-sitting, long I wroughtTo fire the stagnant earth with thought:On spawning slime my song prevails,Wolves shed their fangs, and dragons scales;Flushed in the sky the sweet May-morn,Earth smiled with flowers, and man was born.Then Asia yeaned her shepherd race,And Nile substructs her granite base,--Tented Tartary, columned Nile,--And, under vines, on rocky isle,Or on wind-blown sea-marge bleak,Forward stepped the perfect Greek:That wit and joy might find a tongue,And earth grow civil, HOMER sung.Flown to Italy from Greece,I brooded long and held my peace,For I am wont to sing uncalled,And in days of evil plightUnlock doors of new delight...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Farewell To The Reader.
A maiden blush o'er every feature straying,The Muse her gentle harp now lays down here,And stands before thee, for thy judgment praying,She waits with reverence, but not with fear;Her last farewell for his kind smile delaying.Whom splendor dazzles not who holds truth dear.The hand of him alone whose soaring spiritWorships the beautiful, can crown her merit.These simple lays are only heard resounding,While feeling hearts are gladdened by their tone,With brighter phantasies their path surrounding,To nobler aims their footsteps guiding on.Yet coming ages ne'er will hear them sounding,They live but for the present hour alone;The passing moment called them into being,And, as the hours dance on, they, too, are fleeing.The spring returns, ...
Friedrich Schiller
Poems From "A Shropshire Lad" - LIV
With rue my heart is ladenFor golden friends I had,For many a rose-lipt maidenAnd many a lightfoot lad.By brooks too broad for leapingThe lightfoot boys are laid;The rose-lipt girls are sleepingIn fields where roses fade.
Alfred Edward Housman
Written In Naples
We are what we are made; each following dayIs the Creator of our human mouldNot less than was the first; the all-wise GodGilds a few points in every several life,And as each flower upon the fresh hillside,And every colored petal of each flower,Is sketched and dyed, each with a new design,Its spot of purple, and its streak of brown,So each man's life shall have its proper lights,And a few joys, a few peculiar charms,For him round in the melancholy hoursAnd reconcile him to the common days.Not many men see beauty in the fogsOf close low pine-woods in a river town;Yet unto me not morn's magnificence,Nor the red rainbow of a summer eve,Nor Rome, nor joyful Paris, nor the hallsOf rich men blazing hospitable light,Nor wit, nor eloquence,-...
A Sigh.
Again freckled cowslips are gilding the plain,And crow-flowers yellow again o'er the lea,Again the speck'd throstle comes in with her strain,And welcomes the spring--but no spring can I see.I once hail'd the throstle, her singing begun,And bath'd in spring's dew when her flower met my eyes;I sought for the kingcup all cloth'd in the sun,And gather'd my cowslips, and joy'd in the prize.They brought nature's spring, and they comforted me,They wip'd winter off, and did pleasure restore;But, alas! in their tidings a change can I see,Fate's added a postscript, "Thy spring is no more."
John Clare
Hap
If but some vengeful god would call to meFrom up the sky, and laugh: "Thou suffering thing,Know that thy sorrow is my ecstasy,That thy love's loss is my hate's profiting!"Then would I bear, and clench myself, and die,Steeled by the sense of ire unmerited;Half-eased in that a Powerfuller than IHad willed and meted me the tears I shed.But not so. How arrives it joy lies slain,And why unblooms the best hope ever sown?- Crass Casualty obstructs the sun and rain,And dicing Time for gladness casts a moan . . .These purblind Doomsters had as readily strownBlisses about my pilgrimage as pain.1866.
Thomas Hardy
Early Love
The Spring of life is o'er with me,And love and all gone by;Like broken bough upon yon tree,I'm left to fade and die.Stern ruin seized my home and me,And desolate's my cot:Ruins of halls, the blasted tree,Are emblems of my lot.I lived and loved, I woo'd and won,Her love was all to me,But blight fell o'er that youthful one,And like a blasted treeI withered, till I all forgotBut Mary's smile on me;She never lived where love was not,And I from bonds was free.The Spring it clothed the fields with pride,When first we met together;And then unknown to all besideWe loved in sunny weather;We met where oaks grew overhead,And whitethorns hung with may;Wild thyme beneath her feet was spread,And cows in ...
Sonnet XCIII.
Pien di quella ineffabile dolcezza.WHEREVER HE IS, HE SEES ONLY LAURA. O'erflowing with the sweets ineffable,Which from that lovely face my fond eyes drew,What time they seal'd, for very rapture, grew.On meaner beauty never more to dwell,Whom most I love I left: my mind so wellIts part, to muse on her, is train'd to do,None else it sees; what is not hers to view,As of old wont, with loathing I repel.In a low valley shut from all around,Sole consolation of my heart-deep sighs,Pensive and slow, with Love I walk alone:Not ladies here, but rocks and founts are found,And of that day blest images arise,Which my thought shapes where'er I turn mine eyes.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
A Sunbeam.
The sun was hid all day by clouds, The rain fell softly down;A cold gray mist hung o'er the earth, And veiled the silent town.Behind the clouds a sunbeam crept With restless wings of gold;The skies above were bright and warm, The earth below was cold.It glanced along the heavy clouds, Then sought to glide between;But ah! they gathered closer still, With fierce and angry mien.The dancing ray grew strangely still, Just like some weary bird,That droops upon a lonely shore, And sings its song unheard.For on the earth the drooping flowers Were longing for the light;And children with their watching eyes Could trace no sunbeam's flight.At last an angel, wand'ring by,
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Per Bo (1878)
Once I knew a noble peasantFrom a line of men large-hearted.Light and strength were in his mind,Lifted like a peak clear-linedO'er the valley in spring sunshine,First to feel the morning's beam,First refreshed by cloud-born stream.Wide the springtime spread its banner,Waving in his will illumined,Bright with promise, color-sound;Heritage of toil its ground.Round that mountain music floated,Songsters sweet of faith and hopeNestled on its tree-clad slope.Sometime, sometime all the valleyLike him shall with light be flooded;Sometime all his faith and truthSunward grow in dewy youth,And the dreams he dreamt too earlyLive and make him leader beFor a race as true as he.
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Dreams
I have been dreaming all a summer dayOf rare and dainty poems I would write;Love-lyrics delicate as lilac-scent,Soft idylls woven of wind, and flower, and stream,And songs and sonnets carven in fine gold.The day is fading and the dusk is cold;Out of the skies has gone the opal gleam,Out of my heart has passed the high intentInto the shadow of the falling night,Must all my dreams in darkness pass away?I have been dreaming all a summer day:Shall I go dreaming so until Lifes lightFades in Deaths dusk, and all my days are spent?Ah, what am I the dreamer but a dream!The day is fading and the dusk is cold.My songs and sonnets carven in fine goldHave faded from me with the last day -beamThat purple lustre to the sea-line lent...
Victor James Daley
The River Duddon - A Series Of Sonnets, 1820. - XI - The Faery Chasm
No fiction was it of the antique age:A sky-blue stone, within this sunless cleft,Is of the very footmarks unbereftWhich tiny Elves impressed; on that smooth stageDancing with all their brilliant equipageIn secret revels, haply after theftOf some sweet Babe, Flower stolen, and coarse Weed leftFor the distracted Mother to assuageHer grief with, as she might! But, where, oh! whereIs traceable a vestige of the notesThat ruled those dances wild in character?Deep underground? Or in the upper air,On the shrill wind of midnight? or where floatsO'er twilight fields the autumnal gossamer?
William Wordsworth
Sonnet: Written Upon The Top Of Ben Nevis
Read me a lesson, Muse, and speak it loudUpon the top of Nevis, blind in mist!I look into the chasms, and a shroudVapourous doth hide them, just so much I wistMankind do know of hell; I look o'erhead,And there is sullen mist, even so muchMankind can tell of heaven; mist is spreadBefore the earth, beneath me, even such,Even so vague is man's sight of himself!Here are the craggy stones beneath my feet,Thus much I know that, a poor witless elf,I tread on them, that all my eye doth meetIs mist and crag, not only on this height,But in the world of thought and mental might!
John Keats
The Poets.
Half god, half brute, within the self-same shell,Changers with every hour from dawn till even,Who dream with angels in the gate of heaven,And skirt with curious eyes the brinks of hell,Children of Pan, whom some, the few, love well,But most draw back, and know not what to say,Poor shining angels, whom the hoofs betray,Whose pinions frighten with their goatish smell.Half brutish, half divine, but all of earth,Half-way 'twixt hell and heaven, near to man,The whole world's tangle gathered in one span,Full of this human torture and this mirth:Life with its hope and error, toil and bliss,Earth-born, earth-reared, ye know it as it is.
Archibald Lampman
Melancholy To Laura.
Laura! a sunrise seems to breakWhere'er thy happy looks may glow.Joy sheds its roses o'er thy cheek,Thy tears themselves do but bespeakThe rapture whence they flow;Blest youth to whom those tears are givenThe tears that change his earth to heaven;His best reward those melting eyesFor him new suns are in the skies!Thy soul a crystal river passing,Silver-clear, and sunbeam-glassing,Mays into bloom sad Autumn by thee;Night and desert, if they spy thee,To gardens laugh with daylight shine,Lit by those happy smiles of thine!Dark with cloud the future farGoldens itself beneath thy star.Smilest thou to see the harmonyOf charm the laws of Nature keep?Alas! to me the harmonyBrings only cause to weep!Holds not Ha...
The Poet's Song
IThere came no change from week to weekOn all the land, but all one way,Like ghosts that cannot touch nor speak,Day followed day.Within the palace court the roundsOf glare and shadow, day and night,Went ever with the same dull sounds,The same dull flight:The motion of slow forms of state,The far-off murmur of the street,The din of couriers at the gate,Half-mad with heat;Sometimes a distant shout of boysAt play upon the terrace walk,The shutting of great doors, and noiseOf muttered talk.In one red corner of the wall,That fronted with its granite stainThe town, the palms, and, beyond all,The burning plain,As listless as the hour, alone,The poet by his broken luteS...
Nancy.
I. Thine am I, my faithful fair, Thine, my lovely Nancy; Ev'ry pulse along my veins, Ev'ry roving fancy.II. To thy bosom lay my heart, There to throb and languish: Tho' despair had wrung its core, That would heal its anguish.III. Take away those rosy lips, Rich with balmy treasure: Turn away thine eyes of love, Lest I die with pleasure.IV. What is life when wanting love? Night without a morning: Love's the cloudless summer sun, Nature gay adorning.