Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 82 of 298
Previous
Next
The Foretelling Of Cathbad The Druid At Deirdre's Birth
Let Deirdre be her name: harm will come through her. She will be fair, comely, bright-haired: heroes will fight for her, and kings go seeking for her.O Deirdre, on whose account many shall weep, on whose account many women shall be envious, there will be trouble on Ulster for your sake, O fair daughter of Fedlimid.Many will be jealous of your face, O flame of beauty; for your sake heroes shall go to exile. For your sake deeds of anger shall be done in Emain; there is harm in your face, for it will bring banishment and death on the sons of kings.In your fate, O beautiful child, are wounds and ill-doings and shedding of blood. You will have a little grave apart to yourself; you will be a tale of wonder for ever, Deirdre.
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
The Grief
The heart of me's an empty thing, that never stirs at allFor Moon-shine or Spring-time, or a far bird's call.I only know 'tis living by a grief that shakes it so,--Like an East wind in Autumn, when the old nests blow.Grey Eyes and Black Hair, 'tis never you I blame.'Tis long years and easy years since last I spoke your name.And I'm long past the knife-thrust I got at wake or fair.Or looking past the lighted door and fancying you there.Grey Eyes and Black Hair--the grief is never this;I've long forgot the soft arms--the first, wild kiss.But, Oh, girl that tore my youth,--'tis this I have to bear,--If you were kneeling at my feet I'd neither stay nor care.
Theodosia Garrison
A Presentiment.
"Oh father, let us hence, for hark,A fearful murmur shakes the air.The clouds are coming swift and dark:What horrid shapes they wear!A winged giant sails the sky;Oh father, father, let us fly!""Hush, child; it is a grateful sound,That beating of the summer shower;Here, where the boughs hang close around,We'll pass a pleasant hour,Till the fresh wind, that brings the rain,Has swept the broad heaven clear again.""Nay, father, let us haste, for see,That horrid thing with horned brow,His wings o'erhang this very tree,He scowls upon us now;His huge black arm is lifted high;Oh father, father, let us fly!""Hush, child;" but, as the father spoke,Downward the livid firebolt came,Close to his ear the thunder brok...
William Cullen Bryant
Iseult Of Ireland
Raise the light, my page! that I may see her.Thou art come at last, then, haughty Queen!Long Ive waited, long Ive fought my fever;Late thou comest, cruel thou hast been.IseultBlame me not, poor sufferer! that I tarried;Bound I was, I could not break the band.Chide not with the past, but feel the present!I am here we meet I hold thy hand.TristramThou art come, indeed thou hast rejoind me;Thou hast dared it but too late to save.Fear not now that men should tax thine honour!I am dying: build (thou mayst) my grave!IseultTristram, ah, for love of Heaven, speak kindly!What, I hear these bitter words from thee?Sick with grief I am, and faint with travelTake my hand dear Tristram, look on me!
Matthew Arnold
The Parting
Breathless was she and would not have us part:"Adieu, my Saint," I said, "'tis come to this."But she leaned to me, one hand at her heart,And all her soul sighed trembling in a kiss.
Maurice Henry Hewlett
Gladiators
No broken visor, emptied glove abandoned cudgel, opened net - only gathering spots on spreading sand. Clang of cymbals wrench of flesh, death is a morsel delectably met.
Paul Cameron Brown
Graves Of Infants
Infants' gravemounds are steps of angels, whereEarth's brightest gems of innocence repose.God is their parent, so they need no tear;He takes them to his bosom from earth's woes,A bud their lifetime and a flower their close.Their spirits are the Iris of the skies,Needing no prayers; a sunset's happy close.Gone are the bright rays of their soft blue eyes;Flowers weep in dew-drops o'er them, and the gale gently sighs.Their lives were nothing but a sunny shower,Melting on flowers as tears melt from the eye.Each deathWas tolled on flowers as Summer gales went by.They bowed and trembled, yet they heaved no sigh,And the sun smiled to show the end was well.Infants have nought to weep for ere they die;All prayers are needless, beads they need not ...
John Clare
I Would Not Live Alway.
I looked upon the fair young flowersThat in our gardens bloom,Gazed on their winning loveliness,And then upon the tomb;I looked upon the smiling earth,The blue and cloudless sky,And murmured in my spirit's depths,"O I can never die!"I heard my sister's joyous laugh,As she danced lightly by,Her heart was glad with love and hope,Its pulse with youth beat high;I sought my mother's quiet smile,She fondly drew me nigh,And still I said within my heart,"O I can never die!"Stern winter came, - the fairy flowersWere swept by storms away,And swiftly passed the verdant bloomOf summer's lovely day;My mother's smile grew more serene,And brighter was her eye,And now I know her only asAn angel in the sky.<...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
She passed the thorn-trees, whose gaunt branches tossedTheir spider-shadows round her; and the breeze,Beneath the ashen moon, was full of frost,And mouthed and mumbled to the sickly trees,Like some starved hag who sees her children freeze.Dry-eyed she waited by the sycamore.Some stars made misty blotches in the sky.And all the wretched willows on the shoreLooked faded as a jaundiced cheek or eye.She felt their pity and could only sigh.And then his skiff ground on the river rocks.Whistling he came into the shadow madeBy that dead tree. He kissed her dark brown locks;And round her form his eager arms were laid.Passive she stood, her secret unbetrayed.And then she spoke, while still his greeting kissAched in her hair. She did not...
Madison Julius Cawein
Sonnet: England In 1819.
An old, mad, blind, despised, and dying king, -Princes, the dregs of their dull race, who flowThrough public scorn, - mud from a muddy spring, -Rulers who neither see, nor feel, nor know,But leech-like to their fainting country cling,Till they drop, blind in blood, without a blow, -A people starved and stabbed in the untilled field, -An army, which liberticide and preyMakes as a two-edged sword to all who wield, -Golden and sanguine laws which tempt and slay;Religion Christless, Godless - a book sealed;A Senate, - Time's worst statute, unrepealed, -Are graves from which a glorious Phantom mayBurst, to illumine our tempestuous day.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
A Wasted Illness
Through vaults of pain,Enribbed and wrought with groins of ghastliness,I passed, and garish spectres moved my brainTo dire distress.And hammerings,And quakes, and shoots, and stifling hotness, blentWith webby waxing things and waning thingsAs on I went."Where lies the endTo this foul way?" I asked with weakening breath.Thereon ahead I saw a door extend -The door to death.It loomed more clear:"At last!" I cried. "The all-delivering door!"And then, I knew not how, it grew less nearThan theretofore.And back slid IAlong the galleries by which I came,And tediously the day returned, and sky,And life - the same.And all was well:Old circumstance resumed its former show,And on my head the...
Thomas Hardy
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...
Friedrich Schiller
Dreaming
Paul said:Ah, but who wouldn't want to drive a car forever -We burrow our way through high-stemmed woods,We pass by spaces that seem endless.We pass through the wind and attack the towns, which speed up.But the odors of the sluggish cities are hateful to us -Ah, we are flying! Always alongside death...How we despise and scorn him who sits on our lives!Who lays out graves for us and makes all streets crooked - ha, welaugh at him,and the roads, overcome, die with us -Thus we shall auto our way through the whole world...Until, on some clear eveningWe find a violent ending against a sturdy tree.
Alfred Lichtenstein
The Image In The Glass.
I.The slow reflection of a woman's faceGrew, as by witchcraft, in the oval spaceOf that strange glass on which the moon looked in:As cruel as death beneath the auburn hairThe dark eyes burned; and, o'er the faultless chin,Evil as night yet as the daybreak fair,Rose-red and sensual smiled the mouth of sin.II.The glorious throat and shoulders and, twin crestsOf snow, the splendid beauty of the breasts,Filled soul and body with the old desireDaughter of darkness! how could this thing be?You, whom I loathed! for whom my heart's fierce fireHad burnt to ashes of satiety!You, who had sunk my soul in all that's dire!III.How came your image there? and in that room!Where she, the all adored, my life's sweet bloom...
Before The End
How does the Autumn in her mind concludeThe tragic masque her frosty pencil writes,Broad on the pages of the days and nights,In burning lines of orchard, wold, and wood?What lonelier forms, that at the year's door stoodAt spectral wait, with wildly wasted lightsShall enter? and with melancholy ritesInaugurate their sadder sisterhood?Sorrow, who lifts a signal hand, and slowThe green leaf fevers, falling ere it dies;Regret, whose pale lips summon, and gaunt WoeWakes the wild-wind harps with sonorous sighs;And Sleep, who sits with poppied eyes and seesThe earth and sky grow dream-accessories.
Saying Good-Bye (Song)
We are always saying"Good-bye, good-bye!"In work, in playing,In gloom, in gaying:At many a stageOf pilgrimageFrom youth to ageWe say, "Good-bye,Good-bye!"We are undiscerningWhich go to sigh,Which will be yearningFor soon returning;And which no moreWill dark our door,Or tread our shore,But go to die,To die.Some come from roamingWith joy again;Some, who come homingBy stealth at gloaming,Had better have stoppedTill death, and droppedBy strange hands propped,Than come so fain,So fain.So, with this saying,"Good-bye, good-bye,"We speed their wayingWithout betrayingOur grief, our fearNo more to hearFrom them, close, clear,Again...
By An Evolutionist
The Lord let the house of a brute to the soul of a man,And the man said, Am I your debtor?And the LordNot yet; but make it as clean as you can,And then I will let you a better.I.If my body come from brutes, my soul uncertain or a fable,Why not bask amid the senses while the sun of morning shines,I, the finer brute rejoicing in my hounds, and in my stable,Youth and health, and birth and wealth, and choice of women and of wines?II.What hast thou done for me, grim Old Age, save breaking my bones on the rack?Would I had past in the morning that looks so bright from afar!OLD AGEDone for thee? starved the wild beast that was linkt with thee eighty years back.Less weight now for the ladder-of-heaven that hangs on a s...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Answer To Cloe Jealous. The Author Sick
Yes, fairest Proof of Beauty's Pow'r,Dear Idol of My panting Heart,Nature points This my fatal Hour:And I have liv'd; and We must part.While now I take my last Adieu,Heave Thou no Sigh, nor shed a Tear;Lest yet my half-clos'd Eye may viewOn Earth an Object worth it's Care.From Jealousy's tormenting StrifeFor ever be Thy Bosom free'd:That nothing may disturb Thy Life,Content I hasten to the Dead.Yet when some better-fated YouthShall with his am'rous Parly move Thee;Reflect One Moment on His Truth,Who dying Thus, persists to love Thee.
Matthew Prior