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The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto V
"If beyond earthly wont, the flame of loveIllume me, so that I o'ercome thy powerOf vision, marvel not: but learn the causeIn that perfection of the sight, which soonAs apprehending, hasteneth on to reachThe good it apprehends. I well discern,How in thine intellect already shinesThe light eternal, which to view aloneNe'er fails to kindle love; and if aught elseYour love seduces, 't is but that it showsSome ill-mark'd vestige of that primal beam."This would'st thou know, if failure of the vowBy other service may be so supplied,As from self-question to assure the soul."Thus she her words, not heedless of my wish,Began; and thus, as one who breaks not offDiscourse, continued in her saintly strain."Supreme of gifts, which God crea...
Dante Alighieri
The Storm; Minerva's Petition
Pallas, a goddess chaste and wiseDescending lately from the skies,To Neptune went, and begg'd in formHe'd give his orders for a storm;A storm, to drown that rascal Hort,[1]And she would kindly thank him for't:A wretch! whom English rogues, to spite her,Had lately honour'd with a mitre. The god, who favour'd her request,Assured her he would do his best:But Venus had been there before,Pleaded the bishop loved a whore,And had enlarged her empire wide;He own'd no deity beside.At sea or land, if e'er you found himWithout a mistress, hang or drown him.Since Burnet's death, the bishops' bench,Till Hort arrived, ne'er kept a wench;If Hort must sink, she grieves to tell it,She'll not have left one single prelate:For, to say tr...
Jonathan Swift
Prologue[1] To His Royal Highness,
UPON HIS FIRST APPEARANCE AT THE DUKE'S THEATRE, AFTER HIS RETURN FROM SCOTLAND, 1682. In those cold regions which no summers cheer, Where brooding darkness covers half the year, To hollow caves the shivering natives go; Bears range abroad, and hunt in tracks of snow: But when the tedious twilight wears away, And stars grow paler at the approach of day, The longing crowds to frozen mountains run; Happy who first can see the glimmering sun: The surly savage offspring disappear, And curse the bright successor of the year. Yet, though rough bears in covert seek defence, White foxes stay, with seeming innocence: That crafty kind with daylight can dispense. Still we are throng'd so full with Reynard's race,<...
John Dryden
His Wish.
It is sufficient if we prayTo Jove, who gives and takes away:Let him the land and living find;Let me alone to fit the mind.
Robert Herrick
Our Hearts For You
By the grace of God and the courageOf the peoples far and wide,By the toil and sweat of those who lived,And the blood of those who died,We have won the fight, we have saved the Right,For the Lord was on our side.We have come through the valley of shadows,We have won to the light again,We have smitten to earth the evil thing,And our sons have proved them men.But not alone by our might have we won,For the Lord fought in our van.When the night was at its darkest,And never a light could we see,--When earth seemed like to be enslavedIn a monstrous tyranny;--Then the flaming sword of our Over-LordStruck home for liberty.All the words in the world cannot tell youWhat brims in our hearts for you;For the lives y...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
On Entering Douglas Bay, Isle Of Man
The feudal Keep, the bastions of Cohorn,Even when they rose to check or to repelTides of aggressive war, oft served as wellGreedy ambition, armed to treat with scornJust limits; but yon Tower, whose smiles adornThis perilous bay, stands clear of all offense;Blest work it is of love and innocence,A Tower of refuge built for the else forlorn.Spare it, ye waves, and lift the mariner,Struggling for life, into its saving arms!Spare, too, the human helpers! Do they stir'Mid your fierce shock like men afraid to die?No; their dread service nerves the heart it warms,And they are led by noble Hillary.
William Wordsworth
To...
I.Clear-headed friend, whose joyful scorn,Edged with sharp laughter, cuts atwainThe knots that tangle human creeds,The wounding cords that bind and strainThe heart until it bleeds,Ray-fringed eyelids of the mornRoof not a glance so keen as thine;If aught of prophecy be mine,Thou wilt not live in vain.II.Low-cowering shall the Sophist sit;Falsehood shall bare her plaited brow;Fair-fronted Truth shall droop not nowWith shrilling shafts of subtle wit.Nor martyr-flames, nor trenchant swordsCan do away that ancient lie;A gentler death shall Falsehood die,Shot thro and thro with cunning words.III.Weak Truth a-leaning on her crutch,Wan, wasted Truth in her utmost need,
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Retrospect: Cwm Elan, 1812.
A scene, which 'wildered fancy viewedIn the soul's coldest solitude,With that same scene when peaceful loveFlings rapture's colour o'er the grove,When mountain, meadow, wood and streamWith unalloying glory gleam,And to the spirit's ear and eyeAre unison and harmony.The moonlight was my dearer day;Then would I wander far away,And, lingering on the wild brook's shoreTo hear its unremitting roar,Would lose in the ideal flowAll sense of overwhelming woe;Or at the noiseless noon of nightWould climb some heathy mountain's height,And listen to the mystic soundThat stole in fitful gasps around.I joyed to see the streaks of dayAbove the purple peaks decay,And watch the latest line of lightJust mingling with the shades of ni...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
A Wish
Great dignity ever attends great grief,And silently walks beside it;And I always know when I see such woeThat Invisible Helpers guide it.And I know deep sorrow is like a tide,It cannot ever be flowing;The high-water mark in the night and the dark -Then dawn, and the outward going.But the people who pull at my heart-strings hardAre the ones whom destiny hurriesThrough commonplace ways to the end of their days,And pesters with paltry worries.The peddlers who trudge with a budget of waresTo the door that is slammed unkindly;The vendor who stands with his shop in his handsWhere the hastening hosts pass blindly;The woman who holds in her poor flat purseThe price of her rent-room only,While her starved eye feeds on the comfort...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Patience: Or, Comforts In Crosses.
Abundant plagues I late have had,Yet none of these have made me sad:For why? My Saviour with the senseOf suff'ring gives me patience.
In the Land of Dreams
A bridle-path in the tangled mallee,With blossoms unnamed and unknown bespread,And two who ride through its leafy alley,But never the sound of a horses tread.And one by one whilst the foremost riderPuts back the boughs which have grown apace,And side by side where the track is wider,Together they come to the olden place.To the leaf-dyed pool whence the mallards flattered,Or ever the horses had paused to drink;Where the word was said and the vow was utteredThat brighten for ever its weedy brink.And Memory closes her sad recital,In Fates cold eyes there are kindly gleams,While for one brief moment of blest requital,The parted have met, in the Land of Dreams.13th June, 1882
Mary Hannay Foott
The Swimmer
With short, sharp, violent lights made vivid,To southward far as the sight can roam,Only the swirl of the surges livid,The seas that climb and the surfs that comb.Only the crag and the cliff to norward,And the rocks receding, and reefs flung forward,And waifs wreckd seaward and wasted shorewardOn shallows sheeted with flaming foam.A grim, grey coast and a seaboard ghastly,And shores trod seldom by feet of men,Where the batterd hull and the broken mast lie,They have lain embedded these long years ten.Love! when we wanderd here together,Hand in hand through the sparkling weather,From the heights and hollows of fern and heather,God surely loved us a little then.The skies were fairer and shores were firmer,The blue sea over th...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Miserere
Be pitiful, oh God! the night is long, My soul is faint with watching for the light, And still the gloom and doubt of seven-fold nightHangs heavy on my spirit: Thou art strong.-- Pity me, oh my God!I stretch my hands through darkness up to Thee,-- The stars are shrouded, and the night is dumb; There is no earthly help,--to Thee I comeIn all my helplessness and misery,-- Pity me, oh my God!Be pitiful, oh God!--for I am weak, And all my paths are rough, and hedged about,-- Hold Thou my hand dear Lord, and lead me out,And bring me to the city which I seek,-- Pity me, oh my God!By the temptation which Thou didst endure, And by Thy fasting and Thy midnight prayer, Jesu! let me not utterly desp...
Kate Seymour Maclean
The Somnambulist
List, ye who pass by Lyulph's TowerAt eve; how softly thenDoth Aira-force, that torrent hoarse,Speak from the woody glen!Fit music for a solemn vale!And holier seems the groundTo him who catches on the galeThe spirit of a mournful tale,Embodied in the sound.Not far from that fair site whereonThe Pleasure-house is reared,As story says, in antique daysA stern-browed house appeared;Foil to a Jewel rich in lightThere set, and guarded well;Cage for a Bird of plumage bright,Sweet-voiced, nor wishing for a flightBeyond her native dell.To win this bright Bird from her cage,To make this Gem their own,Came Barons bold, with store of gold,And Knights of high renown;But one She prized, and only one;Sir ...
The Realists
Hope that you may understand!What can books of men that wiveIn a dragon-guarded land,Paintings of the dolphin-drawnSea-nymphs in their pearly waggonsDo, but awake a hope to liveThat had goneWith the dragons?
William Butler Yeats
He Fears His Good Fortune
There was a glorious timeAt an epoch of my prime;Mornings beryl-bespread,And evenings golden-red;Nothing gray:And in my heart I said,"However this chanced to be,It is too full for me,Too rare, too rapturous, rash,Its spell must close with a crashSome day!"The radiance went onAnon and yet anon,And sweetness fell aroundLike manna on the ground."I've no claim,"Said I, "to be thus crowned:I am not worthy this:-Must it not go amiss? -Well . . . let the end foreseenCome duly! - I am serene."- And it came.
Thomas Hardy
Covenent
We thought we ranked above the chance of ill.Others might fall, not we, for we were wise,Merchants in freedom. So, of our free-willWe let our servants drug our strength with lies.The pleasure and the poison had its wayOn us as on the meanest, till we learnedThat he who lies will steal, who steals will slay.Neither God's judgment nor man's heart was turned.Yet there remains His Mercy to be soughtThrough wrath and peril till we cleanse the wrongBy that last right which our forefathers claimedWhen their Law failed them and its stewards were bought.This is our cause. God help us, and make strongOur will to meet Him later, unashamed!
Rudyard
Cassandra
Of all the luckless women ever born, Or ever to be born here on our earth, Most pitied be Cassandra, from her birth Condemned to woes unearned by her. Forlorn, She early read great Ilium's doom, and tried, Clear-eyed, clear-voiced, her countrymen to warn. But - she Apollo's passion in high scorn Had once repelled, and of his injured pride The God for her had bred this punishment, - That good, or bad, all things she prophesied Though true as truth, should ever be decried And flouted by the people. As she went Far from old Priam's gates among the crowd, To save her country was her heart intent. Pure, fearless, on an holy errand bent, They called her "mad," who was a Prince...
Helen Leah Reed