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The Harp Of Hoel. Part II.
High on the hill, with moss o'ergrown, A hermit chapel stood; It spoke the tale of seasons gone, And half-revealed its ivied stone. Amid the beechen wood. Here often, when the mountain trees A leafy murmur made, Now still, now swaying to the breeze, (Sounds that the musing fancy please), The widowed mourner strayed. And many a morn she climbed the steep, From whence she might behold, Where, 'neath the clouds, in shining sweep, And mingling with the mighty deep, The sea-broad Severn rolled. Her little boy beside her played, With sea-shells in his hand; And sometimes, 'mid the bents delayed, And sometimes running onward, said, Oh, where is Holy Land!<...
William Lisle Bowles
Mariana In The South
With one black shadow at its feet,The house thro' all the level shines,Close-latticed to the brooding heat,And silent in its dusty vines:A faint-blue ridge upon the right,An empty river-bed before,And shallows on a distant shore,In glaring sand and inlets bright.But "Aye Mary," made she moan,And "Aye Mary," night and morn,And "Ah," she sang, "to be all alone,To live forgotten, and love forlorn."She, as her carol sadder grew,From brow and bosom slowly downThro' rosy taper fingers drewHer streaming curls of deepest brownTo left and right, and made appear,Still-lighted in a secret shrine,Her melancholy eyes divine,The home of woe without a tear.And "Aye Mary," was her moan,"Madonna, sad is night and morn;"...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Is It Not Sweet To Think, Hereafter. (Air.--Haydn.)
Is it not sweet to think, hereafter, When the Spirit leaves this sphere.Love, with deathless wing, shall waft her To those she long hath mourned for here?Hearts from which 'twas death to sever. Eyes this world can ne'er restore,There, as warm, as bright as ever, Shall meet us and be lost no more.When wearily we wander, asking Of earth and heaven, where are they,Beneath whose smile we once lay basking, Blest and thinking bliss would stay?Hope still lifts her radiant finger Pointing to the eternal Home,Upon whose portal yet they linger, Looking back for us to come.Alas, alas--doth Hope deceive us? Shall friendship--love--shall all those tiesThat bind a moment, and then leave us,...
Thomas Moore
Remind Me Not, Remind Me Not.
1.Remind me not, remind me not,Of those beloved, those vanish'd hours, When all my soul was given to thee;Hours that may never be forgot,Till Time unnerves our vital powers, And thou and I shall cease to be.2.Can I forget - canst thou forget,When playing with thy golden hair, How quick thy fluttering heart did move?Oh! by my soul, I see thee yet,With eyes so languid, breast so fair, And lips, though silent, breathing love.3.When thus reclining on my breast,Those eyes threw back a glance so sweet, As half reproach'd yet rais'd desire,And still we near and nearer prest,And still our glowing lips would meet,As if in kisses to expire.4.And...
George Gordon Byron
A Vision Of The Sea.
'Tis the terror of tempest. The rags of the sailAre flickering in ribbons within the fierce gale:From the stark night of vapours the dim rain is driven,And when lightning is loosed, like a deluge from Heaven,She sees the black trunks of the waterspouts spinAnd bend, as if Heaven was ruining in,Which they seemed to sustain with their terrible massAs if ocean had sunk from beneath them: they passTo their graves in the deep with an earthquake of sound,And the waves and the thunders, made silent around,Leave the wind to its echo. The vessel, now tossedThrough the low-trailing rack of the tempest, is lostIn the skirts of the thunder-cloud: now down the sweepOf the wind-cloven wave to the chasm of the deepIt sinks, and the walls of the watery valeWhose dep...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Fulfilment
Happy are they whom men and women love,And you were happy as a river that flowsDown between lonely hills, and knowsThe pang and virtue of that loneliness,And moves unresting on until it moveUnder the trees that stoop at the low brinkAnd deepen their cool shade, and drinkAnd sing and hush and sing again,Breathing their music's many-toned caress;While the river with his high clear music speaksSometimes of loneliness, of hills obscure,Sometimes of sunlight dancing on the plain,Or of the night of stars unbared and deepMultiplied in his depths unbared and pure;Sometimes of winds that from the unknown sea creep,Sometimes of morning when most clear it breaksSpilling its brightness on his breast like rain:--And then flows on in loneliness again
John Frederick Freeman
Too Late.
Had we but met in other days,Had we but loved in other ways,Another light and hope had shone On your life and my own.In sweet but hopeless reveriesI fancy how your wistful eyesHad saved me, had I known their power In fate's imperious hour;How loving you, beloved of God,And following you, the path I trodHad led me, through your love and prayers, To God's love unawares:And how our beings joined as oneHad passed through checkered shade and sun,Until the earth our lives had given, With little change, to heaven.God knows why this was not to be.You bloomed from childhood far from me.The sunshine of the favoured place That knew your youth and grace.And when your eyes, so fair and fre...
John Hay
I Will Not Be Comforted Because One Is Not
There is a gladness over all the earth,For summer is abroad in breezy mirth,Nature rejoices and the heavens are glad,And I alone am desolate and sad,For I sit mourning by an empty cot,Refusing comfort because one is not.And I will mourn because I am bereaved,Others have suffered others too have grievedOver hopes broken even as mine are broke,By a swift unexpected bitter stroke,And I must weep as weeping Jacob prest,To grieving lips his last ones princely vestYou tell me cease weeping, to resignUnto the Father's a will this will of mine,You say my lamb is on the Shepherd s breast,My flower blooms in gardens of the blest,I know it all I say, Thy will be doneYet I must mourn for him--my son! my son!
Nora Pembroke
To My Heart, Bidding It Have No Fear
Be you still, be you still, trembling heart;Remember the wisdom out of the old days:Him who trembles before the flame and the flood,And the winds that blow through the starry ways,Let the starry winds and the flame and the floodCover over and hide, for he has no partWith the proud, majestical multitude.
William Butler Yeats
Davids Lament for Jonathan
Thou wast hard pressed, yet God concealed this thingFrom me; and thou wast wounded very sore,And beaten down, O son of Israels king,Like wheat on threshing-flour.Thou, that from courtly and from wise for friendDidst choose me, and in spite of ban and sneer,Rebuke and ridicule, until the endDidst ever hold me dear!All night thy body on the mountain lay:At morn the heathen nailed thee to their wall.Surely their deaf gods hear the songs to-dayOer the slain House of Saul!Oh! if that witch were here thy father sought,Methinks I een could call thee from thy place,To shift thy mangled image from my thought,Seeing thy souls calm face.I sorrowed for the words the prophet spoke,That set me rival to thy fathers line;
Mary Hannay Foott
To A Friend Whose Work Has Come To Nothing
Now all the truth is out,Be secret and take defeatFrom any brazen throat,For how can you compete,Being honour bred, with oneWho, were it proved he lies,Were neither shamed in his ownNor in his neighbours eyes?Bred to a harder thingThan Triumph, turn awayAnd like a laughing stringWhereon mad fingers playAmid a place of stone,Be secret and exult,Because of all things knownThat is most difficult
Desespoir
The seasons send their ruin as they go,For in the spring the narciss shows its headNor withers till the rose has flamed to red,And in the autumn purple violets blow,And the slim crocus stirs the winter snow;Wherefore yon leafless trees will bloom againAnd this grey land grow green with summer rainAnd send up cowslips for some boy to mow.But what of life whose bitter hungry seaFlows at our heels, and gloom of sunless nightCovers the days which never more return?Ambition, love and all the thoughts that burnWe lose too soon, and only find delightIn withered husks of some dead memory.
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LVIII.
O giorno, o ora, o ultimo momento.HE MOURNS HIS WANT OF PERCEPTION AT THAT MEETING. O Day, O hour, O moment sweetest, last,O stars conspired to make me poor indeed!O look too true, in which I seem'd to read.At parting, that my happiness was past;Now my full loss I know, I feel at last:Then I believed (ah! weak and idle creed!)'Twas but a part alone I lost; instead,Was there a hope that flew not with the blast?For, even then, it was in heaven ordain'dThat the sweet light of all my life should die:'Twas written in her sadly-pensive eye!But mine unconscious of the truth remain'd;Or, what it would not see, to see refrain'd,That I might sink in sudden misery!MOREHEAD. Dark hour, last moment of t...
Francesco Petrarca
Astarte
Across the dripping ridges,O, look, luxurious night!She comes, the bright-haired beauty,My luminous delight!My luminous delight!So hush, ye shores, your roar,That my soul may sleep, forgettingDead Loves wild Nevermore!Astarte, Syrian sister,Your face is wet with tears;I think you know the secretOne heart hath held for years!One heart hath held for years!But hide your hapless love,And my sweet my Syrian sister,Dead Loves wild Nevermore!Ah, Helen Hope in heaven,My queen of long ago,Ive swooned with adoration,But could not tell you so,Or dared not tell you so,My radiant queen of yore!And youve passed away and left meDead Loves wild Nevermore!Astarte knoweth, darling,Of ey...
Henry Kendall
Soldier, Maiden, And Flower
"Sweetheart, take this," a soldier said,"And bid me brave good-by;It may befall we ne'er shall wed,But love can never die.Be steadfast in thy troth to me,And then, whate'er my lot,'My soul to God, my heart to thee,'--Sweetheart, forget me not!"The maiden took the tiny flowerAnd nursed it with her tears:Lo! he who left her in that hourCame not in after years.Unto a hero's death he rode'Mid shower of fire and shot;But in the maiden's heart abodeThe flower, forget-me-not.And when he came not with the restFrom out the years of blood,Closely unto her widowed breastShe pressed a faded bud;Oh, there is love and there is pain,And there is peace, God wot,--And these dear three do live againIn ...
Eugene Field
Secret Love
I hid my love when young till ICouldn't bear the buzzing of a fly;I hid my love to my despiteTill I could not bear to look at light:I dare not gaze upon her faceBut left her memory in each place;Where eer I saw a wild flower lieI kissed and bade my love good bye.I met her in the greenest dellsWhere dewdrops pearl the wood blue bellsThe lost breeze kissed her bright blue eye,The bee kissed and went singing by,A sunbeam found a passage there,A gold chain round her neck so fair;As secret as the wild bee's songShe lay there all the summer long.I hid my love in field and townTill een the breeze would knock me down,The bees seemed singing ballads oer,The fly's bass turned a lion's roar;And even silence found a tong...
John Clare
Lilith. The Legend Of The First Woman. Book II.
Soft stealing through the shade, and skirting swiftThe walls of Paradise, through night's dark riftLilith fled far; nor stopped lest deadly snareOr peril by the wayside lurked.The airGrew chill. Loud beat her heart, as through the windEchoed, unseen, pursuing feet, behind.Adown the pathway of the mist she passed,And reached a weird, strange land at last.When morning flecked the dappled sky with red,And odors sweet from waking flowers were shed,Lilith beheld a plain, outstretching wide,With distant mountains seamed.Afar, a silvery tideThe blue shore kissed. And in that tropic glowDim islands shone, palm-fringed, and low.In nearer space, like scarlet arrows flewStrange birds, or 'mong the reedy fens, or throughTall trees, of ...
Ada Langworthy Collier
Passer Mortuus Est
Death devours all lovely things; Lesbia with her sparrow Shares the darkness,--presently Every bed is narrow. Unremembered as old rain Dries the sheer libation, And the little petulant hand Is an annotation. After all, my erstwhile dear, My no longer cherished, Need we say it was not love, Now that love is perished?
Edna St. Vincent Millay