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The Viceroy. A Ballad.
Tune, "Lady Isabella's Tragedy." or "The Stepmother's cruelty."Of Nero, tyrant, petty king,Who heretofore did reignIn famed Hibernia, I will sing,And in a ditty plain.He hated was by rich and poorFor reasons you shall hear;So ill he exercised his powerThat he himself did fear.Full proud and arrogant was he,And covetous withal;The guilty he would still set free,But guiltless men enthral.He with a haughty, impious nodWould curse and dogmatize,Nor fearing either man or God,Gold he did idolize.A patriot of high degree,Who could no longer bearThis upstart Viceroy's tyranny,Against him did declare.And, arm'd with truth, impeach'd the DonOf his enormous crimes,Which I'll unf...
Matthew Prior
The Regret of the Ranee in the Hall of Peacocks
This man has taken my Husband's life And laid my Brethren low,No sister indeed, were I, no wife, To pardon and let him go.Yet why does he look so young and slim As he weak and wounded lies?How hard for me to be harsh to him With his soft, appealing eyes.His hair is ruffled upon the stone And the slender wrists are bound,So young! and yet he has overthrown His scores on the battle ground.Would I were only a slave to-day, To whom it were right and meetTo wash the stains of the War away, The dust from the weary feet.Were I but one of my serving girls To solace his pain to rest!Shake out the sand from the soft loose curls, And hold him against my breast!Have we such...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Fragment: Supposed To Be An Epithalamium Of Francis Ravaillac And Charlotte Corday.
Posthumous Fragments Of Margaret Mcholson.Being Poems found amongst the Papers of that noted Female who attempted the life of the King in 1786. Edited by John Fitzvictor.[The "Posthumous Fragments", published at Oxford by Shelley, appeared in November, 1810.]Fragment: Supposed To Be An Epithalamium Of Francis Ravaillac And Charlotte Corday.'Tis midnight now - athwart the murky air,Dank lurid meteors shoot a livid gleam;From the dark storm-clouds flashes a fearful glare,It shows the bending oak, the roaring stream.I pondered on the woes of lost mankind,I pondered on the ceaseless rage of Kings;My rapt soul dwelt upon the ties that bindThe mazy volume of commingling things,When fell and wild misrule to man stern sorrow brings.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Epitaph
Our loved ones lay them down to sleep And leave us here to grieve and mourn, While we, our silent watches keep, O'er their low graves whence they are bourne. Some heroes are in battle slain, Their names are honored far and near, While others die on beds of pain And no sad mourner sheds a tear. This day we honor each and all Whose soul has left its temporal case; And be he great, or be he small, We'll reverence his resting place.
Alan L. Strang
Macpherson's Farewell.
Tune - "M'Pherson's Rant."I. Farewell, ye dungeons dark and strong, The wretch's destinie! Macpherson's time will not be long On yonder gallows-tree. Sae rantingly, sae wantonly, Sae dauntingly gaed he; He play'd a spring, and danc'd it round, Below the gallows-tree.II. Oh, what is death but parting breath? On many a bloody plain I've dar'd his face, and in this place I scorn him yet again!III. Untie these bands from off my hands, And bring to me my sword; And there's no a man in all Scotland, But I'll brave him at a word.IV. ...
Robert Burns
Tide-Water.
Through many-winding valleys far inland,A maze among the convoluted hills,Of rocks up-piled, and pines on either hand,And meadows ribbanded with silver rills,Faint, mingled-up, composite sweetnessesOf scented grass and clover, and the blueWild-violet hid in muffling moss and fern,Keen and diverse another breath cleaves through,Familiar as the taste of tears to me,As on my lips, insistent, I discernThe salt and bitter kisses of the sea.The tide sets up the river; mimic fleetnessesOf little wavelets, fretted by the shellsAnd shingle of the beach, circle and eddy round,And smooth themselves perpetually: there dwellsA spirit of peace in their low murmuring noiseSubsiding into quiet, as if life were suchA struggle with inexorable bound,<...
Kate Seymour Maclean
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...
Nadowessian Death-Lament.
See, he sitteth on his matSitteth there upright,With the grace with which he satWhile he saw the light.Where is now the sturdy gripe,Where the breath sedate,That so lately whiffed the pipeToward the Spirit great?Where the bright and falcon eye,That the reindeer's treadOn the waving grass could spy,Thick with dewdrops spread?Where the limbs that used to dartSwifter through the snowThan the twenty-membered hart,Than the mountain roe?Where the arm that sturdilyBent the deadly bow?See, its life hath fleeted by,See, it hangeth low!Happy he! He now has goneWhere no snow is found:Where with maize the fields are sown,Self-sprung from the ground;Where with birds each bus...
Friedrich Schiller
Poor Wounded Heart
Poor wounded heart, farewell! Thy hour of rest is come; Thou soon wilt reach thy home, Poor wounded heart, farewell!The pain thou'lt feel in breaking Less bitter far will be,Than that long, deadly aching, This life has been to thee. There--broken heart, farewell! The pang is o'er-- The parting pang is o'er; Thou now wilt bleed no more. Poor broken heart, farewell!No rest for thee but dying-- Like waves whose strife is past,On death's cold shore thus lying, Thou sleepst in peace at last-- Poor broken heart, farewell!
Thomas Moore
Rocking Horse
Fate is a mahout astride a large elephant, impersonalas dark sun with winds raging across a desert. Fate isthe old bones of dead Indians being resurrected asground mist on the edge of a salt marsh.And not knowing what to call personal destiny weresort to the clunker "fate" - "beggar and king"enjoying, or so it is said, the dust together. I prefer wetleaves breaking canisters of restraint and calling tothe earth as little paws digging into the humus of thesky.
Paul Cameron Brown
The Tryst.
I raised the veil, I loosed the bands, I took the dead thing from its place. Like a warm stream in frozen lands My lips went wandering on her face, My hands burnt in her hands. She could not stay me, being dead; Her body here was mine to hold. What if her lips had lost their red? To me they always tasted cold With the cold words she said. Did my breath run along her hair, And free the pulse, and fire the brain, My wild blood wake her wild blood there? Her eyelids lifted wide again In a blue, sudden stare. Beneath my fierce, profane caress The whole white length of body moved; The drowsy bosom seemed to press As if against a breast bel...
Muriel Stuart
There's A Regret
There's a regretSo grinding, so immitigably sad,Remorse thereby feels tolerant, even glad . . .Do you not know it yet?For deeds undoneRankle and snarl and hunger for their due,Till there seems naught so despicable as youIn all the grin o' the sun.Like an old shoeThe sea spurns and the land abhors, you lieAbout the beach of Time, till by and byDeath, that derides you too -Death, as he goesHis ragman's round, espies you, where you stray,With half-an-eye, and kicks you out of his way;And then - and then, who knowsBut the kind GraveTurns on you, and you feel the convict Worm,In that black bridewell working out his term,Hanker and grope and crave?'Poor fool that might -That might, yet would...
William Ernest Henley
The Young Lieutenant
The young lieutenant's face was grey.As came the day.The watchers saw it lifting whiteAnd ghostlike from the pool of night.His eyes were wide and strangely lit.Each thought in that unhallowed pit:I, too, may seem like one who diesWith wide, set eyes.He stood so still we thought it death,For through the breathOf reeking shell we came, and fire,To hell, unlit, of blood and mire.Tianced in a chill deliriumWe wondered, though our lips were dumbWhat precious thing his fingers pressedAgainst his breast.His left hand clutched so lovinglyWhat none might see.All bloodless were his lips beneathThe straight, white, rigid clip of teeth.His eyes turned to the distance dim;Our sleepless eyes were all on him.H...
Edward
The Horrors of Flying
The day is cold; the wind is strong;And through the sky great cloud-banks throng,While swathes of snow lie on the groundO'er which I walk without a sound,But I have vowed to fly to-dayThough winds are fierce, and clouds are grey.My aeroplane is on the field;So I must fly - my fate is sealed,And no excuses can I make;Within its back my place I take.I strap myself inside the seatAnd press the rudder with my feet,And hold the wheel with nervous gripAnd gaze around my little ship -For on its wire-rigging tautDepends my life - which will be shortIf it should fail me in the air;Swift then my fall, and short my prayer,And these my wings would be my pyre -So well I scrutinise each wire!Then out across the field I goIn shak...
Paul Bewsher
Ashamed, But Not Afraid
O God, I am ashamed to die,But not the least afraid;Tho' death's dark shadow draweth nigh,Atonement has been madeFor every member of our race,And I on it rely,And hope immortal blooms thro' grace;I'm not afraid to die.But Thou hast done great things for me,And I have nothing done.To set my sin-bound spirit free,Was sacrificed Thy Son;And every day by Thy kind handRich blessings are bestowed;Oh, how can I before Thee stand,Or rest in Thine abodeWith self-respect, or feel at homeWith no returns to show,My whole life like the worthless foamOn time's incessant flow.Oh, that in life's great harvest field,I may some reaping do;Early and late the sickle wield,And prove a reaper tr...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Nephelidia
From the depth of the dreamy decline of the dawn through a notable nimbus of nebulous noonshine,Pallid and pink as the palm of the flag-flower that flickers with fear of the flies as they float,Are they looks of our lovers that lustrously lean from a marvel of mystic miraculous moonshine,These that we feel in the blood of our blushes that thicken and threaten with throbs through the throat?Thicken and thrill as a theatre thronged at appeal of an actor's appalled agitation,Fainter with fear of the fires of the future than pale with the promise of pride in the past;Flushed with the famishing fullness of fever that reddens with radiance of rathe recreation,Gaunt as the ghastliest of glimpses that gleam through the gloom of the gloaming when ghosts go aghast?Nay, for the nick of the tick of the ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Poor House
Hope went by and Peace went byAnd would not enter in;Youth went by and Health went byAnd Love that is their kin.Those within the house shed tearsOn their bitter bread;Some were old and some were mad,And some were sick a-bed.Gray Death saw the wretched houseAnd even he passed by"They have never lived," he said,"They can wait to die."
Sara Teasdale
In The Wings
The play is Life; and this round earth,The narrow stage whereonWe act before an audienceOf actors dead and gone.There is a figure in the wingsThat never goes away,And though I cannot see his face,I shudder while I play.His shadow looms behind me here,Or capers at my side;And when I mouth my lines in dread,Those scornful lips deride.Sometimes a hooting laugh breaks out,And startles me alone;While all my fellows, wonderingAt my stage-fright, play on.I fear that when my Exit comes,I shall encounter there,Stronger than fate, or time, or love,And sterner than despair,The Final Critic of the craft,As stage tradition tells;And yet--perhaps 'twill only beThe jester with his bells.
Bliss Carman