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Love And Thought
Two well-assorted travellers useThe highway, Eros and the Muse.From the twins is nothing hidden,To the pair is nought forbidden;Hand in hand the comrades goEvery nook of Nature through:Each for other they were born,Each can other best adorn;They know one only mortal griefPast all balsam or relief;When, by false companions crossed,The pilgrims have each other lost.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
On A Friend.
An honest man here lies at rest As e'er God with his image blest! The friend of man, the friend of truth; The friend of age, and guide of youth; Few hearts like his, with virtue warm'd, Few heads with knowledge so inform'd: If there's another world, he lives in bliss; If there is none, he made the best of this.
Robert Burns
To A Friend.
The youthful joys of vanish'd years,The joys e'en now we share,Have something of a sacred bliss,Which time can not impair.For when the years of youth have gone,Its joys and hopes have flown,The mem'ry clings with fond embrace -Those joys are still our own.Then, as I write these words for you, -This earnest wish I pen:That you may think but pleasant thoughts -When life's liv'd o'er again.May nought of sorrow, or of woe,Invade to wound or pain,And may the joys that we have shar'dBe bright in mem'ry's train.
Thomas Frederick Young
To a Cat
IStately, kindly, lordly friend,CondescendHere to sit by me, and turnGlorious eyes that smile and burn,Golden eyes, love's lustrous meed,On the golden page I read.All your wondrous wealth of hair,Dark and fair,Silken-shaggy, soft and brightAs the clouds and beams of night,Pays my reverent hand's caressBack with friendlier gentleness.Dogs may fawn on all and someAs they come;You, a friend of loftier mind,Answer friends alone in kind.Just your foot upon my handSoftly bids it understand.Morning round this silent sweetGarden-seatSheds its wealth of gathering light,Thrills the gradual clouds with might,Changes woodland, orchard, heath,Lawn, and garden there beneath.Fair and dim they gleamed below...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Upon The Sand.
All love that has not friendship for its base Is like a mansion built upon the sand. Though brave its walls as any in the land, And its tall turrets lift their heads in grace; Though skilful and accomplished artists trace Most beautiful designs on every hand, And gleaming statues in dim niches stand, And fountains play in some flow'r-hidden place: Yet, when from the frowning east a sudden gust Of adverse fate is blown, or sad rains fall, Day in, day out, against its yielding wall, Lo! the fair structure crumbles to the dust. Love, to endure life's sorrow and earth's woe, Needs friendship's solid mason-work below.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Twilight
Below them in the twilight the quiet village lies,And warm within its holding, the old folks and the wise,But here within the open fields the paths of Eden show,And, hand in hand, across them the little lovers go.Below them in the village are peaceful folk and still,They gossip of old yesterdays, of merry times or ill.But here beyond the twilight stray two who only seeThe promise of to-morrow--the dawn that is to be.Below them in the village the quiet hearth-flames glow,With friendly word and greeting the neighbours come and go,But here the silence folds them together, each to each,And lights within the mating eyes the dream beyond their speech.Below them in the village stay honest toil and truth,--They rest there who adventured the road of lov...
Theodosia Garrison
To Imagination.
When weary with the long day's care,And earthly change from pain to pain,And lost, and ready to despair,Thy kind voice calls me back again:Oh, my true friend! I am not lone,While then canst speak with such a tone!So hopeless is the world without;The world within I doubly prize;Thy world, where guile, and hate, and doubt,And cold suspicion never rise;Where thou, and I, and Liberty,Have undisputed sovereignty.What matters it, that all aroundDanger, and guilt, and darkness lie,If but within our bosom's boundWe hold a bright, untroubled sky,Warm with ten thousand mingled raysOf suns that know no winter days?Reason, indeed, may oft complainFor Nature's sad reality,And tell the suffering heart how vain
Emily Bronte
Thursday
So well the week has sped, hast thou a friend,Go spend an hour in converse. It will lendNew beauty to thy labours and thy lifeTo pause a little sometimes in the strife. Toil soon seems rude That has no interlude.
Pairing Time Anticipated. A Fable.
I shall not ask Jean Jaques Rousseau[1]If birds confabulate or no;Tis clear, that they were always ableTo hold discourse, at least in fable;And een the child who knows no betterThan to interpret, by the letter,A story of a cock and bull,Must have a most uncommon skull.It chanced then on a winters day,But warm, and bright, and calm as May,The birds, conceiving a designTo forestall sweet St. Valentine,In many an orchard, copse, and grove,Assembled on affairs of love,And with much twitter and much chatterBegan to agitate the matter.At length a Bullfinch, who could boastMore years and wisdom than the most,Entreated, opening wide his beak,A moments liberty to speak;And, silence publicly enjoind,Deliverd...
William Cowper
To The Rev. W. Cawthorne Unwin.
Unwin, I should but ill repayThe kindness of a friend,Whose worth deserves as warm a layAs ever friendship pennd,Thy name omitted in a pageThat would reclaim a vicious age.A union formd, as mine with thee,Not rashly, or in sport,May be as fervent in degreeAnd faithful in its sort,And may as rich in comfort prove,As that of true fraternal love.The bud inserted in the rind,The bud of peach or rose,Adorns, though differing in its kind,The stock whereon it grows,With flower as sweet, or fruit as fair,As if produced by nature there.Not rich, I render what I may,I seize thy name in haste,And place it in this first essay,Lest this should prove the last.Tis where it should bein...
To A Friend
Here in the fairwayFetching--foul of keel,Long-stray but fortunate--Out of the fogs, the vastAtlantic solitudes.Shall, by the hawser-pinWaiting the signalLeave--go--anchor!Scent the familiar,The unforgettableFragrance of home;So in a long breathBless us unknowing:Bless them, the violets,Bless me, the gardener,Bless thee, the giver.
Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
To A Young Beauty
Dear fellow-artist, why so freeWith every sort of company,With every Jack and Jill?Choose your companions from the best;Who draws a bucket with the restSoon topples down the hill.You may, that mirror for a school,Be passionate, not bountifulAs common beauties may,Who were not born to keep in trimWith old Ezekiels cherubimBut those of Beaujolet.I know what wages beauty gives,How hard a life her servant lives,Yet praise the winters gone;There is not a fool can call me friend,And I may dine at journeys endWith Landor and with Donne.
William Butler Yeats
To -----
Thee would I choose as my teacher and friend. Thy living exampleTeaches me, thy teaching word wakens my heart unto life.
Friedrich Schiller
True Enjoyment.
VAINLY wouldst thou, to gain a heart,Heap up a maiden's lap with gold;The joys of love thou must impart,Wouldst thou e'er see those joys unfold.The voices of the throng gold buys,No single heart 'twill win for thee;Wouldst thou a maiden make thy prize,Thyself alone the bribe must be.If by no sacred tie thou'rt bound,Oh youth, thou must thyself restrain!Well may true liberty be found,Tho' man may seem to wear a chain.Let one alone inflame thee e'er,And if her heart with love o'erflows,Let tenderness unite you there,If duty's self no fetter knows.First feel, oh youth! A girl then findWorthy thy choice, let her choose thee,In body fair, and fair in mind,And t...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
To The Spade Of A Friend (An Agriculturist)
Spade! with which Wilkinson hath tilled his lands,And shaped these pleasant walks by Emont's side,Thou art a tool of honour in my hands;I press thee, through the yielding soil, with pride.Rare master has it been thy lot to know;Long hast Thou served a man to reason true;Whose life combines the best of high and low,The labouring many and the resting few;Health, meekness, ardour, quietness secure,And industry of body and of mind;And elegant enjoyments, that are pureAs nature is; too pure to be refined.Here often hast Thou heard the Poet singIn concord with his river murmuring by;Or in some silent field, while timid springIs yet uncheered by other minstrelsy.Who shall inherit Thee when death has laidLow in the darksom...
William Wordsworth
Trusting Still.
When shall we meet again?One more year passed;One more of grief and pain; -Maybe the last.Are the years sending usFarther apart?Or love still blending usHeart into heart?Do love's fond memoriesBrighten the way,Or faith's fell enemiesDarken thy day?Oh! could the word unkindBe recalled now,Or in the years behindBuried lie low,How would my heart rejoiceAs round it fell,Sweet cadence of thy voice,Still loved so well.Sometimes when sad it seemsWhisperings say:"Cherish thy baseless dreams,Yet whilst thou may,Try not to pierce the veil,Lest thou should'st see,Only a dark'ning valeStretching for thee."But Hope's mist-shrouded sunOnce more breaks out,Chasing the shadows ...
John Hartley
Platonic.
I knew it the first of the Summer - I knew it the same at the end -That you and your love were plighted, But couldn't you be my friend?Couldn't we sit in the twilight, Couldn't we walk on the shore,With only a pleasant friendship To bind us, and nothing more?There was never a word of nonsense Spoken between us two,Though we lingered oft in the garden Till the roses were wet with dew.We touched on a thousand subjects - The moon and the stars above;But our talk was tinctured with science, With never a hint of love."A wholly platonic friendship," You said I had proved to you,"Could bind a man and a woman The whole long season through,With never a thought of folly, Though bo...
Epitaph On A Friend.
By painful sickness long severely prest,Here sinks, on Nature's sacred lap of rest,A friend, who, in a life too short, display'dA mind in virtue bright, without one shade.Hence with unusual grief is Fondness mov'd,Hence more than Pity's sighs for one belov'd;Unshaken Honour sheds a manly tear,And weeping Virtue stops, a mourner here.
John Carr