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Rose Lorraine
Sweet water-moons, blown into lightsOf flying gold on pool and creek,And many sounds and many sightsOf younger days are back this week.I cannot say I sought to faceOr greatly cared to cross againThe subtle spirit of the placeWhose life is mixed with Rose Lorraine.What though her voice rings clearly throughA nightly dream I gladly keep,No wish have I to start anewHeart fountains that have ceased to leap.Here, face to face with different days,And later things that plead for love,It would be worse than wrong to raiseA phantom far too fain to move.But, Rose Lorraine ah! Rose Lorraine,Ill whisper now, where no one hearsIf you should chance to meet againThe man you kissed in soft, dead years,Just say for once He ...
Henry Kendall
Interim
The room is full of you!--As I came in And closed the door behind me, all at once A something in the air, intangible, Yet stiff with meaning, struck my senses sick!-- Sharp, unfamiliar odors have destroyed Each other room's dear personality. The heavy scent of damp, funereal flowers,-- The very essence, hush-distilled, of Death-- Has strangled that habitual breath of home Whose expiration leaves all houses dead; And wheresoe'er I look is hideous change. Save here. Here 'twas as if a weed-choked gate Had opened at my touch, and I had stepped Into some long-forgot, enchanted, strange, Sweet garden of a thousand years ago And suddenly thought, "I have been here before!" You are not...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
The Wreckage
Love lit a beacon in thine eyes, And I out in the storm,And lo! the night had taken wings; I dream me safe and warm.Love lit a beacon in thine eyes, A wreckers light for me;My heart is broken on the rocks; I perish in the sea.
Dora Sigerson Shorter
My Queen
Annie - Oh! what a weary whileIt seems since that sad day;When whispering a fond "good bye,"I tore myself away.And yet, 'tis only two short years;How has it seemed to thee?To me, those lonesome years appearLike an eternity.We loved, - Ah, me! how much we loved;How happy passed the dayWhen pouring forth enraptured vows,The charmed hours passed away.In every leaf we beauty saw, -In every song and sound,Some sweet entrancing melody,To soothe our hearts we found.And now it haunts me as a dream, -A thing that could not be! -That one so pure and beautifulCould ever care for me.But I still have the nut-brown curl,Which tells me it is true;And in my fancy I can seeThe brow where once it grew.<...
John Hartley
Memory
II nursed it in my bosom while it lived, I hid it in my heart when it was dead;In joy I sat alone, even so I grieved Alone and nothing said.I shut the door to face the naked truth, I stood alone - I faced the truth alone,Stripped bare of self-regard or forms or ruth Till first and last were shown.I took the perfect balances and weighed; No shaking of my hand disturbed the poise;Weighed, found it wanting: not a word I said, But silent made my choice.None know the choice I made; I make it still. None know the choice I made and broke my heart,Breaking mine idol: I have braced my will Once, chosen for once my part.I broke it at a blow, I laid it cold, Crushed in my deep heart wher...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Lament IV
Thou hast constrained mine eyes, unholy Death,To watch my dear child breathe her dying breath:To watch thee shake the fruit unripe and clingingWhile fear and grief her parents' hearts were wringing.Ah, never, never could my well-loved childHave died and left her father reconciled:Never but with a heart like heavy leadCould I have watched her go, abandoned.And yet at no time could her death have broughtMore cruel ache than now, nor bitterer thought;For had God granted to her ample daysI might have walked with her down flowered waysAnd left this life at last, content, descendingTo realms of dark Persephone, the all-ending,Without such grievous sorrow in my heart,Of which earth holdeth not the counterpart.I marvel not that Niobe, aloneAmid h...
Jan Kochanowski
Her Love-Birds
When I looked up at my love-birdsThat Sunday afternoon,There was in their tiny tuneA dying fetch like broken words,When I looked up at my love-birdsThat Sunday afternoon.When he, too, scanned the love-birdsOn entering there that day,'Twas as if he had nought to sayOf his long journey citywards,When he, too, scanned the love-birds,On entering there that day.And billed and billed the love-birds,As 'twere in fond despairAt the stress of silence whereHad once been tones in tenor thirds,And billed and billed the love-birdsAs 'twere in fond despair.O, his speech that chilled the love-birds,And smote like death on me,As I learnt what was to be,And knew my life was broke in sherds!O, his speech that...
Thomas Hardy
O Sweetheart, Hear You
O Sweetheart, hear youYour lovers tale;A man shall have sorrowWhen friends him fail.For he shall know thenFriends be untrueAnd a little ashesTheir words come to.But one unto himWill softly moveAnd softly woo himIn ways of love.His hand is underHer smooth round breast;So he who has sorrowShall have rest.
James Joyce
The Dream.
It was the morning; through the shutters closed, Along the balcony, the earliest rays Of sunlight my dark room were entering; When, at the time that sleep upon our eyes Its softest and most grateful shadows casts, There stood beside me, looking in my face, The image dear of her, who taught me first To love, then left me to lament her loss. To me she seemed not dead, but sad, with such A countenance as the unhappy wear. Her right hand near my head she sighing placed; "Dost thou still live," she said to me, "and dost Thou still remember what we were and are?" And I replied: "Whence comest thou, and how, Beloved and beautiful? Oh how, how I Have grieved, still grieve for thee! Nor did I think...
Giacomo Leopardi
Towards Break Of Day
Was it the double of my dreamThe woman that by me layDreamed, or did we halve a dreamUnder the first cold gleam of day?I thought: "There is a waterfallUpon Ben Bulben sideThat all my childhood counted dear;Were I to travel far and wideI could not find a thing so dear.'My memories had magnifiedSo many times childish delight.I would have touched it like a childBut knew my finger could but have touchedCold stone and water. I grew wild.Even accusing Heaven becauseIt had set down among its laws:Nothing that we love over-muchIs ponderable to our touch.I dreamed towards break of day,The cold blown spray in my nostril.But she that beside me layHad watched in bitterer sleepThe marvelous stag of Arthur,That lofty...
William Butler Yeats
The Closed Door
The dew falls and the stars fall,The sun falls in the west,But never moreThrough the closed door,Shall the one that I loved bestReturn to me:A salt tear is the sea,All earth's air is a sigh,But they never can mourn for meWith my heart's cry,For the one that I loved bestWho caressed me with her eyes,And every morning came to me,With the beauty of sunrise,Who was health and wealth and all,Who never shall answer my call,While the sun falls in the west,The dew falls and the stars fall.
Duncan Campbell Scott
Rain In My Heart
There is a quiet in my heart Like one who rests from days of pain. Outside, the sparrows on the roof Are chirping in the dripping rain. Rain in my heart; rain on the roof; And memory sleeps beneath the gray And windless sky and brings no dreams Of any well remembered day. I would not have the heavens fair, Nor golden clouds, nor breezes mild, But days like this, until my heart To loss of you is reconciled. I would not see you. Every hope To know you as you were has ranged. I, who am altered, would not find The face I loved so greatly changed.
Edgar Lee Masters
Reconciliation
Some may have blamed you that you took awayThe verses that could move them on the dayWhen, the ears being deafened, the sight of the eyes blindWith lightning you went from me, and I could findNothing to make a song about but kings,Helmets, and swords, and half-forgotten thingsThat were like memories of you, but nowWell out, for the world lives as long ago;And while were in our laughing, weeping fit,Hurl helmets, crowns, and swords into the pit.But, dear, cling close to me; since you were gone,My barren thoughts have chilled me to the bone.
Consolation In Bereavement.
'Tis not when we look on the dreamless dead,And feel that the spirit forever has fled;'Tis not when we're called to the voiceless tombBy the loved who were culled in their brightest bloom;'Tis not when the grave's last rite is o'er,And we know they are gone to return no more;But, oh! 'tis when Time with oblivious wingA balm to all other hearts may bring;When the dark, dark hours of grief are o'er,And we join the world we can love no more,That world whose grief for the absent onePassed like a cloud from an April sun;When, amid the mirth that salutes the ear,One tone is gone we had used to hear,One form is missed in that happy train,That will never exult in its sports again;We feel that death has indeed passed o'er,And a blank...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
Sorrow
Sorrow like a ceaseless rain Beats upon my heart. People twist and scream in pain,-- Dawn will find them still again; This has neither wax nor wane, Neither stop nor start. People dress and go to town; I sit in my chair. All my thoughts are slow and brown: Standing up or sitting down Little matters, or what gown Or what shoes I wear.
Broken Love
My Spectre around me night and dayLike a wild beast guards my way;My Emanation far withinWeeps incessantly for my sin.A fathomless and boundless deep,There we wander, there we weep;On the hungry craving windMy Spectre follows thee behind.He scents thy footsteps in the snowWheresoever thou dost go,Thro the wintry hail and rain.When wilt thou return again?Dost thou not in pride and scornFill with tempests all my morn,And with jealousies and fearsFill my pleasant nights with tears?Seven of my sweet loves thy knifeHas bereavèd of their life.Their marble tombs I built with tears,And with cold and shuddering fears.Seven more loves weep night and dayRound the tombs where my loves lay,
William Blake
A Fragment
Oh, Youth! could dark futurity revealHer hidden worlds, unlock her cloud-hung gates,Or snatch the keys of mystery from time,Your souls would madden at the piercing sightOf fortune, wielding high her woe-born armsTo crush aspiring genius, seize the wreathWhich fond imagination's hand had weav'd,Strip its bright beams, and give the wreck to air.Forth from Cimmeria's nest of vipers, lo!Pale envy trails its cherish'd form, and views,With eye of cockatrice, the little pileWhich youthful merit had essay'd to raise;From shrouded night his blacker arm he draws,Replete with vigor from each heavenly blast,To cloud the glories of that infant sun,And hurl the fabric headlong to the ground.How oft, alas! through that envenom'd blow,The youth is ...
Thomas Gent
Deserted.
A broken rainbow on the skies of MayTouching the sodden roses and low clouds,And in wet clouds like scattered jewels lost:Upon the heaven of a soul the ghostOf a great love, perfect in its pure ray,Touching the roses moist of memoryTo die within the Present's grief of clouds -A broken rainbow on the skies of May.A flashing humming-bird amid strange flowers,Or red or white; its darting length of tongueSucking and drinking all the cell-stored sweet,And now the surfeit and the hurried fleet:A love that put into expanding bowersOf one's large heart a tongue's persuasive powersTo cream with joy, and riffled, so was gone -A flashing humming-bird amid strange flowers.A foamy moon which thro' a night of fleeceMoves amber girt into a b...
Madison Julius Cawein