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Absence
In this fair strangers eyes of greyThine eyes, my love, I see.I shudder: for the passing dayHad borne me far from thee.This is the curse of life: that notA nobler calmer trainOf wiser thoughts and feelings blotOur passions from our brain;But each day brings its petty dustOur soon-chokd souls to fill,And we forget because we must,And not because we will.I struggle towards the light; and ye,Once-longd-for storms of love!If with the light ye cannot be,I bear that ye remove.I struggle towards the light; but oh,While yet the night is chill,Upon Times barren, stormy flow,Stay with me, Marguerite, still!
Matthew Arnold
Roses
Oh, wind of the spring-time, oh, free wind of May,When blossoms and bird-song are rife;Oh, joy for the season, and joy for the day,That gave me the roses of life, of life,That gave me the roses of life.Oh, wind of the summer, sing loud in the night,When flutters my heart like a dove;One came from thy kingdom, thy realm of delight,And gave me the roses of love, of love,And gave me the roses of love.Oh, wind of the winter, sigh low in thy grief,I hear thy compassionate breath;I wither, I fall, like the autumn-kissed leaf,He gave me the roses of death, of death,He gave me the roses of death.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Insight
Sirs, when you pity us, I sayYou waste your pity. Let it stay,Well corked and stored upon your shelves,Until you need it for yourselves.We do appreciate God's thoughtIn forming you, before He broughtUs into life. His art was crude,But oh! so virile in its rude,Large, elemental strength; and thenHe learned His trade in making men,Learned how to mix and mould the clayAnd fashion in a finer way.How fine that skilful way can beYou need but lift your eyes to see;And we are glad God placed you thereTo lift your eyes and find us fair.Apprentice labour though you were,He made you great enough to stirThe best and deepest depths of us,And we are glad He made you thus.Aye! we are glad of many thi...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Dost Thou Not Care?
I love and love not: Lord, it breaks my heart To love and not to love.Thou veiled within Thy glory, gone apart Into Thy shrine, which is above,Dost Thou not love me, Lord, or care For this mine ill? -I love thee here or there, I will accept thy broken heart, lie still.Lord, it was well with me in time gone by That cometh not again,When I was fresh and cheerful, who but I? I fresh, I cheerful: worn with painNow, out of sight and out of heart; O Lord, how long? -I watch thee as thou art, I will accept thy fainting heart, be strong.'Lie still,' 'be strong,' to-day; but, Lord, to-morrow, What of to-morrow, Lord?Shall there be rest from toil, be truce from sorrow, Be living gr...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
To Contemplation.
[Greek (transliterated): Kai pagas fileoimi ton enguthen aechon achthein, A terpei psopheoisa ton agrikon, thchi tarassei.MOSCHOS.]Faint gleams the evening radiance thro' the sky, The sober twilight dimly darkens round;In short quick circles the shrill bat flits by, And the slow vapour curls along the ground.Now the pleas'd eye from yon lone cottage sees On the green mead the smoke long-shadowing play; The Red-breast on the blossom'd spray Warbles wild her latest lay,And sleeps along the dale the silent breeze.Calm CONTEMPLATION,'tis thy favorite hour!Come fill my bosom, tranquillizing Power.Meek Power! I view thee on the calmy shore When Ocean stills his waves ...
Robert Southey
Praise Of My Lady
My lady seems of ivoryForehead, straight nose, and cheeks that beHollow'd a little mournfully. Beata mea Domina!Her forehead, overshadow'd muchBy bows of hair, has a wave suchAs God was good to make for me. Beata mea Domina!Not greatly long my lady's hair,Nor yet with yellow colour fair,But thick and crispèd wonderfully: Beata mea Domina!Heavy to make the pale face sad,And dark, but dead as though it hadBeen forged by God most wonderfully Beata mea Domina!Of some strange metal, thread by thread,To stand out from my lady's head,Not moving much to tangle me. Beata mea Domina!Beneath her brows the lids fal...
William Morris
A Blessing. Translations. After Heine.
When I look on thee and feel how dear, How pure, and how fair thou art,Into my eyes there steals a tear,And a shadow mingled of love and fear Creeps slowly over my heart.And my very hands feel as if they would lay Themselves on thy fair young head,And pray the good God to keep thee alwayAs good and lovely, as pure and gay, - When I and my wild love are dead.
John Hay
A Grain Of Sand.
Do you see this grain of sandLying loosely in my hand?Do you know to me it broughtJust a simple loving thought?When one gazes night by nightOn the glorious stars of light,Oh how little seems the spanMeasured round the life of man.Oh! how fleeting are his yearsWith their smiles and their tears;Can it be that God does careFor such atoms as we are?Then outspake this grain of sand"I was fashioned by His handIn the star lit realms of spaceI was made to have a place."Should the ocean flood the world,Were its mountains 'gainst me hurledAll the force they could employWouldn't a single grain destroy;And if I, a thing so light,Have a place within His sight;You are linked unto his throneCannot live nor...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Thoughts: Mahomed Akram
If some day this body of mine were burned(It found no favour alas! with you)And the ashes scattered abroad, unurned,Would Love die also, would Thought die too? But who can answer, or who can trust, No dreams would harry the windblown dust?Were I laid away in the furrows deepSecure from jackal and passing plough,Would your eyes not follow me still through sleepTorment me then as they torture now? Would you ever have loved me, Golden Eyes, Had I done aught better or otherwise?Was I overspeechful, or did you yearnWhen I sat silent, for songs or speech?Ah, Beloved, I had been so apt to learn,So apt, had you only cared to teach. But time for silence and song is done, You wanted nothing, my Golden Sun!W...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Two Songs by Sitara, of Kashmir
Beloved! your hair was goldenAs tender tints of sunrise,As corn beside the River In softly varying hues.I loved you for your slightness,Your melancholy sweetness,Your changeful eyes, that promised What your lips would still refuse.You came to me, and loved me,Were mine upon the River,The azure water saw us And the blue transparent sky;The Lotus flowers knew it,Our happiness together,While life was only River, Only love, and you and I.Love wakened on the River,To sounds of running water,With silver Stars for witness And reflected Stars for light;Awakened to existence,With ripples for first musicAnd sunlight on the River For earliest sense of sight.Love grew upon ...
Blessed Among Women
To the Signora CairoliBlessed was she that bare,Hidden in flesh most fair,For all mens sake the likeness of all love;Holy that virgins womb,The old record saith, on whomThe glory of God alighted as a dove;Blessed, who brought to gracious birthThe sweet-souled Saviour of a man-tormented earth.But four times art thou blest,At whose most holy breastFour times a godlike soldier-saviour hung;And thence a fourfold ChristGiven to be sacrificedTo the same cross as the same bosom clung;Poured the same blood, to leave the sameLight on the many-folded mountain-skirts of fame.Shall they and thou not live,The children thou didst giveForth of thine hands, a godlike gift, t...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
San Lorenzo Giustiniani's Mother
I had not seen my son's dear face(He chose the cloister by God's grace) Since it had come to full flower-time. I hardly guessed at its perfect prime,That folded flower of his dear face.Mine eyes were veiled by mists of tearsWhen on a day in many years One of his Order came. I thrilled, Facing, I thought, that face fulfilled.I doubted, for my mists of tears.His blessing be with me for ever!My hope and doubt were hard to sever. -That altered face, those holy weeds. I filled his wallet and kissed his beads,And lost his echoing feet for ever.If to my son my alms were givenI know not, and I wait for Heaven. He did not plead for child of mine, But for another Child divine,And unto Him it was...
Alice Meynell
Amaryllis
I care not for these ladies that must be wooed and prayed;Give me kind Amaryllis, the wanton country maid.Nature Art disdaineth; her beauty is her own.Her when we court and kiss, she cries: forsooth, let go!But when we come where comfort is, she never will say no.If I love Amaryllis, she gives me fruit and flowers;But if we love these ladies, we must give golden showers.Give them gold that sell love, give me the nut-brown lass,Who when we court and kiss, she cries: forsooth, let go!But when we come where comfort is, she never will say no.These ladies must have pillows and beds by strangers wrought.Give me a bower of willows, of moss and leaves unbought,And fresh Amaryllis with milk and honey fed,Who when we court and kiss, she cries: forsooth, let go...
Thomas Campion
With A Copy Of "In Memoriam."
TO E.M. II.Dear friend, you love the poet's song, And here is one for your regard. You know the "melancholy bard,"Whose grief is wise as well as strong;Already something understand For whom he mourns and what he sings, And how he wakes with golden stringsThe echoes of "the silent land;"How, restless, faint, and worn with grief, Yet loving all and hoping all, He gazes where the shadows fall,And finds in darkness some relief;And how he sends his cries across, His cries for him that comes no more, Till one might think that silent shoreFull of the burden of his loss;And how there comes sublimer cheer-- Not darkness solacing sad eyes, Not the wild joy of mournf...
George MacDonald
A Ballad of Bath
Like a queen enchanted who may not laugh or weep,Glad at heart and guarded from change and care like ours,Girt about with beauty by days and nights that creepSoft as breathless ripples that softly shoreward sweep,Lies the lovely city whose grace no grief deflowers.Age and grey forgetfulness, time that shifts and veers,Touch not thee, our fairest, whose charm no rival nears,Hailed as England's Florence of one whose praise gives grace,Landor, once thy lover, a name that love reveres:Dawn and noon and sunset are one before thy face.Dawn whereof we know not, and noon whose fruit we reap,Garnered up in record of years that fell like flowers,Sunset liker sunrise along the shining steepWhence thy fair face lightens, and where thy soft springs leap,Crown at once a...
New Love And Old
In my heart the old loveStruggled with the new;It was ghostly wakingAll night through.Dear things, kind things,That my old love said,Ranged themselves reproachfullyRound my bed.But I could not heed them,For I seemed to seeThe eyes of my new loveFixed on me.Old love, old love,How can I be true?Shall I be faithless to myselfOr to you?
Sara Teasdale
Out Of The Depths.
I.Let me forget her face!So fresh, so lovely! the abiding placeOf tears and smiles that won my heart to her;Of dreams and moods that moved my soul's dim deeps,As strong winds stirDark waters where the starlight glimmering sleeps.In every lineament the mind can trace,Let me forget her face!II.Let me forget her form!Soft and seductive, that contained each charm,Each grace the sweet word maidenhood implies;And all the sensuous youth of line and curve,That makes men's eyesBondsmen of beauty eager still to serve.In every part that memory can warm,Let me forget her form!III.Let me forget her, God!Her who made honeyed love a bitter rodTo scourge my heart with, barren with despair;To tea...
Madison Julius Cawein
Canzone X.
Poichè per mio destino.IN PRAISE OF LAURA'S EYES: IN THEM HE FINDS EVERY GOOD, AND HE CAN NEVER CEASE TO PRAISE THEM. Since then by destinyI am compell'd to sing the strong desire,Which here condemns me ceaselessly to sigh,May Love, whose quenchless fireExcites me, be my guide and point the way,And in the sweet task modulate my lay:But gently be it, lest th' o'erpowering themeInflame and sting me, lest my fond heart mayDissolve in too much softness, which I deem,From its sad state, may be:For in me--hence my terror and distress!Not now as erst I seeJudgment to keep my mind's great passion less:Nay, rather from mine own thoughts melt I so,As melts before the summer sun the snow.At first I fondly thought
Francesco Petrarca