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Monody On The Death Of Dr Warton
Oh! I should ill thy generous cares requiteThou who didst first inspire my timid Muse,Could I one tuneful tear to thee refuse,Now that thine aged eyes are closed in night,Kind Warton! Thou hast stroked my stripling head,And sometimes, mingling soft reproof with praise,My path hast best directed through the mazeOf thorny life: by thee my steps were ledTo that romantic valley, high o'erhungWith sable woods, where many a minstrel rungHis bold harp to the sweeping waterfall;Whilst Fancy loved around each form to callThat fill the poet's dream: to this retreatOf Fancy, (won by whose enticing layI have forgot how sunk the summer's day),Thou first did guide my not unwilling feet;Meantime inspiring the gay breast of youthWith love of taste, of sc...
William Lisle Bowles
I'll Dream Upon The Days To Come
I'll lay me down on the green sward,Mid yellowcups and speedwell blue,And pay the world no more regard,But be to Nature leal and true.Who break the peace of hapless manBut they who Truth and Nature wrong?I'll hear no more of evil's plan,But live with Nature and her song.Where Nature's lights and shades are green,Where Nature's place is strewn with flowers.Where strife and care are never seen,There I'll retire to happy hours,And stretch my body on the green,And sleep among the flowers in bloom,By eyes of malice seldom seen,And dream upon the days to come.I'll lay me by the forest green,I'll lay me on the pleasant grass;My life shall pass away unseen;I'll be no more the man I was.The tawny bee upon the flower,<...
John Clare
A Night Of Storm.
Oh city, whom grey stormy hands have sownWith restless drift, scarce broken now of any,Out of the dark thy windows dim and manyGleam red across the storm. Sound is there none,Save evermore the fierce wind's sweep and moan,From whose grey hands the keen white snow is shakenIn desperate gusts, that fitfully lull and waken,Dense as night's darkness round thy towers of stone.Darkling and strange art thou thus vexed and chidden;More dark and strange thy veilèd agony,City of storm, in whose grey heart are hiddenWhat stormier woes, what lives that groan and beat,Stern and thin-cheeked, against time's heavier sleet,Rude fates, hard hearts, and prisoning poverty.
Archibald Lampman
His Grange.
How well contented in this private grangeSpend I my life, that's subject unto change:Under whose roof with moss-work wrought, there IKiss my brown wife and black posterity.
Robert Herrick
God-Speed To The Snow
March is slain; the keen winds fly;Nothing more is thine to do;April kisses thee good-bye;Thou must haste and follow too;Silent friend that guarded wellWithered things to make us glad,Shyest friend that could not tellHalf the kindly thought he had.Haste thee, speed thee, O kind snow;Down the dripping valleys go,From the fields and gleaming meadows,Where the slaying hours behold thee,From the forests whose slim shadows,Brown and leafless cannot fold thee,Through the cedar lands aflameWith gold light that cleaves and quivers,Songs that winter may not tame,Drone of pines and laugh of rivers.May thy passing joyous beTo thy father, the great sea,For the sun is getting stronger;Earth hath need of thee no longer;Go,...
Two Worlds.
It makes no difference abroad,The seasons fit the same,The mornings blossom into noons,And split their pods of flame.Wild-flowers kindle in the woods,The brooks brag all the day;No blackbird bates his jargoningFor passing Calvary.Auto-da-fe and judgmentAre nothing to the bee;His separation from his roseTo him seems misery.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Pan In Vermont
Its forty in the shade to-day, the spouting eaves declare;The boulders nose above the drift, the southern slopes are bare;Hub-deep in slush Apollos car swings north along the Zod,iac. Good luck, the Spring is back, and Pan is on the road!His house is Gee & Tellus Sons,, so goes his jest with men,He sold us Zeus knows what last year; hell take us in again.Disguised behind the livery-team, fur-coated, rubber-shod,Yet Apis from the bull-pen lows, he knows his brother God!Now down the lines of tasseled pines the yearning whispers wake,Pithys of old thy love behold! Come in for Hermess sake!How long since that so-Boston boot with reeling Maenads ran!Numen adest! Let be the rest. Pipe and we pay, O Pan.(What though his phlox and hollyhocks ere hal...
Rudyard
Steamboats, Viaducts, And Railways
Motions and Means, on land and sea at warWith old poetic feeling, not for this,Shall ye, by Poets even, be judged amiss!Nor shall your presence, howsoe'er it marThe loveliness of Nature, prove a barTo the Mind's gaining that prophetic senseOf future change, that point of vision, whenceMay be discovered what in soul ye are.In spite of all that beauty may disownIn your harsh features, Nature doth embraceHer lawful offspring in Man's art; and Time,Pleased with your triumphs o'er his brother Space,Accepts from your bold hands the proffered crownOf hope, and smiles on you with cheer sublime.
William Wordsworth
Two In The Campagna
II wonder do you feel to-dayAs I have felt since, hand in hand,We sat down on the grass, to strayIn spirit better through the land,This morn of Rome and May?IIFor me, I touched a thought, I know,Has tantalized me many times,(Like turns of thread the spiders throwMocking across our path) for rhymesTo catch at and let go.IIIHelp me to hold it! First it leftThe yellowing fennel, run to seedThere, branching from the brickworks cleft,Some old tombs ruin: yonder weedTook up the floating weft,IVWhere one small orange cup amassedFive beetles, blind and green they gropeAmong the honey-meal: and last,Everywhere on the grassy slopeI traced it. Hold it fast!VThe champaign with ...
Robert Browning
Ah Poverties, Wincings Sulky Retreats
Ah poverties, wincings, and sulky retreats!Ah you foes that in conflict have overcome me!(For what is my life, or any man's life, but a conflict with foes--the old, the incessant war?)You degradations--you tussle with passions and appetites;You smarts from dissatisfied friendships, (ah wounds, the sharpest of all;)You toil of painful and choked articulations--you meannesses;You shallow tongue-talks at tables, (my tongue the shallowest of any;)You broken resolutions, you racking angers, you smother'd ennuis;Ah, think not you finally triumph--My real self has yet to come forth;It shall yet march forth o'ermastering, till all lies beneath me;It shall yet stand up the soldier of unquestion'd victory.
Walt Whitman
His Confession.
Look how our foul days do exceed our fair;And as our bad, more than our good works are,E'en so those lines, pen'd by my wanton wit,Treble the number of these good I've writ.Things precious are least numerous: men are proneTo do ten bad for one good action.
To My Sister,
With a copy of "The Supernaturalism Of New England."Dear Sister! while the wise and sageTurn coldly from my playful page,And count it strange that ripened ageShould stoop to boyhood's folly;I know that thou wilt judge arightOf all which makes the heart more light,Or lends one star-gleam to the nightOf clouded Melancholy.Away with weary cares and themes!Swing wide the moonlit gate of dreams!Leave free once more the land which teemsWith wonders and romancesWhere thou, with clear discerning eyes,Shalt rightly read the truth which liesBeneath the quaintly masking guiseOf wild and wizard fancies.Lo! once again our feet we setOn still green wood-paths, twilight wet,By lonely brooks, whose waters fret
John Greenleaf Whittier
Rain For The Farmer.
If gently falls the small, soft, lazy rain,To indoor industries he shrewdly steals;And in the barn from some neglected grainThe choking chaff the clattering fanner reels;Or in the shed the sapling ash he peelsFor handles for the fork with humor blithe,Or haply lards the tumbril's heavy wheels,Or of the harness oils the leather lithe,Or turns the tuneless stone and grinds the gleaming scythe.But now the sky is black; and now the StormPrepares his legions for the coming fray,While murmurs low prelude the dread alarm,As prayed the hosts, - like robèd monks who prayMid slumb'rous incense in a cloister gray, -Till from yon cloud the fiery signal givenEnrages all their terrible array.Jove's flaming car is o'er Olympus driven,And thunders ...
W. M. MacKeracher
To George Felton Mathew
Sweet are the pleasures that to verse belong,And doubly sweet a brotherhood in song;Nor can remembrance, Mathew! bring to viewA fate more pleasing, a delight more trueThan that in which the brother Poets joy'd,Who with combined powers, their wit employ'dTo raise a trophy to the drama's muses.The thought of this great partnership diffusesOver the genius loving heart, a feelingOf all that's high, and great, and good, and healing.Too partial friend! fain would I follow theePast each horizon of fine poesy;Fain would I echo back each pleasant noteAs o'er Sicilian seas, clear anthems float'Mong the light skimming gondolas far parted,Just when the sun his farewell beam has darted:But 'tis impossible, far different caresBeckon me sternly fr...
John Keats
Sonnet.
By mead and marsh and sandhill clad with bent,Soothed by the wistful musings of the windThat in scarce listening ears are mildly dinned,On plods the traveller till the day be spent,And day-dreams end in dreamless night at last.He hears, beyond the grey bent's silken waves,The foam-embroidered waters ever castOn sighing sands and into echoing caves.And from the west, where the last sunset glowStill lingers on the border hills afar,Come pastoral sounds, attenuate and low,Thence where the night shall bring, 'neath cloud and star,Silence to yearn o'er folk worn with day's strife,Lost in blank sleep to hope, regret, death, life.[An alternative ending:While from the West comes murmuring earthly noise,Sweet, slumberous, attenuate an...
Thomas Runciman
Alarm Clocks
When Dawn strides out to wake a dewy farm Across green fields and yellow hills of hay The little twittering birds laugh in his wayAnd poise triumphant on his shining arm.He bears a sword of flame but not to harm The wakened life that feels his quickening sway And barnyard voices shrilling "It is day!"Take by his grace a new and alien charm.But in the city, like a wounded thing That limps to cover from the angry chase,He steals down streets where sickly arc-lights sing, And wanly mock his young and shameful face;And tiny gongs with cruel fervor ring In many a high and dreary sleeping place.
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
The Old Workman
"Why are you so bent down before your time,Old mason? Many have not left their primeSo far behind at your age, and can stillStand full upright at will."He pointed to the mansion-front hard by,And to the stones of the quoin against the sky;"Those upper blocks," he said, "that there you see,It was that ruined me."There stood in the air up to the parapetCrowning the corner height, the stones as setBy him ashlar whereon the gales might drumFor centuries to come."I carried them up," he said, "by a ladder there;The last was as big a load as I could bear;But on I heaved; and something in my backMoved, as 'twere with a crack."So I got crookt. I never lost that sprain;And those who live there, walled from wind and rain
Thomas Hardy
Rutherford McDowell
They brought me ambrotypes Of the old pioneers to enlarge. And sometimes one sat for me - Some one who was in being When giant hands from the womb of the world Tore the republic. What was it in their eyes? - For I could never fathom That mystical pathos of drooped eyelids, And the serene sorrow of their eyes. It was like a pool of water, Amid oak trees at the edge of a forest, Where the leaves fall, As you hear the crow of a cock From a far - off farm house, seen near the hills Where the third generation lives, and the strong men And the strong women are gone and forgotten. And these grand - children and great grand-children Of the pioneers! Truly did my camera recor...
Edgar Lee Masters