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To Robert Burns
Sweet Singer that I loe the maistO' ony, sin' wi' eager hasteI smacket bairn-lips ower the tasteO' hinnied sang,I hail thee, though a blessed ghaistIn Heaven lang!For weel I ken, nae cantie phrase,Nor courtly airs, nor lairdly ways,Could gar me freer blame, or praise,Or proffer hand,Where "Rantin' Robbie" and his laysThegither stand.And sae these hamely lines I send,Wi' jinglin' words at ilka end,In echo o' the sangs that wendFrae thee to meLike simmer-brooks, wi mony a bendO' wimplin' glee.In fancy, as wi' dewy een,I part the clouds aboon the sceneWhere thou wast born, and peer atween,I see nae spotIn a' the Hielands half sae greenAnd unforgot?I see nae storied castle-hall...
James Whitcomb Riley
Evening On The Farm
From out the hills where twilight stands,Above the shadowy pasture lands,With strained and strident cry,Beneath pale skies that sunset bands,The bull-bats fly.A cloud hangs over, strange of shape,And, colored like the half-ripe grape,Seems some uneven stainOn heaven's azure; thin as crape,And blue as rain.By ways, that sunset's sardonyxO'erflares, and gates the farm-boy clicks,Through which the cattle came,The mullein-stalks seem giant wicksOf downy flame.From woods no glimmer enters in,Above the streams that, wandering, winTo where the wood pool bids,Those haunters of the dusk begin,The katydids.Adown the dark the firefly marksIts flight in gold and emerald sparks;And, loosened from h...
Madison Julius Cawein
For The Birthday Of Edgar Allan Poe
(January 19, 1909)Poet of doom, dementia, and death,Of beauty singing in a charnel house,Like the lost soul of a poor moon-mad maid,With too much loving of some lord of hell;Doomed and disastrous spirit, to what shoreOf what dark gulf infernal art thou strayed,Or to what spectral star of topless heavenArt lifted and enthroned? The winter dark,And the drear winter cold that welcomed theeTo a world all winter, gird with ice and stormThy January day - yea! the same worldOf winter and the wintry hearts of men;And still, for all thy shining, the same swarmThat mocked thy song gather about thy fame,With the small murmur of the undying worm,And whisper, blind and foul, amid thy dust.
Richard Le Gallienne
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXX.
Quand' io mi volgo indietro a mirar gli anni.THE REMEMBRANCE OF THE PAST ENHANCES HIS MISERY. When I look back upon the many yearsWhich in their flight my best thoughts have entomb'd,And spent the fire, that, spite her ice, consumed,And finish'd the repose so full of tears,Broken the faith which Love's young dream endears,And the two parts of all my blessing doom'd,This low in earth, while heaven has that resumed,And lost the guerdon of my pains and fears,I wake, and feel me to the bitter windSo bare, I envy the worst lot I see;Self-terror and heart-grief on me so wait.O Death, O Fate, O Fortune, stars unkind!O day for ever dark and drear to me!How have ye sunk me in this abject state!MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Marthy's Younkit.
The mountain brook sung lonesomelikeAnd loitered on its wayEz if it waited for a childTo jine it in its play;The wild flowers of the hillsideBent down their heads to hearThe music of the little feetThat had, somehow, grown so dear;The magpies, like winged shadders,Wuz a-flutterin' to and froAmong the rocks and holler stumpsIn the ragged gulch below;The pines 'nd hemlock tosst their boughs(Like they wuz arms) 'nd madeSoft, sollum music on the slopeWhere he had often played.But for these lonesome, sollum voicesOn the mountain side,There wuz no sound the summer dayThat Marthy's younkit died.We called him Marthy's younkit,For Marthy wuz the nameUv her ez wuz his mar, the wifeUv Sorry Tom--the same
Eugene Field
By The Runic Stone
(Two who became a story)By the Runic StoneThey sat, where the grass sloped down,And chattered, he white-hatted, she in brown,Pink-faced, breeze-blown.Rapt there aloneIn the transport of talking soIn such a place, there was nothing to let them knowWhat hours had flown.And the die thrownBy them heedlessly there, the dentIt was to cut in their encompassment,Were, too, unknown.It might have strownTheir zest with qualms to see,As in a glass, Time toss their historyFrom zone to zone!
Thomas Hardy
Light Love
'Oh, sad thy lot before I came, But sadder when I go;My presence but a flash of flame, A transitory glow Between two barren wastes like snow.What wilt thou do when I am gone, Where wilt thou rest, my dear?For cold thy bed to rest upon, And cold the falling year Whose withered leaves are lost and sere.'She hushed the baby at her breast, She rocked it on her knee:'And I will rest my lonely rest, Warmed with the thought of thee, Rest lulled to rest by memory.'She hushed the baby with her kiss, She hushed it with her breast:'Is death so sadder much than this - Sure death that builds a nest For those who elsewhere cannot rest?''Oh, sad thy note, my mateless dove, With t...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Robin Shure In Hairst.
I. Robin shure in hairst, I shure wi' him, Fient a heuk had I, Yet I stack by him.II. I gaed up to Dunse, To warp a wab o' plaiden, At his daddie's yett, Wha met me but Robin.III. Was na Robin bauld, Tho' I was a cotter, Play'd me sic a trick, And me the eller's dochter? Robin share in hairst, &c.IV. Robin promis'd me A' my winter vittle; Fient haet he had but three Goose feathers and a whittle. Robin share in hairst, &c.
Robert Burns
Snowbirds
Along the narrow sandy heightI watch them swiftly come and go,Or round the leafless wood,Like flurries of wind-driven snow,Revolving in perpetual flight,A changing multitude.Nearer and nearer still they sway,And, scattering in a circled sweep,Rush down without a sound;And now I see them peer and peep,Across yon level bleak and gray,Searching the frozen ground, -Until a little wind upheaves,And makes a sudden rustling there,And then they drop their play,Flash up into the sunless air,And like a flight of silver leavesSwirl round and sweep away.
Archibald Lampman
Queens
The red sun stared unwinking at the EastThen slept under a cloak of hodden gray;The rimy fields held the last light of day,A little tender yet. And I rememberHow black against the pale and wintry westStood the confused great army of old trees,Topping that lean, enormous-shouldered hillWith crossing lances shivering and then still.I looked as one that seesQueens passing by and lovelier than he dreamed,With fringe of silver light following their feet,And all those lances vail'd, and solemn KnightsWatching their Queens as with eyes grave and sweetThey left for the gray fields those airy heights.Nothing had lovelier seemed--Not April's noise nor the early dew of June,Nor the calm languid cow-eyed Autumn Moon,Nor ruffling woods the greenest I ...
John Frederick Freeman
I Bear In Youth The Sad Infirmities
I bear in youth the sad infirmitiesThat use to undo the limb and sense of age;It hath pleased Heaven to break the dream of blissWhich lit my onward way with bright presage,And my unserviceable limbs forego.The sweet delight I found in fields and farms,On windy hills, whose tops with morning glow,And lakes, smooth mirrors of Aurora's charms.Yet I think on them in the silent night,Still breaks that morn, though dim, to Memory's eye,And the firm soul does the pale train defyOf grim Disease, that would her peace affright.Please God, I'll wrap me in mine innocence,And bid each awful Muse drive the damned harpies hence.CAMBRIDGE, 1827.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Forest Moods
There is singing of birds in the deep wet woods,In the heart of the listening solitudes,Pewees, and thrushes, and sparrows, not few,And all the notes of their throats are true.The thrush from the innermost ash takes onA tender dream of the treasured and gone;But the sparrow singeth with pride and cheerOf the might and light of the present and here.There is shining of flowers in the deep wet woods,In the heart of the sensitive solitudes,The roseate bell and the lily are there,And every leaf of their sheaf is fair.Careless and bold, without dream of woe,The trilliums scatter their flags snow;But the pale wood-daffodil covers her face,Agloom with the doom of a sorrowful race.
Perfection
The leaf that ripens only in the sunIs dull and shrivelled ere its race is run.The leaf that makes a carnival of deathMust tremble first before the north wind's breath.The life that neither grief nor burden knowsIs dwarfed in sympathy before its close.The life that grows majestic with the yearsMust taste the bitter tonic found in tears.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
In School-Days
Still sits the school-house by the road,A ragged beggar sleeping;Around it still the sumachs grow,And blackberry-vines are creeping.Within, the masters desk is seen,Deep scarred by raps official;The warping floor, the battered seats,The jack-knifes carved initial;The charcoal frescos on its wall;Its doors worn sill, betrayingThe feet that, creeping slow to school,Went storming out to playing!Long years ago a winter sunShone over it at setting;Lit up its western window-panes,And low eaves icy fretting.It touched the tangled golden curls,And brown eyes full of grieving,Of one who still her steps delayedWhen all the school were leaving.For near her stood the little boyHer childish fav...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Autumn Days.
Yellow, mellow, ripened days,Sheltered in a golden coating;O'er the dreamy, listless haze,White and dainty cloudlets floating;Winking at the blushing trees,And the sombre, furrowed fallow;Smiling at the airy easeOf the southward-flying swallow.Sweet and smiling are thy ways,Beauteous, golden, Autumn days!Shivering, quivering, tearful days,Fretfully and sadly weeping;Dreading still, with anxious gaze,Icy fetters round thee creeping;O'er the cheerless, withered plain,Woefully and hoarsely calling;Pelting hail and drenching rainOn thy scanty vestments falling.Sad and mournful are thy ways,Grieving, wailing, Autumn days!
Will Carleton
Going And Staying
IThe moving sun-shapes on the spray,The sparkles where the brook was flowing,Pink faces, plightings, moonlit May,These were the things we wished would stay;But they were going.IISeasons of blankness as of snow,The silent bleed of a world decaying,The moan of multitudes in woe,These were the things we wished would go;But they were staying.IIIThen we looked closelier at Time,And saw his ghostly arms revolvingTo sweep off woeful things with prime,Things sinister with things sublimeAlike dissolving.
Foolishness.
In's Tusc'lans, Tully doth confess,No plague there's like to foolishness.
Robert Herrick
Footsteps In The Street
Oh, will the footsteps never be done? The insolent feet Thronging the street,Forsaken now of the only one.The only one out of all the throng, Whose footfall I knew, And could tell it so true,That I leapt to see as she passed along,As she passed along with her beautiful face, Which knew full well Though it did not tell,That I was there in the window-space.Now my sense is never so clear. It cheats my heart, Making me startA thousand times, when she is not near.When she is not near, but so far away, I could not come To the place of her home,Though I travelled and sought for a month and a day....
Robert Fuller Murray