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The Beggar's Valentine
Kiss me and comfort my heart Maiden honest and fine. I am the pilgrim boy Lame, but hunting the shrine; Fleeing away from the sweets, Seeking the dust and rain, Sworn to the staff and road, Scorning pleasure and pain; Nevertheless my mouth Would rest like a bird an hour And find in your curls a nest And find in your breast a bower: Nevertheless my eyes Would lose themselves in your own, Rivers that seek the sea, Angels before the throne: Kiss me and comfort my heart, For love can never be mine: Passion, hunger and pain, These are the only wine Of the pilgrim bound to the road. He would rob no man of his own. Yo...
Vachel Lindsay
Lines Upon The Death Of The Lady Of Lieutenant-Colonel Adams, Who Lately Died Of A Decline In The East Indies.
When Time a mellowing tint has thrownO'er many a scene to mem'ry dear.It scatters round a charm, unknownWhen first th' impression rested there.But, oh! should distance intervene,Should Ocean's wave, should changeful clime.Divide - how sweeter far the scene!How richer ev'ry tint of time!E'en thus with those (a treasur'd few)Who gladden'd life with many a smile,Tho' long has pass'd the sad adieu,In thought we love to dwell awhile.Then with keen eye, and beating heart,The anxious mind still seeks reliefFrom those who can the tale impart,How pass their day, in joy or grief.If haply health and fortune bless,We feel as if on us they shone;If sickness and if sorrow press,Then feeling makes their woes our own.<...
John Carr
Young Love V - The Day Of The Two Daffodils
'The daffodils are fine this year,' I said;'O yes, but see my crocuses,' said she.And so we entered in and sat at talkWithin a little parlour bowered aboutWith garden-noises, filled with garden scent,As some sweet sea-shell rings with pearly chimesAnd sighs out fragrance of its mother's breast.We sat at talk, and all the afternoonWhispered about in changing silencesOf flush and sudden light and gathering shade,As though some Maestro drew out organ stopsSomewhere in heaven. As two within a boatOn the wide sea we sat at talk, the hoursLapping unheeded round us as the waves.And as such two will ofttimes pause in speech,Gaze at high heaven and draw deep to their heartsThe infinite azure, then meet eyes againAnd flash it to each other; w...
Richard Le Gallienne
Her Immortality
Upon a noon I pilgrimed throughA pasture, mile by mile,Unto the place where I last sawMy dead Love's living smile.And sorrowing I lay me downUpon the heated sod:It seemed as if my body pressedThe very ground she trod.I lay, and thought; and in a tranceShe came and stood me byThe same, even to the marvellous rayThat used to light her eye."You draw me, and I come to you,My faithful one," she said,In voice that had the moving toneIt bore ere breath had fled.She said: "'Tis seven years since I died:Few now remember me;My husband clasps another bride;My children's love has she."My brethren, sisters, and my friendsCare not to meet my sprite:Who prized me most I did not knowTill I...
Thomas Hardy
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - March.
1. THE song birds that come to me night and morn, Fly oft away and vanish if I sleep, Nor to my fowling-net will one return: Is the thing ever ours we cannot keep?-- But their souls go not out into the deep. What matter if with changed song they come back? Old strength nor yet fresh beauty shall they lack. 2. Gloriously wasteful, O my Lord, art thou! Sunset faints after sunset into the night, Splendorously dying from thy window-sill-- For ever. Sad our poverty doth bow Before the riches of thy making might: Sweep from thy space thy systems at thy will-- In thee the sun sets every sunset still. 3.<...
George MacDonald
The Pilgrims
Who is your lady of love, O ye that passSinging? and is it for sorrow of that which wasThat ye sing sadly, or dream of what shall be?For gladly at once and sadly it seems ye sing.Our lady of love by you is unbeholden;For hands she hath none, nor eyes, nor lips, nor goldenTreasure of hair, nor face nor form; but weThat love, we know her more fair than anything.Is she a queen, having great gifts to give?Yea, these; that whoso hath seen her shall not liveExcept he serve her sorrowing, with strange pain,Travail and bloodshedding and bitterer tears;And when she bids die he shall surely die.And he shall leave all things under the skyAnd go forth naked under sun and rainAnd work and wait and watch out all his years.Hath she on earth no pla...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
To The Same Flower
Pleasures newly found are sweetWhen they lie about our feet:February last, my heartFirst at sight of thee was glad;All unheard of as thou art,Thou must needs, I think, have had,Celandine! and long ago,Praise of which I nothing know.I have not a doubt but he,Whosoe'er the man might be,Who the first with pointed rays(Workman worthy to be sainted)Set the sign-board in a blaze,When the rising sun he painted,Took the fancy from a glanceAt thy glittering countenance.Soon as gentle breezes bringNews of winter's vanishing,And the children build their bowers,Sticking 'kerchief-plots of mouldAll about with full-blown flowers,Thick as sheep in shepherd's fold!With the proudest thou art there,Mantling i...
William Wordsworth
My Romance
If it so befalls that the midnight hoversIn mist no moonlight breaks,The leagues of the years my spirit covers,And my self myself forsakes.And I live in a land of stars and flowers,White cliffs by a silvery sea;And the pearly points of her opal towersFrom the mountains beckon me.And I think that I know that I hear her callingFrom a casement bathed with lightThrough music of waters in waters fallingMid palms from a mountain height.And I feel that I think my love's awaitedBy the romance of her charms;That her feet are early and mine belatedIn a world that chains my arms.But I break my chains and the rest is easyIn the shadow of the rose,Snow-white, that blooms in her garden breezy,We meet and no one knows...
Madison Julius Cawein
Recollections of Love
IHow warm this woodland wild Recess!Love surely hath been breathing here;And this sweet bed of heath, my dear!Swells up, then sinks with faint caress,As if to have you yet more near.IIEight springs have flown, since last I layOn sea-ward Quantock's heathy hills,Where quiet sounds from hidden rillsFloat hear and there, like things astray,And high o'er head the sky-lark shrills.IIINo voice as yet had made the airBe music with your name; yet whyThat asking look? that yearning sigh?That sense of promise every where?Belovéd! flew your spirit by?IVAs when a mother doth exploreThe rose-mark on her long-lost child,I met, I loved you, maiden mild!As whom I long had loved befor...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Some Time
Last night, my darling, as you slept,I thought I heard you sigh,And to your little crib I crept,And watched a space thereby;And then I stooped and kissed your brow,For oh! I love you so--You are too young to know it now,But some time you shall know!Some time when, in a darkened placeWhere others come to weep,Your eyes shall look upon a faceCalm in eternal sleep,The voiceless lips, the wrinkled brow,The patient smile shall show--You are too young to know it now,But some time you may know!Look backward, then, into the years,And see me here to-night--See, O my darling! how my tearsAre falling as I write;And feel once more upon your browThe kiss of long ago--You are too young to know it now,But ...
Eugene Field
A Pearl, A Girl
A simple ring with a single stone,To the vulgar eye no stone of price:Whisper the right word, that alone,Forth starts a sprite, like fire from ice,And lo, you are lord (says an Eastern scroll)Of heaven and earth, lord whole and soleThrough the power in a pearl.A woman (tis I this time that say)With little the world counts worthy praiseUtter the true word, out and awayEscapes her soul: I am wrapt in blaze,Creations lord, of heaven and earthLord whole and sole, by a minutes birth,Through the love in a girl!
Robert Browning
Johanna
'Twas a balmy day in Autumn,In the drowsy, dreamy Autumn,When from out the quiet woodlandSounds of rustling leaves came only -Leaves that floated softly earthward -And the streamlets had a murmurSuch as wanders through our visionsIn the hushed and starry midnight -Low, soft murmur, full of music.With the small hand of her darlingClasped in her's, there came a motherTo an Artist - fondly askingFor the picture of her pet-lamb -Winsome pet-lamb full of child-life,Full of merry, ringing laughter -Laughter that went up unceasingLike the happy chime of streamletsSinging thro' some mountain valley, -Like the bird-song in the forestIn the time of early roses, -Like the tinkle of sweet watersDripping o'er a marble fou...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
With A Painted Ribbon.
Little leaves and flow'rets too,Scatter we with gentle hand,Kind young spring-gods to the view,Sporting on an airy band.Zephyr, bear it on the wing,Twine it round my loved one's dress;To her glass then let her spring,Full of eager joyousness.Roses round her let her see,She herself a youthful rose.Grant, dear life, one look to me!'Twill repay me all my woes,What this bosom feels, feel thou.Freely offer me thy hand;Let the band that joins us nowBe no fragile rosy band!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Good Night.
O slumber on, untaught to feelThe weight of care and sorrow's blight.Here have I often loved to stealAnd o'er thee breathe a soft "good night."And gentle as thy beauty's rayBe all the visions of thy dreams,Thy years be joyous as to-day,And life be always what it seems.Ah, may it ne'er be thine to knowThe sleepless eye, the tossing head;May He above ordain it so,And guardian angels shield thy bed.Now o'er thy cheek the smile betraysSome sweetness in thy dreaming eye,Alas that thou must wake and gazeOn things that cause thy breast a sigh!So placid is thy pillow here,'Tis sweet, indeed, to know thy peace,To smoothe thy locks and drop a tear,To clasp a hand I must release.Ah, dost thou dream of ...
Lennox Amott
To Mary
Mary, I love to singAbout the flowers of Spring,For they resemble thee.In the earliest of the yearThy beauties will appear,And youthful modesty.Here's the daisy's silver rim,With gold eye never dim,Spring's earliest flower so fair.Here the pilewort's golden raysSet the cow green in a blaze,Like the sunshine in thy hair.Here's forget-me-not so blue;Is there any flower so true?Can it speak my happy lot?When we courted in disguiseThis flower I used to prize,For it said "Forget-me-not."Speedwell! And when we meetIn the meadow paths so sweet,Where the flowers I gave to theeAll grew beneath the sun,May thy gentle heart be won,And I be blest with thee.
John Clare
A Swain To His Sweetheart.
What subtle charm is in thy voice,That ever, when I hear its tone,My heart doth pleasantly rejoice,And fondly turns to thee alone?The mem'ries of a toilsome lifeAre banish'd by its potent spell,And earthly care, and earthly strife,No whisper'd sorrows dare to tell.Where hope had fled, new hope inspires;Comes life, where lately life had gone;New purposes my bosom fires,To battle hard and bravely on.What charm dwells in thine eye of blue,That thus, by its magnetic pow'r,The world to me hath brighter hue,And happier grows each passing hour?With virtuous thought, and pure desire,Thine eyes look forth from lofty soul;Contagious, then, my thoughts aspireTo reach, with thee, thy lofty goal.Thine ey...
Thomas Frederick Young
Elusion
IMy soul goes out to her who says,"Come, follow me and cast off care!"Then tosses back her sun-bright hair,And like a flower before me swaysBetween the green leaves and my gaze:This creature like a girl, who smilesInto my eyes and softly laysHer hand in mine and leads me miles,Long miles of haunted forest ways.IISometimes she seems a faint perfume,A fragrance that a flower exhaledAnd God gave form to; now, unveiled,A sunbeam making gold the gloomOf vines that roof some woodland roomOf boughs; and now the silvery soundOf streams her presence doth assume -Music, from which, in dreaming drowned,A crystal shape she seems to bloom.IIISometimes she seems the light that liesOn foam of w...
November, 1851
What dost thou here, O soul,Beyond thy own control,Under the strange wild sky?0 stars, reach down your hands,And clasp me in your silver bands,I tremble with this mystery!--Flung hither by a chanceOf restless circumstance,Thou art but here, and wast not sent;Yet once more mayest thou drawBy thy own mystic lawTo the centre of thy wonderment. Why wilt thou stop and start?Draw nearer, oh my heart,And I will question thee most wistfully;Gather thy last clear resolutionTo look upon thy dissolution. The great God's life throbs far and free,And thou art but a sparkKnown only in thy dark,Or a foam-fleck upon the awful ocean,Thyself thy slender dignity,Thy own thy vexing mystery,In the vast...