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Memories.
Here where LOVE lies perishèd,Look not in upon the dead;Lest the shadowy curtains, shakenIn my Heart's dark chamber, wakenGhosts, beneath whose garb of sorrowWhilom gladness bows his head:When you come at morn to-morrow,Look not in upon the dead,Here where LOVE lies perishèd.Here where LOVE lies cold interred,Let no syllable be heard;Lest the hollow echoes, housingIn my Soul's deep tomb, arousingWake a voice of woe, once laughterClaimed and clothed in joy's own word:When you come at dusk or after,Let no syllable be heard,Here where LOVE lies cold interred.
Madison Julius Cawein
Savitri. Part I.
Savitri was the only childOf Madra's wise and mighty king;Stern warriors, when they saw her, smiled,As mountains smile to see the spring.Fair as a lotus when the moonKisses its opening petals red,After sweet showers in sultry June!With happier heart, and lighter tread,Chance strangers, having met her, past,And often would they turn the headA lingering second look to cast,And bless the vision ere it fled.What was her own peculiar charm?The soft black eyes, the raven hair,The curving neck, the rounded arm,All these are common everywhere.Her charm was this--upon her faceChildlike and innocent and fair,No man with thought impure or baseCould ever look;--the glory there,The sweet simplicity and grace,Abashed the b...
Toru Dutt
Beyond Utterance.
There in the midst of gloom the church-spire rose,And not a star lit any side of heaven;In glades not far the damp reeds coldly touchedTheir sides, like soldiers dead before they fall;There in the belfry clung the sleeping bat, -Most abject creature, hanging like a leafDown from the bell-tongue, silent as the speechThe dead have lost ere they are laid in graves.A melancholy prelude I would singTo song more drear, while thought soars into gloom.Find me the harbor of the roaming storm,Or end of souls whose doom is life itself!So vague, yet surely sad, the song I dreamAnd utter not. So sends the tide its roll, -Unending chord of horror for a woeWe but half know, even when we die of it.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
A Medley: Tears, Idle Tears (The Princess)
Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean,Tears from the depth of some divine despairRise in the heart, and gather to the eyes,In looking on the happy Autumn-fields,And thinking of the days that are no more.Fresh as the first beam glittering on a sail,That brings our friends up from the underworld,Sad as the last which reddens over oneThat sinks with all we love below the verge;So sad, so fresh, the days that are no more.Ah, sad and strange as in dark summer dawnsThe earliest pipe of half-awaken'd birdsTo dying ears, when unto dying eyesThe casement slowly grows a summering square;So sad, so strange, the days that are no more.Dear as remember'd kisses after death,And sweet as those by hopeless fancy feign'dOn lips that are ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Farewell
(Shortly before departing for the theater of war)for Peter ScherBefore dying I am making my poem.Quiet, comrades, don't disturb me.We are going off to war. Death is our cement.If only my beloved did not shed these tears for me.What am I doing. I go gladly.Mother is crying. One must be made of iron.The sun sinks to the horizon.Soon I shall be tossed into a gentle mass grave.In the sky the fine red of evening is burning.Perhaps in thrirteen days I'll be dead.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Processionals
NORTHWe come from the gloom of the shadowy trailOut away on the fringe of the Night,Where no man could tell, when the darkness fell,If his eyes would behold the light. To--the--Night,-- To--the--Night,--To the darkness and the sorrow of the Night,-- Came--the--Light, Came--the--Light,Came the Wonder and the Glory of the Light.There are wanderers still, without ever a guide,Out there on the fringe of the Night,They are bond and blind,--to their darkness resigned,With never a wish for the Light. To--their--Night,-- To--their--Night,--To the darkness and the sorrow of their Night, Take--the--Light! Take--the--Light!Take the Wonder and the Glory of the Light...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Humiliation
I have been so innerly proud, and so long alone,Do not leave me, or I shall break.Do not leave me.What should I do if you were gone againSo soon?What should I look for?Where should I go?What should I be, I myself,"I"?What would it mean, thisI?Do not leave me.What should I think of death?If I died, it would not be you:It would be simply the sameLack of you.The same want, life or death,Unfulfilment,The same insanity of spaceYou not there for me.Think, I daren't dieFor fear of the lack in death.And I daren't live.Unless there were a morphine or a drug.I would bear the pain.But always, strong, unremittingIt would make me not me.The thing with my bo...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
To The Duke Of Dorset. [1]
Dorset! whose early steps with mine have stray'd,Exploring every path of Ida's glade;Whom, still, affection taught me to defend,And made me less a tyrant than a friend,Though the harsh custom of our youthful bandBade thee obey, and gave me to command; [2]Thee, on whose head a few short years will showerThe gift of riches, and the pride of power;E'en now a name illustrious is thine own,Renown'd in rank, not far beneath the throne.Yet, Dorset, let not this seduce thy soulTo shun fair science, or evade controul;Though passive tutors, [3] fearful to dispraiseThe titled child, whose future breath may raise,View ducal errors with indulgent eyes,And wink at faults they tremble to chastise.When youthful parasites, who bend the kne...
George Gordon Byron
Scented Herbage Of My Breast
Scented herbage of my breast,Leaves from you I yield, I write, to be perused best afterwards,Tomb-leaves, body-leaves, growing up above me, above death,Perennial roots, tall leaves O the winter shall not freeze you, delicate leaves,Every year shall you bloom again out from where you retired, you shall emerge again;O I do not know whether many, passing by, will discover you, or inhale your faint odor but I believe a few will;O slender leaves! O blossoms of my blood! I permit you to tell, in your own way, of the heart that is under you;O burning and throbbing surely all will one day be accomplish'd;O I do not know what you mean, there underneath yourselves you are not happiness,You are often more bitter than I can bear you burn and sting me,Yet you are very beautiful to me, you fai...
Walt Whitman
A Prayer For Grace In Death. Second Reading.
Parmi che spesso.Ofttimes my great desire doth flatter me With hope on earth yet many years to stay: Still Death, the more I love it, day by day Takes from the life I love so tenderly.What better time for that dread change could be, If in our griefs alone to God we pray? Oh, lead me, Lord, oh, lead me far away From every thought that lures my soul from Thee!Yea, if at any hour, through grace of Thine, The fervent zeal of love and faith that cheer And fortify the soul, my heart assail.Since nought achieve these mortal powers of mine, Plant, like a saint in heaven, that virtue here; For, lacking Thee, all good must faint and fail.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
The Affliction Of Margaret
IWhere art thou, my beloved Son,Where art thou, worse to me than dead?Oh find me, prosperous or undone!Or, if the grave be now thy bed,Why am I ignorant of the sameThat I may rest; and neither blameNor sorrow may attend thy name?IISeven years, alas! to have receivedNo tidings of an only child;To have despaired, have hoped, believed,And been for evermore beguiled;Sometimes with thoughts of very bliss!I catch at them, and then I miss;Was ever darkness like to this?IIIHe was among the prime in worth,An object beauteous to behold;Well born, well bred; I sent him forthIngenuous, innocent, and bold:If things ensued that wanted grace,As hath been said, they were not base;And never...
William Wordsworth
The Pauper's Funeral
What! and not one to heave the pious sigh!Not one whose sorrow-swoln and aching eyeFor social scenes, for life's endearments fled,Shall drop a tear and dwell upon the dead!Poor wretched Outcast! I will weep for thee,And sorrow for forlorn humanity.Yes I will weep, but not that thou art comeTo the stern Sabbath of the silent tomb:For squalid Want, and the black scorpion Care,Heart-withering fiends! shall never enter there.I sorrow for the ills thy life has knownAs thro' the world's long pilgrimage, alone,Haunted by Poverty and woe-begone,Unloved, unfriended, thou didst journey on:Thy youth in ignorance and labour past,And thine old age all barrenness and blast!Hard was thy Fate, which, while it doom'd to woe,Denied thee wisdom to support t...
Robert Southey
The Dead Prophet
I.Dead!And the Muses cried with a stormy crySend them no more, for evermore.Let the people die.II.Dead!Is it he then brought so low?And a careless people flockd from the fieldsWith a purse to pay for the show.III.Dead, who had served his time,Was one of the peoples kings,Had labourd in lifting them out of slime,And showing them, souls have wings!IV.Dumb on the winter heath he lay.His friends had stript him bare,And rolld his nakedness everywayThat all the crowd might stare.V.A storm-worn signpost not to be read,And a tree with a moulderd nestOn its barkless bones, stood stark by the dead;And behind him, low in t...
Napoleon III
His silent spirit from the placeSlid forth unseen; amid the throngOf those whose love outlived disgrace,Whose fealty to the last was strong.Midst homage, neath Fates adverse reign,Paid to the star shorn of its rays,How passed the Exile? Lingering fain,As never once in prouder days?The Mother and the Child were there,Discrowned and disinherited!No hand henceforth to right the heir;New griefs to bow the golden head.How passed Napoleon? Prizing more,Old fame in camp and council wonOr fearless Englands aegis, oerThe future of her allys son?Gate of that World we know not yet,What thou beheldst who may proclaim!Were spirit-ranks, in order set,Haunting thy portals, as he came,With voices murmuring, Our life ...
Mary Hannay Foott
On The Death Of A Friend.
Pure as the mantle, which, o'er him who stood By Jordan's stream, descended from the sky,Is that remembrance which the wise and good Leave in the hearts that love them, when they die.So pure, so precious shall the memory be,Bequeathed, in dying, to our souls by thee--So shall the love we bore thee, cherisht warm Within our souls thro' grief and pain and strife,Be, like Elisha's cruse, a holy charm, Wherewith to "heal the waters" of this life!
Thomas Moore
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XIV
Soon as the charity of native landWrought in my bosom, I the scatter'd leavesCollected, and to him restor'd, who nowWas hoarse with utt'rance. To the limit thenceWe came, which from the third the second roundDivides, and where of justice is display'dContrivance horrible. Things then first seenClearlier to manifest, I tell how nextA plain we reach'd, that from its sterile bedEach plant repell'd. The mournful wood waves roundIts garland on all sides, as round the woodSpreads the sad foss. There, on the very edge,Our steps we stay'd. It was an area wideOf arid sand and thick, resembling mostThe soil that erst by Cato's foot was trod.Vengeance of Heav'n! Oh! how shouldst thou be fear'dBy all, who read what here my eyes beheld!Of n...
Dante Alighieri
The End Of Laughter
O never laugh again!Laughter is dead,Deep hiding in her grave,A sacred thing.O never laugh again,Never take hands and runThrough the wild streets,Or sing,Glad in the sun:For she, the immortal sweetness of all sweets,Took laughter with herWhen she went awayWith sleep.O never laugh again!Ours but to weep,Ours but to pray.
Richard Le Gallienne
The Devil's Walk. A Ballad.
1.Once, early in the morning, Beelzebub arose,With care his sweet person adorning,He put on his Sunday clothes.2.He drew on a boot to hide his hoof,He drew on a glove to hide his claw,His horns were concealed by a Bras Chapeau,And the Devil went forth as natty a BeauAs Bond-street ever saw.3.He sate him down, in London town,Before earth's morning ray;With a favourite imp he began to chat,On religion, and scandal, this and that,Until the dawn of day.4.And then to St. James's Court he went,And St. Paul's Church he took on his way;He was mighty thick with every Saint,Though they were formal and he was gay.5.The Devil was an agriculturist,And as bad weeds quickly grow,In lookin...
Percy Bysshe Shelley