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The Call
Out of the nothingness of sleep,The slow dreams of Eternity,There was a thunder on the deep:I came, because you called to me.I broke the Night's primeval bars,I dared the old abysmal curse,And flashed through ranks of frightened starsSuddenly on the universe!The eternal silences were broken;Hell became Heaven as I passed.What shall I give you as a token,A sign that we have met, at last?I'll break and forge the stars anew,Shatter the heavens with a song;Immortal in my love for you,Because I love you, very strong.Your mouth shall mock the old and wise,Your laugh shall fill the world with flame,I'll write upon the shrinking skiesThe scarlet splendour of your name,Till Heaven cracks, and Hell th...
Rupert Brooke
An Old Sweetheart of Mine
The ordered intermingling of the real and the dream,-- The mill above the river, and the mist above the stream; The life of ceaseless labor, brave with song and cheery call-- The radiant skies of evening, with its rainbow o'er us all. AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE!--Is this her presence here with me, Or but a vain creation of a lover's memory? A fair, illusive vision that would vanish into air Dared I even touch the silence with the whisper of a prayer? Nay, let me then believe in all the blended false a...
James Whitcomb Riley
Sister Rosa: A Ballad.
1.The death-bell beats! -The mountain repeatsThe echoing sound of the knell;And the dark Monk nowWraps the cowl round his brow,As he sits in his lonely cell.2.And the cold hand of deathChills his shuddering breath,As he lists to the fearful layWhich the ghosts of the sky,As they sweep wildly by,Sing to departed day.And they sing of the hourWhen the stern fates had powerTo resolve Rosa's form to its clay.3.But that hour is past;And that hour was the lastOf peace to the dark Monk's brain.Bitter tears, from his eyes, gushed silent and fast;And he strove to suppress them in vain.4.Then his fair cross of gold he dashed on the floor,When the death-knell struck on his ear. -...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Extempore Effusion Upon The Death Of James Hogg
When first, descending from the moorlands,I saw the Stream of Yarrow glideAlong a bare and open valley,The Ettrick Shepherd was my guide.When last along its banks I wandered,Through groves that had begun to shedTheir golden leaves upon the pathways,My steps the Border-minstrel led.The mighty Minstrel breathes no longer,'Mid mouldering ruins low he lies;And death upon the braes of Yarrow,Has closed the Shepherd-poet's eyes:Nor has the rolling year twice measured,From sign to sign, its stedfast course,Since every mortal power of ColeridgeWas frozen at its marvellous source;The rapt One, of the godlike forehead,The heaven-eyed creature sleeps in earth:And Lamb, the frolic and the gentle,Has vanished from h...
William Wordsworth
The Busy Heart
Now that we've done our best and worst, and parted,I would fill my mind with thoughts that will not rend.(O heart, I do not dare go empty-hearted)I'll think of Love in books, Love without end;Women with child, content; and old men sleeping;And wet strong ploughlands, scarred for certain grain;And babes that weep, and so forget their weeping;And the young heavens, forgetful after rain;And evening hush, broken by homing wings;And Song's nobility, and Wisdom holy,That live, we dead. I would think of a thousand things,Lovely and durable, and taste them slowly,One after one, like tasting a sweet food.I have need to busy my heart with quietude.
Remembrance.
1.Swifter far than summer's flight -Swifter far than youth's delight -Swifter far than happy night,Art thou come and gone -As the earth when leaves are dead,As the night when sleep is sped,As the heart when joy is fled,I am left lone, alone.2.The swallow summer comes again -The owlet night resumes her reign -But the wild-swan youth is fainTo fly with thee, false as thou. -My heart each day desires the morrow;Sleep itself is turned to sorrow;Vainly would my winter borrowSunny leaves from any bough.3.Lilies for a bridal bed -Roses for a matron's head -Violets for a maiden dead -Pansies let MY flowers be:On the living grave I bearScatter them without a tear -Let no friend, however d...
The Dreams Of My Heart
The dreams of my heart and my mind pass,Nothing stays with me long,But I have had from a childThe deep solace of song;If that should ever leave me,Let me find death and stayWith things whose tunes are played out and forgottenLike the rain of yesterday.
Sara Teasdale
Madhouse Cell - Porphyrias Lover
The rain set early in to-night,The sullen wind was soon awake,It tore the elm-tops down for spite,And did its worst to vex the lake,I listened with heart fit to break;When glided in Porphyria: straightShe shut the cold out and the storm,And kneeled and made the cheerless grateBlaze up, and all the cottage warm;Which done, she rose, and from her formWithdrew the dripping cloak and shawl,And laid her soiled gloves by, untiedHer hat and let the damp hair fall,And, last, she sate down by my sideAnd called me. When no voice replied,She put my arm about her waist,And made her smooth white shoulder bare,And all her yellow hair displaced,And, stooping, made my cheek lie there,And spread oer all her yellow hair,Murmuring how she...
Robert Browning
Lament For The Death Of Eoghan Ruadh O'Neill.[1]
I."Did they dare, did they dare, to slay Eoghan Ruadh O'Neill?""Yes, they slew with poison him they feared to meet with steel.""May God wither up their hearts! May their blood cease to flow!May they walk in living death, who poisoned Eoghan Ruadh!"II."Though it break my heart to hear, say again the bitter words.From Derry, against Cromwell, he marched to measure swords:But the weapon of the Sacsanach met him on his way,And he died at Cloch Uachtar,[2] upon St. Leonard's day.III."Wail, wail ye for the Mighty One! Wail, wail ye for the Dead!Quench the hearth, and hold the breath--with ashes strew the head.How tenderly we loved him! How deeply we deplore!Holy Saviour! but to think we shall never see him mor...
Thomas Osborne Davis
In Memoriam. - Mr. John A. Taintor,
Died at Hartford, on Saturday Evening, November 15th, 1862, aged 62 years.A sense of loss is on us. One hath gone Whose all-pervading energy doth leaveA void and silence 'mid the haunts of men And desolation for the hearts that grieveIn his fair mansion, so bereft and lone,Whence the inspiring smile, and cheering voice have flown.Those too there are who eloquently speak Of his firm friendship, not without a tear,Of its strong power to undergird the weak And hold the faltering feet in duty's sphere,While in the cells of want, a broken trustIn bitterness laments, that he is of the dust.In foreign climes, with patriotic eye He sought what might his Country's welfare aid,And the rich flocks of Spain, at his behest
Lydia Howard Sigourney
The Highland Girl's Lament.
The ancient Highlanders believed the spirits of their departed friends continually present, and that their imagined appearances and voices communicated warnings of approaching death.Oh! set the bridal feast aside,And bear the harp away;The coronach must sound instead,From solemn kirk-yard gray.I heard last eve, at set of sun,The death-bell on the gale.It was no earthly melody:--The eglantine grew pale;And leaf and blossom seemed to thrillWith an unuttered prayer,As, fraught with desolateness wild,The strange notes stirred the air.And on the rugged mountain height,Where snow and sunbeam meet,That never yet in storm or shineWas trod by human feet,A weird and spectral presence cameBetween me and the ...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
For Ever
Out of the body for ever,Wearily sobbing, Oh, whither?A Soul that hath wasted its chancesFloats on the limitless ether.Lost in dim, horrible blankness;Drifting like wind on a sea,Untraversed and vacant and moaning,Nor shallow nor shore on the lee!Helpless, unfriended, forsaken;Haunted and tracked by the Past,With fragments of pitiless voices,And desolate faces aghast!One saith It is well that he goethNaked and fainting with cold,Who worshipped his sweet-smelling garments,Arrayed with the cunning of old!Hark! how he crieth, my brothers,With pain for the glittering thingsHe saw on the shoulders of Rulers,And the might in the mouths of the Kings!This Soul hath been one of the idlersW...
Henry Kendall
Dirge
CONCORD, 1838I reached the middle of the mountUp which the incarnate soul must climb,And paused for them, and looked around,With me who walked through space and time.Five rosy boys with morning lightHad leaped from one fair mother's arms,Fronted the sun with hope as bright,And greeted God with childhood's psalms.Knows he who tills this lonely fieldTo reap its scanty corn,What mystic fruit his acres yieldAt midnight and at morn?In the long sunny afternoonThe plain was full of ghosts;I wandered up, I wandered down,Beset by pensive hosts.The winding Concord gleamed below,Pouring as wide a floodAs when my brothers, long ago,Came with me to the wood.But they are gone,--the holy ...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
That Kind Heart You Were Jealous Of, My Nurse
That kind heart you were jealous of, my nurseWho sleeps her sleep beneath the humble turf,I'd like to give her flowers, wouldn't you?The dead, the poor dead, have their sorrows too,And when October trims the branches down,Blowing its sombre wind around their stones,The living seem ungrateful to the dead,For sleeping as they do, warm in their beds;Meanwhile, devoured by black imaginings,No bedmate, and without good gossiping,Worked by the worm, cold skeletons belowSeem to be filtering the winter's snows,And time flows by, no family who willTend to the scraps that hang from iron grills.If in the dusk, while logs would smoke and sing,I'd see her in the armchair, pondering,Or find her in a night of wintry gloomAbinding in a corner of my...
Charles Baudelaire
Via Dolorosa
The days of a man are threescore years and ten.The days of his life were half a man's, whom weLament, and would yet not bid him back, to bePartaker of all the woes and ways of men.Life sent him enough of sorrow: not againWould anguish of love, beholding him set free,Bring back the beloved to suffer life and seeNo light but the fire of grief that scathed him then.We know not at all: we hope, and do not fear.We shall not again behold him, late so near,Who now from afar above, with eyes alightAnd spirit enkindled, haply toward us hereLooks down unforgetful yet of days like nightAnd love that has yet his sightless face in sight.ITRANSFIGURATIONBut half a man's days, and his days were nights.What hearts were ours who loved him, sho...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Death Of The Flowers.
The melancholy days are come, the saddest of the year,Of wailing winds, and naked woods, and meadows brown and sear.Heaped in the hollows of the grove, the autumn leaves lie dead;They rustle to the eddying gust, and to the rabbit's tread.The robin and the wren are flown, and from the shrubs the jay,And from the wood-top calls the crow through all the gloomy day.Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, that lately sprang and stoodIn brighter light, and softer airs, a beauteous sisterhood?Alas! they all are in their graves, the gentle race, of flowersAre lying in their lowly beds, with the fair and good of ours.The rain is falling where they lie, but the cold November rainCalls not from out the gloomy earth the lovely ones again.The wind-flower and the...
William Cullen Bryant
Haunted Child
In the dark of wedlock nightly sky, the wither of hope and estranged replies, cause a white face to flicker with transparent eye, calumny of purpose to slowly die.
Paul Cameron Brown
Virtue
Her breast is cold; her hands how faint and wan!And the deep wonder of her starry eyesSeemingly lost in cloudless Paradise,And all earth's sorrow out of memory gone.Yet sings her clear voice unrelenting onOf loveliest impossibilities;Though echo only answer her with sighsOf effort wasted and delights foregone.Spent, baffled, 'wildered, hated and despised,Her straggling warriors hasten to defeat;By wounds distracted, and by night surprised,Fall where death's darkness and oblivion meet:Yet, yet: O breast how cold! O hope how far!Grant my son's ashes lie where these men's are!
Walter De La Mare