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The Moondial
Iron and granite and rust,In a crumbling garden old,Where the roses are paler than dustAnd the lilies are green with gold,Under the racing moon,Inconscious of war or crime,In a strange and ghostly noon,It marks the oblivion of time.The shadow steals through its arc,Still as a frosted breath,Fitful, gleaming, and darkAs the cold frustration of death.But where the shadow may fall,Whether to hurry or stay,It matters little at allTo those who come that way.For this is the dial of themThat have forgotten the world,No more through the mad day-dreamOf striving and reason hurled.Their heart as a little childOnly remembers the worthOf beauty and love and the wildDark peace of the el...
Bliss Carman
Francie.
I loved a child as we should loveEach other everywhere;I cared more for his happinessThan I dreaded my own despair.An angel asked me to give himMy whole life's dearest cost;And in adding mine to his treasuresI knew they could never be lost.To his heart I gave the gold,Though little my own had known;To his eyes what tendernessFrom youth in mine had grown!I gave him all my buoyantHope for my future years;I gave him whatever melodyMy voice had steeped in tears.Upon the shore of darknessHis drifted body lies.He is dead, and I stand beside him,With his beauty in my eyes.I am like those withered petalsWe see on a winter day,That gladly gave their colorIn the happy summer away.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Fluttered Wings.
The splendor of the kindling day,The splendor of the setting sun,These move my soul to wend its way,And have doneWith all we grasp and toil amongst and say.The paling roses of a cloud,The fading bow that arches space,These woo my fancy toward my shroud;Toward the placeOf faces veiled, and heads discrowned and bowed.The nation of the awful stars,The wandering star whose blaze is brief,These make me beat against the barsOf my grief;My tedious grief, twin to the life it mars.O fretted heart tossed to and fro,So fain to flee, so fain to rest!All glories that are high or low,East or west,Grow dim to thee who art so fain to go.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Lines In Memory Of Edmund Morris
Dear Morris - here is your letter -Can my answer reach you now?Fate has left me your debtor,You will remember how;For I went away to Nantucket,And you to the Isle of Orleans,And when I was dawdling and dreamingOver the ways and meansOf answering, the power was denied me,Fate frowned and took her stand;I have your unanswered letterHere in my hand.This - in your famous scribble,It was ever a cryptic fist,Cuneiform or ChaldaicMeanings held in a mist.Dear Morris, (now I'm inditingAnd poring over your script)I gather from the writing,The coin that you had flipt,Turned tails; and so you compel meTo meet you at Touchwood Hills:Or, mayhap, you are trying to tell meThe sum of a painter's ills:Is that...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Lay Of The Lover's Friend, The
|Air| "The days we went a-gipsying."I would all womankind were dead, Or banished o'er the sea;For they have been a bitter plague These last six weeks to me:It is not that I'm touched myself, For that I do not fear;No female face hath shown me grace For many a bygone year. But 'tis the most infernal bore, Of all the bores I know, To have a friend who's lost his heart A short time ago.Whene'er we steam it to Blackwall, Or down to Greenwich run,To quaff the pleasant cider cup, And feed on fish and fun;Or climb the slopes of Richmond Hill, To catch a breath of air:Then, for my sins, he straight begins To rave about his fair. Oh, 'tis ...
William Edmondstoune Aytoun
Stars.
Ah! why, because the dazzling sunRestored our Earth to joy,Have you departed, every one,And left a desert sky?All through the night, your glorious eyesWere gazing down in mine,And, with a full heart's thankful sighs,I blessed that watch divine.I was at peace, and drank your beamsAs they were life to me;And revelled in my changeful dreams,Like petrel on the sea.Thought followed thought, star followed star,Through boundless regions, on;While one sweet influence, near and far,Thrilled through, and proved us one!Why did the morning dawn to breakSo great, so pure, a spell;And scorch with fire the tranquil cheek,Where your cool radiance fell?Blood-red, he rose, and, arrow-straight,His fierce...
Emily Bronte
The Lady's First Song
I turn roundLike a dumb beast in a show.Neither know what I amNor where I go,My language beatenInto one name;I am in loveAnd that is my shame.What hurts the soulMy soul adores,No better than a beastUpon all fours.
William Butler Yeats
Solvitur acris Hiems
Youth, that went, is come again,Youth, for which we all were fain;With soft pleasure and sweet painIn each nerve and every vein,Circling through the heart and brain,Whence and wherefore come again?Eva, tell me!Dead and buried when we thought him,Who the magic spell hath taught him?Who the strong elixir brought him?Dead and buried as we thought,Lo! unasked for and unsoughtComes he, shall it be for nought?Eva, tell me!Youth that lifeless long had lain,Youth that long we longed in vain for,Used to grumble and complain for,Thought at last to entertainA decorous cool disdain for,On a sudden see againComes, but will not long remain,Comes, with whom too in his train,Comes, and shall it be in vain?E...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Passageways
Greet the days - greet the moon, gather the stars.. . Man is not at one with himself - collars the infidel ways of his race under pressure domes of widening silence. I scan the horizon barely cognizant of the metallic bits that pierce the night's crown - no jewelled orb stabs this queen's spectre. I am running and lost. . . ever slow to breech this reasoning. Honeysuckle mist with armfuls of orange lilies with scent stronger than the carriage needed in their gathering. Place the constellations upon their heads, the colour so transcends. And then there are the bludgeoned stars fallen into the eyes of my farmhouse scene. The sphin...
Paul Cameron Brown
To Myrrha, Hard-Hearted.
Fold now thine arms and hang the head,Like to a lily withered;Next look thou like a sickly moon,Or like Jocasta in a swoon;Then weep and sigh and softly go,Like to a widow drown'd in woe,Or like a virgin full of ruthFor the lost sweetheart of her youth;And all because, fair maid, thou artInsensible of all my smart,And of those evil days that beNow posting on to punish thee.The gods are easy, and condemnAll such as are not soft like them.
Robert Herrick
Despair
I have experienc'dThe worst, the World can wreak on me, the worstThat can make Life indifferent, yet disturbWith whisper'd Discontents the dying prayer,I have beheld the whole of all, whereinMy Heart had any interest in this Life,To be disrent and torn from off my HopesThat nothing now is left. Why then live on?That Hostage, which the world had in it's keepingGiven by me as a Pledge that I would live,That Hope of Her, say rather, that pure FaithIn her fix'd Love, which held me to keep truceWith the Tyranny of Life, is gone ah! whither?What boots it to reply? 'tis gone! and nowWell may I break this Pact, this League of BloodThat ties me to myself, and break I shall!
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
To Earthward
Love at the lips was touchAs sweet as I could bear;And once that seemed too much;I lived on airThat crossed me from sweet things,The flow of was it muskFrom hidden grapevine springsDownhill at dusk?I had the swirl and acheFrom sprays of honeysuckleThat when they're gathered shakeDew on the knuckle.I craved strong sweets, but thoseSeemed strong when I was young;The petal of the roseIt was that stung.Now no joy but lacks salt,That is not dashed with painAnd weariness and fault;I crave the stainOf tears, the aftermarkOf almost too much love,The sweet of bitter barkAnd burning clove.When stiff and sore and scarredI take away my handFrom leaning on it har...
Robert Lee Frost
To The Memory Of John Keats.
The World, its hopes and fears, have pass'd away;No more its trifling thou shalt feel or see;Thy hopes are ripening in a brighter day,While these left buds thy monument shall be.When Rancour's aims have past in nought away,Enlarging specks discern'd in more than thee,And beauties 'minishing which few display, -When these are past, true child of Poesy,Thou shalt survive - Ah, while a being dwells,With soul, in Nature's joys, to warm like thine,With eye to view her fascinating spells,And dream entranced o'er each form divine,Thy worth, Enthusiast, shall be cherish'd here, -Thy name with him shall linger, and be dear.
John Clare
Love Letters of a Violinist. Letter III. Regrets.
Letter III. Regrets.I. When I did wake, to-day, a bird of Heaven, A wanton, woeless thing, a wandering sprite, Did seem to sing a song for my delight; And, far away, did make its holy steven Sweeter to hear than lute-strings that are seven; And I did weep thereat in my despite.II. O glorious sun! I thought, O gracious king, Of all this splendour that we call the earth! For thee the lark distils his morning mirth, But who will hear the matins that I sing? Who will be glad to greet ...
Eric Mackay
When Helen Lived
We have cried in our despairThat men desert,For some trivial affairOr noisy, insolent, sport,Beauty that we have wonFrom bitterest hours;Yet we, had we walked withinThose topless towersWhere Helen walked with her boy,Had given but as the restOf the men and women of Troy,A word and a jest.
Susan Scuppernong
Silly Susan ScuppernongCried so hard and cried so long,People asked her what was wrong.She replied, "I do not knowAny reason for my woe -I just feel like feeling so."
Arthur Macy
At Sunset Time
Adown the west a golden glowSinks burning in the sea,And all the dreams of long agoCome flooding back to me.The past has writ a story strangeUpon my aching heart,But time has wrought a subtle change,My wounds have ceased to smart.No more the quick delight of youth,No more the sudden pain,I look no more for trust or truthWhere greed may compass gain.What, was it I who bared my heartThrough unrelenting years,And knew the sting of misery's dart,The tang of sorrow's tears?'Tis better now, I do not weep,I do not laugh nor care;My soul and spirit half asleepDrift aimless everywhere.We float upon a sluggish stream,We ride no rapids mad,While life is all a tempered dreamAnd every joy half sad.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Interlude
The days grow shorter, the nights grow longer; The headstones thicken along the way,And life grows sadder, but love grows stronger, For those who walk with us day by day.The tear comes quicker, the laugh comes slower; The courage is lesser to do and dare;And the tide of joy in the heart falls lower, And seldom covers the reefs of care.But all true things in the world seem truer; And the better things of earth seem best,And friends are dearer, as friends are fewer, And love is ALL as our sun dips west.Then let us clasp hands as we walk together, And let us speak softly in love's sweet tone;For no man knows on the morrow whether We two pass on - or but one alone.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox