Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 1 of 739
Previous
Next
Hope
Faith may break on reason,Faith may prove a treasonTo that highest giftThat is granted by Thy grace;But Hope! Ah, let us cherishSome spark that may not perish,Some tiny spark to cheer us,As we wander through the waste!A little lamp beside us,A little lamp to guide us,Where the path is rocky,Where the road is steep.That when the light falls dimmer,Still some God-sent glimmerMay hold us steadfast ever,To the track that we should keep.Hope for the trending of it,Hope for the ending of it,Hope for all around us,That it ripens in the sun.Hope for what is waning,Hope for what is gaining,Hope for what is waitingWhen the long day is done.Hope that He, the nameless,May still b...
Arthur Conan Doyle
Men talk and dream of better daysOf a golden time to come;Toward a happy and shining goalThey run with a ceaseless hum.The world grows old and grows young again,Still hope of the better is bright to men.Hope leads us in at the gate of life;She crowns the boyish head;Her bright lamp lures the stalwart youth,Nor burns out with the gray-haired dead;For the grave closes over his trouble and care,But see on the grave Hope is planted there!'Tis not an empty and flattering deceit,Begot in a foolish brain;For the heart speaks loud with its ceaseless throbs,"We are not born in vain";And the words that out of the heart-throbs roll,They cannot deceive the hoping soul.
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Hope.
Hope is the shadowy essence of a wish, A fond desire which floats before our eyes;With lurid aberration, feverish,-- We clutch the shadow which elusive, flies;Though at our grasp the mocking fancy flees,Hope still pursues and soothes realities.Hope, as a mirage on the desert waste, Lures the lost traveler, by a vision fairOf gushing fountains which he may not taste, Of streamlets cool depicted on the air;With tongue outstretched and parched he onward speeds,But as he moves the phantom scene recedes.In the foul dungeon or the narrow cell, The prisoner doth pace his lonely beat,And as he treads, his shackles clank a knell Responsive to each movement of his feet;Yet through his grated window, he discernsThe star...
Alfred Castner King
Within the world of every man's desireTwo things have power to lift the soul above:The first is Work, who dons a mean attire;The other, Love, whose raiment is of fire.Their child is Hope, and we the heirs thereof.
Madison Julius Cawein
To Hope
Here's to Hope,the child of Care,And pretty sisterof Despair!Here's hoping thatHope's children shan'tTake after their Grandmaor Aunt!
Oliver Herford
See through yon cloud that rolls in wrath,One little star benignant peep,To light along their trackless pathThe wanderers of the stormy deep.And thus, oh Hope! thy lovely formIn sorrow's gloomy night shall beThe sun that looks through cloud and stormUpon a dark and moonless sea.When heaven is all serene and fair,Full many a brighter gem we meet;'Tis when the tempest hovers there,Thy beam is most divinely sweet.The rainbow, when the sun declines,Like faithless friend will disappear;Thy light, dear star! more brightly shinesWhen all is wail and weeping here.And though Aurora's stealing beamMay wake a morning of delight,'Tis only thy consoling beamWill smile amid affliction's night.
Joseph Rodman Drake
Hope And Patience
An unborn bird lies crumpled and curled,A-dreaming of the world.Round it, for castle-wall, a shellIs guarding it well.Hope is the bird with its dim sensations;The shell that keeps it alive is Patience.
George MacDonald
Hope And Despair
Said God, "You sisters, ere ye goDown among men, my work to do,I will on each a badge bestow:Hope I love best, and gold for her,Yet a silver glory for Despair,For she is my angel too."Then like a queen, DespairPut on the stars to wear.But Hope took ears of corn, and roundHer temples in a wreath them bound.Which think ye lookt the more fair?
Lascelles Abercrombie
Oh! why should sorrow wound the heart, And rob the soul of rest? Why is misfortune's bitter dart Allowed to pierce the breast? We dare not ask; 'tis heaven's decree, While faring here below, Man's bark is tossed upon the sea Of trouble, grief and woe. But Mercy holdeth forth a light Upon the waves to shine, And cheer him in the darkest night, - The star of Hope divine. Enabled thus, he looks before, And sees, Oh! joyful sight! The waves subside, the storm is o'er, The sky is clear and bright. What comfort 'tis when cares annoy To know they are from One Whose hand dispenses peace and joy As well as grief ...
W. M. MacKeracher
This world has suns, but they are overcast;This world has sweets, but they're of ling'ring bloom;Life still expects, and empty falls at last;Warm Hope on tiptoe drops into the tomb.Life's journey's rough--Hope seeks a smoother way,And dwells on fancies which to-morrow see,--To-morrow comes, true copy of to-day,And empty shadow of what is to be;Yet cheated Hope on future still depends,And ends but only when our being ends.I long have hoped, and still shall hope the bestTill heedless weeds are scrambling over me,And hopes and ashes both together restAt journey's end, with them that cease to be.
John Clare
Ode, To Hope
Thou Cherub fair! in whose blue, sparkling eyeNew joys, anticipated, ever play;Celestial Hope! with whose all-potent swayThe moral elements of life comply;At thy melodious voice their jarrings cease,And settle into order, beauty, peace;How dear to memory that thrice-hallow'd hourWhich gave Thee to the world, auspicious Power!Sent by thy parent, Mercy, from the sky,Invested with her own all-cheering ray,To dissipate the thick, black cloud of fateWhich long had shrouded this terrestrial state, What time fair Virtue, struggling with despair,Pour'd forth to pitying heaven her saddest soul in prayer: Then, then she saw the brightening gloom divide, And Thee, sweet Comforter! adown thy rainbow glide. From the veil'd awful future, to her v...
Thomas Oldham
Little Messages Of Joy And Hope
I.Take HeartTake heart again. Joy may be lost awhile.It is not always Spring.And even now from some far Summer IsleHither the birds may wing.II.TouchstonesHearts, that have cheered us ever, night and day,With words that helped us on the rugged way,The hard, long road of life to whom is dueMore than the heart can ever hope to payAre they not touchstones, soul-transmuting trueAll thoughts to gold, refining thus the clay?III.FortuneFortune may pass us by:Follow her flying feet.Love, all we ask, deny:Never admit defeat.Take heart again and try.Never say die.IVBe GladBe glad, just for to-day!O heart, be glad!Cast all your car...
The Hope of My Heart
"Delicta juventutis et ignorantius ejus, quoesumus ne memineris, Domine." I left, to earth, a little maiden fair, With locks of gold, and eyes that shamed the light; I prayed that God might have her in His care And sight. Earth's love was false; her voice, a siren's song; (Sweet mother-earth was but a lying name) The path she showed was but the path of wrong And shame. "Cast her not out!" I cry. God's kind words come -- "Her future is with Me, as was her past; It shall be My good will to bring her home At last."
John McCrae
Thine eyes are dim:A mist hath gathered there;Around their rimFloat many clouds of care,And there is sorrow every -- everywhere.But there is God,Every -- everywhere;Beneath His rodKneel thou adown in prayer.For grief is God's own kissUpon a soul.Look up! the sun of blissWill shine where storm-clouds roll.Yes, weeper, weep!'Twill not be evermore;I know the darkest deepHath e'en the brightest shore.So tired! so tired!A cry of half despair;Look! at your side --And see Who standeth there!Your Father! Hush!A heart beats in His breast;Now rise and rushInto His arms -- and rest.
Abram Joseph Ryan
A Song Of Cheer
Be of good cheer, and have no fearOf Fortune or Tomorrow:To Hope's low whisper lend an earAnd turn away from Sorrow.Time out of mind the soul is blindTo things God sends as blessings:And Fortune often proves unkindMerely in foolish guessings.Within the soul we bear the wholeOf Hell and also Heaven;And 'twixt the two is set the goalOf dreams our lives have driven.What counts above all deeds is Love,And Friendship, that, remember,In heart-beats keeps Life's record ofIts April and December.To every one come rain and sun,And calm and stormy weather:What helps is not what Life has done,But Life and Love together.Of sun and rain and joy and painThe web of Life is woven;And ever through...
Sonnet. To Hope.
How droops the wretch whom adverse fates pursue,While sad experience, from his aching sightSweeps the fair prospects of unproved delight,Which flattering friends and flattering fancies drew.When want assails his solitary shed,When dire distraction's horrent eye-ball glares,Seen 'midst the myriad of tumultuous cares,That shower their shafts on his devoted head.Then, ere despair usurp his vanquish'd heart,Is there a power, whose influence benignCan bid his head in pillow'd peace recline,And from his breast withdraw the barbed dart?There is--sweet Hope! misfortune rests on thee--Unswerving anchor of humanity!
Thomas Gent
Translations. - Hope. (From Schiller.)
Men talk with their lips and dream with their soulOf better days hitherward pacing;To a happy, a glorious, golden goalSee them go running and chasing!The world grows old and to youth returns,But still for the Better man's bosom burns.It is Hope leads him into life and its light;She haunts the little one merry;The youth is inspired by her magic might;Her the graybeard cannot bury:When he finds at the grave his ended scope,On the grave itself he planteth Hope.She was never begotten in Folly's brain,An empty illusion, to flatter;In the Heart she cries, aloud and plain:We are born to something better!And that which the inner voice doth sayThe hoping spirit will not betray.
Sonnet II.
The Future, and its gifts, alone we prize, Few joys the Present brings, and those alloy'd; Th' expected fulness leaves an aching void; But HOPE stands by, and lifts her sunny eyesThat gild the days to come. - She still relies The Phantom HAPPINESS not thus shall glide Always from life. - Alas! - yet ill betide Austere Experience, when she coldly triesIn distant roses to discern the thorn! Ah! is it wise to anticipate our pain? Arriv'd, it then is soon enough to mourn.Nor call the dear Consoler false and vain, When yet again, shining through april-tears, Those fair enlight'ning eyes beam on advancing Years.
Anna Seward