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The Tom-toms
Dost thou hear the tom-toms throbbing,Like a lonely lover sobbingFor the beauty that is robbing him of all his life's delight?Plaintive sounds, restrained, enthralling,Seeking through the twilight fallingSomething lost beyond recalling, in the darkness of the night.Oh, my little, loved Firoza,Come and nestle to me closer,Where the golden-balled Mimosa makes a canopy above,For the day, so hot and burning,Dies away, and night, returning,Sets thy lover's spirit yearning for thy beauty and thy love.Soon will come the rosy warningOf the bright relentless morning,When, thy soft caresses scorning, I shall leave thee in the shade.All the day my work must chain me,And its weary bonds restrain me,For I may not re-attain thee till the li...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
The Tree
Oh to be free of myself,With nothing left to remember,To have my heart as bareAs a tree in December;Resting, as a tree restsAfter its leaves are gone,Waiting no more for a rain at nightNor for the red at dawn;But still, oh so stillWhile the winds come and go,With no more fear of the hard frostOr the bright burden of snow;And heedless, heedlessIf anyone pass and seeOn the white page of the skyIts thin black tracery.
Sara Teasdale
An Evening at Vichy
Written on the news of the death of Lord LeightonA light has passed that never shall pass away,A sun has set whose rays are unquelled of night.The loyal grace, the courtesy bright as day,The strong sweet radiant spirit of life and lightThat shone and smiled and lightened on all men's sight,The kindly life whose tune was the tune of May,For us now dark, for love and for fame is bright.Nay, not for us that live as the fen-fires live,As stars that shoot and shudder with life and die,Can death make dark that lustre of life, or giveThe grievous gift of trust in oblivion's lie.Days dear and far death touches, and draws them nigh,And bids the grief that broods on their graves forgiveThe day that seems to mock them as clouds that fly.If life be life more fai...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
A Reminiscence
Yes, thou art gone ! and never moreThy sunny smile shall gladden me ;But I may pass the old church door,And pace the floor that covers thee.May stand upon the cold, damp stone,And think that, frozen, lies belowThe lightest heart that I have known,The kindest I shall ever know.Yet, though I cannot see thee more,'Tis still a comfort to have seen ;And though thy transient life is o'er,'Tis sweet to think that thou hast been ;To think a soul so near divine,Within a form so angel fair,United to a heart like thine,Has gladdened once our humble sphere.
Anne Bronte
Pennies
A few long-hoarded pennies in his handBehold him stand;A kilted Hedonist, perplexed and sad.The joy that once he had,The first delight of ownership is fled.He bows his little head.Ah, cruel Time, to killThat splendid thrill!Then in his tear-dimmed eyesNew lights arise.He drops his treasured pennies on the ground,They roll and boundAnd scattered, rest.Now with what zestHe runs to find his errant wealth again!So unto menDoth God, depriving that He may bestow.Fame, health and money go,But that they may, new found, be newly sweet.Yea, at His feetSit, waiting us, to their concealment bid,All they, our lovers, whom His Love hath hid.Lo, comfort blooms on pain, and peace on strife, And gai...
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
When The Dusk Comes Down.
Do you know what I will love best of all To do when I'm old? At the close of day When the dusk comes down and the shadows play, And the wind sings loud in the poplars tall, I will love to get into my corner here - The curtains drawn, and never a one To break the stillness - to sit here alone And dream of these good old times, my dear. In fancy you'll come and sit by my side - I can see your face with my eyes close shut, With the pride and the softness clearly cut, The obstinate chin and the forehead wide, The oval cheek and the smile so warm, The dark eyes full of their fun and power, With the tender light for the tender hour, And the flash of fire that was half their charm. I'll w...
Jean Blewett
Tears, Tears.
Tears, tears,With wifely fearsImmixed - I held my breath,My boy!As down the streetThe drums did beatThat led you to your death,My boy!Oh! Oh!Where'er I go,And soldier boys I see,My jo!I wis', I wis',For him whose kissWas blessedness to me,My jo!Still, still,By wish and will,The land you saved, I love,My boy!Beneath a stone,It holds your bone,I'll clasp your soul above,My boy!
A. H. Laidlaw
The Passion.
IEre-while of Musick, and Ethereal mirth,Wherwith the stage of Ayr and Earth did ring,And joyous news of heav'nly Infants birth,My muse with Angels did divide to sing;But headlong joy is ever on the wing,In Wintry solstice like the shortn'd lightSoon swallow'd up in dark and long out-living night.IIFor now to sorrow must I tune my song,And set my Harpe to notes of saddest wo,Which on our dearest Lord did sease er'e long,Dangers, and snares, and wrongs, and worse then so,Which he for us did freely undergo.Most perfect Heroe, try'd in heaviest plightOf labours huge and hard, too hard for human wight.IIIHe sov'ran Priest stooping his regall headThat dropt with odorous oil down his fair eyes,Poor fles...
John Milton
Dainty Little Love
Dainty little Love came tripping Down the hill,Smiling as he thought of sipping Sweets at will. SHE said, "No, Love must go."Dainty little Love came tripping Down the hill.Dainty little Love went sighing Up the hill,All his little hopes were dying - Love was ill. Vain he tried Tears to hide.Dainty little Love went sighing Up the hill.
Arthur Macy
Crucifix
Do not cry for me, Mother, seeing me in the grave.IThis greatest hour was hallowed and thanderedBy angel's choirs; fire melted sky.He asked his Father:"Why am I abandoned...?"And told his Mother: "Mother, do not cry..."IIMagdalena struggled, cried and moaned.Peter sank into the stone trance...Only there, where Mother stood alone,None has dared cast a single glance.
Anna Akhmatova
Fête Galante; The Triumph Of Love
Aristonoë, the fading shepherdess,Gathers the young girls round her in a ring,Teaching them wisdom of love,What to say, how to dress,How frown, how smile,How suitors to their dancing feet to bring,How in mere walking to beguile,What words cunningly said in what a wayWill draw man's busy fancy astray,All the alphabet, grammar and syntax of love.The garden smells are sweet,Daisies spring in the turf under the high-heeled feet,Dense, dark banks of laurel growBehind the wavering rowOf golden, flaxen, black, brown, auburn heads,Behind the light and shimmering dressesOf these unreal, modern shepherdesses;And gaudy flowers in formal patterned bedsVary the dim long vistas of the park,Far as the eye can see,Till at the fore...
Edward Shanks
In Remembrance
In the eclipses of your soul, and when you cry"O God! give more of rest and less of night,"My words may rest you; and mayhap a lightShall flash from them bright o'er thy spirit's sky;Then think of me as one who passes by.A few brief hours -- a golden August day,We met, we spake -- I pass fore'er away.Let ev'ry word of mine be golden rayTo brighten thy eclipses; and then wilt prayThat he who passes thee shall meet thee yetIn the "Beyond" where souls may ne'er forget.
Abram Joseph Ryan
Gentleness.
Blind multitudes that jar confusedlyAt strife, earth's children, will ye never restFrom toils made hateful here, and dawns distressedWith ravelling self-engendered misery?And will ye never know, till sleep shall seeYour graves, how dreadful and how dark indeedAre pride, self-will, and blind-voiced anger, greed,And malice with its subtle cruelty?How beautiful is gentleness, whose faceLike April sunshine, or the summer rain,Swells everywhere the buds of generous thought?So easy, and so sweet it is; its graceSmoothes out so soon the tangled knots of pain.Can ye not learn it? will ye not be taught?
Archibald Lampman
A Day Redeemed.
I rose, and idly sauntered to the pane,And on the March-bleak mountain bent my look;And standing there a sad review I tookOf what the day had brought me. What the gainTo Wisdom's store? What holds had Knowledge ta'en?I mused upon the lightly-handled book,The erring thought, and felt a stern rebuke:"Alas, alas! the day hath been in vain!"But as I gazed upon the upper blue,With many a twining jasper ridge up-ploughed,Sudden, up-soaring, swung upon my viewA molten, rolling, sunset-laden cloud:My spirit stood, and caught its glorious hue -"Not lost the day!" it, leaping, cried aloud.
W. M. MacKeracher
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XI.
Se lamentar augelli, o Verdi fronde.SHE IS EVER PRESENT TO HIM. If the lorn bird complain, or rustling sweepSoft summer airs o'er foliage waving slow,Or the hoarse brook come murmuring down the steep,Where on the enamell'd bank I sit belowWith thoughts of love that bid my numbers flow;'Tis then I see her, though in earth she sleep!Her, form'd in heaven! I see, and hear, and know!Responsive sighing, weeping as I weep:"Alas," she pitying says, "ere yet the hour,Why hurry life away with swifter flight?Why from thy eyes this flood of sorrow pour?No longer mourn my fate! through death my daysBecome eternal! to eternal lightThese eyes, which seem'd in darkness closed, I raise!"DACRE. Where the gr...
Francesco Petrarca
Sonnet: - II.
'Tis summer still, yet now and then a leafFalls from some stately tree. True type of life!How emblamatic of the pangs that griefWrings from our blighted hopes, that one by oneDrop from us in our wrestle with the strifeAnd natural passions of our stately youth.And thus we fall beneath life's summer sun.Each step conducts us through an opening doorInto new halls of being, hand in handWith grave Experience, until we commandThe open, wide-spread autumn fields, and storeThe full ripe grain of Wisdom and of Truth.As on life's tott'ring precipice we stand,Our sins like withered leaves are blown about the land.
Charles Sangster
Peace.
Unbroken peace, I ween, is sweeter far Than reconciliation. Love's red scar, Though salved with kiss of penitence, and tears, Remains, full oft, unhealed through all the years.
Margaret's Remembrance Of Lightfoot.
My beautiful steed,'Tis painful indeedTo think we are parted forever;That on no sunny day,With light spirits and gay,Over hills far away,We shall joyously travel together.Thy soft glossy maneI shall ne'er see again,Nor thy proudly arched neck 'gain behold;Nor admire that in thee,Which so seldom we see,A kind, gentle spirit, yet bold.Thou wert pleasant indeedMy darling grey steed,"In my mind's eye" thou'rt beautiful still;For when thou wert oldThy heart grew not cold,Its warm current time never could chill.Not a stone marks the spotWhere they laid thee, Lightfoot,And no fence to enclose thee around;But what if there's not,Deep engraved on my heartThy loved image may ever b...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow