Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 11 of 206
Previous
Next
Gray Skies
It is not wellFor me to dwellOn what upon that day befell,On that dark day of fall befell;When through the landscape, bowed and bent,With Love and Death I slowly went,And wild rain swept the firmament.Ah, Love that sighed!Ah, Joy that died!And Heart that humbled all its pride;In vain that humbled all its pride!The roses ruin and rot awayUpon your grave where grasses sway,And all is dim, and all is gray.
Madison Julius Cawein
Mountains
Rifted mountains, clad with forests, girded round by gleaming pines,Where the morning, like an angel, robed in golden splendour shines;Shimmering mountains, throwing downward on the slopes a mazy glareWhere the noonday glory sails through gulfs of calm and glittering air;Stately mountains, high and hoary, piled with blocks of amber cloud,Where the fading twilight lingers, when the winds are wailing loud;Grand old mountains, overbeetling brawling brooks and deep ravines,Where the moonshine, pale and mournful, flows on rocks and evergreens.Underneath these regal ridges underneath the gnarly trees,I am sitting, lonely-hearted, listening to a lonely breeze!Sitting by an ancient casement, casting many a longing lookOut across the hazy gloaming out beyond the brawling brook...
Henry Kendall
Despair
Let me close the eyes of my soulThat I may not seeWhat stands between thee and me.Let me shut the ears of my heartThat I may not hearA voice that drowns yours, my dear.Let me cut the cords of my life,Of my desolate being,Since cursed is my hearing and seeing.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Autumn.
Autumn, thy rushing blast Sweeps in wild eddies by,Whirling the sear leaves past, Beneath my feet, to die.Nature her requiem sings In many a plaintive tone,As to the wind she flings Sad music, all her own.The murmur of the rill Is hoarse and sullen now,And the voice of joy is still In grove and leafy bough.There's not a single wreath, Of all Spring's thousand flowers,To strew her bier in death, Or deck her faded bowers.I hear a spirit sigh Where the meeting pines resound,Which tells me all must die, As the leaf dies on the ground.The brightest hopes we cherish, Which own a mortal trust,But bloom awhile to perish And moulder in the dust.Sweep on...
Susanna Moodie
Tears.
Our present tears here, not our present laughter,Are but the handsels of our joys hereafter.
Robert Herrick
Transients
They are ashamed who leave so soonThe Inn of Grief--who thought to stayThrough many a faithful sun and moon,Yet tarry but a day.Shame-faced I watch them pay the score,Then straight with eager footsteps pressWhere waits beyond its rose-wreathed doorThe Inn of Happiness.I wish I did not know that here,Here too--where they have dreamed to staySo many and many a golden yearThey lodge but for a day.
Theodosia Garrison
The Sadness Of The Moon - (Twelve Translations From Charles Baudelaire)
This evening the Moon dreams more languidly, Like a beauty who on mounded cushions rests, And with her light hand fondles lingeringly, Before she sleeps, the slope of her sweet breasts. On her soft satined avalanches' height Dying, she laps herself for hours and hours In long, long swoons, and gazes at the white Visions which rise athwart the blue like flowers. When sometimes in her perfect indolence She lets a furtive tear steal gently thence, Some pious poet, a lone, sleepless one, Takes in his hollowed hand this gem, shot through, Like an opal stone, with gleams of every hue, And in his heart's depths hides it from the sun.
John Collings Squire, Sir
Thoughts On Leaving Japan
A changing medley of insistent sounds,Like broken airs, played on a Samisen,Pursues me, as the waves blot out the shore.The trot of wooden heels; the warning cryOf patient runners; laughter and strange wordsOf children, children, children everywhere:The clap of reverent hands, before some shrine;And over all the haunting temple bells,Waking, in silent chambers of the soul,Dim memories of long-forgotten lives.But oh! the sorrow of the undertone;The wail of hopeless weeping in the dawnFrom lips that smiled through gilded bars at night.Brave little people, of large aims, you bowToo often, and too low before the Past;You sit too long in worship of the dead.Yet have you risen, open eyed, to greetThe great material Present. Now s...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Comfort.
Comfort the sorrowful with watchful eyesIn silence, for the tongue cannot avail.Vex not his wounds with rhetoric, nor the staleWorn truths, that are but maddening mockeriesTo him whose grief outmasters all replies.Only watch near him gently; do but bringThe piteous help of silent ministering,Watchful and tender. This alone is wise.So shall thy presence and thine every motion,The grateful knowledge of thy sad devotionMelt out the passionate hardness of his grief,And break the flood-gates of the pent-up soul.He shall bow down beneath thy mute control,And take thine hands, and weep, and find relief.
Archibald Lampman
Spleen
When low and heavy sky weighs like a lidUpon the spirit moaning in ennui,And when, spanning the circle of the world,It pours a black day sadder than our nights;When earth is changed into a sweaty cell,In which Hope, captured, like a frantic bat,Batters the walls with her enfeebled wing,Striking her head against the rotting beams;When steady rain trailing its giant trainDescends on us like heavy prison bars,And when a silent multitude of spidersSpins its disgusting threads deep in our brains,Bells all at once jump out with all their force,And hurl about a mad cacophonyAs if they were those lost and homeless soulsWho send a dogged whining to the skies.And long corteges minus drum or toneDeploy morosely through my bei...
Charles Baudelaire
Error And Loss.
Upon an eve I sat me down and wept,Because the world to me seemed nowise good;Still autumn was it, & the meadows slept,The misty hills dreamed, and the silent woodSeemed listening to the sorrow of my mood:I knew not if the earth with me did grieve,Or if it mocked my grief that bitter eve.Then 'twixt my tears a maiden did I see,Who drew anigh me on the leaf-strewn grass,Then stood and gazed upon me pitifullyWith grief-worn eyes, until my woe did passFrom me to her, and tearless now I was,And she mid tears was asking me of oneShe long had sought unaided and alone.I knew not of him, and she turned awayInto the dark wood, and my own great painStill held me there, till dark had slain the day,And perished at the grey dawn's hand...
William Morris
On An Unfortunate And Beautiful Woman.
Oh, Mary, when distress and anguish came,And slow disease preyed on thy wasted frame;When every friend, ev'n like thy bloom, was fled,And Want bowed low thy unsupported head;Sure sad Humanity a tear might give,And Virtue say, Live, beauteous sufferer, live!But should there one be found, (amidst the fewWho with compassion thy last pangs might view),One who beheld thy errors with a tear,To whom the ruins of thy heart were dear,Who fondly hoped, the ruthful season past,Thy faded virtues might revive at last;Should such be found, oh! when he saw thee lie,Closing on every earthly hope thine eye;When he beheld despair, with rueful trace,Mark the strange features of thy altered face;When he beheld, as painful death drew nigh,Thy pale, pale cheek...
William Lisle Bowles
Drowned at Sea
Gloomy cliffs, so worn and wasted with the washing of the waves,Are ye not like giant tombstones round those lonely ocean graves?Are ye not the sad memorials, telling of a mighty griefDark with records ground and lettered into caverned rock and reef?Oh! ye show them, and I know them, and my thoughts in mourning goDown amongst your sunless chasms, deep into the surf below!Oh! ye bear them, and declare them, and oer every cleft and scar,I have wept for dear dead brothers perished in the lost Dunbar!Ye smitten ye battered,And splintered and shatteredCliffs of the Sea!Restless waves, so dim with dreams of sudden storms and gusty surge,Roaring like a gathered whirlwind reeling round a mountain verge,Were ye not like loosened maniacs, in the night when Beauty p...
Sonnet. To Melancholy.
To thy unhappy courts a lonely guestI come, corroding Melancholy, where,Sequester'd from the world, this woe-worn breastMay yet indulge a solitary tear!For what should cheer the wretch's struggling heart;What lead him thro' misfortunes gloomy shades;When retrospection wings her keenest dart,And hope's dim land in misery's ocean fades?Adieu, for ever! visionary joys,Delusive shadows of a short-liv'd hour;The rod of woe invincible, destroysThe light, the fairy fabric of your pow'r!How short of bliss the sublunary reign,How long the clouded days of misery and pain!
Thomas Gent
Sympathy
Grief held me silent in my seat; I neither moved nor smiled: Joy held her silent at my feet, My shining lily-child. She raised her face and looked in mine; She deemed herself denied; The door was shut, there was no shine; Poor she was left outside! Once, twice, three times, with infant grace Her lips my name did mould; Her face was pulling at my face-- She was but ten months old. I saw; the sight rebuked my sighs; It made me think--Does God Need help from his poor children's eyes To ease him of his load? Ah, if he did, how seldom then The Father would be glad! If comfort lay in the eyes of men, He little...
George MacDonald
The Bliss Of Sorrow.
Never dry, never dry,Tears that eternal love sheddeth!How dreary, how dead doth the world still appear,When only half-dried on the eye is the tear!Never dry, never dry,Tears that unhappy love sheddeth!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
A Parting.
Has the last farewell been spoken? Have I ta'en the parting token From thy lips so sweet? Has their last soft word been spoken Till again we meet? Why is not thy hand extended? Is my maiden queen offended? Or does she forget? No! my queen is not offended, She is kindly yet. For her eye is softly beaming, And with tenderness is teeming, Gentle as the dove's: With a holy light is beaming - Dare I call it love's? But the time is fast advancing; From the heaven of its glancing I must rend my heart: Treacherous Time is fast advancing, And I must depart. Ah! the pain the parting brings me! As a serpe...
W. M. MacKeracher
Mariana
"There, at the moated grange, resides this dejected Mariana."Shakespeare.The sunset-crimson poppies are departed,Mariana!The dusky-centred, sultry-smelling poppies,The drowsy-hearted,That burnt like flames along the garden coppice:All heavy-headed,The ruby-cupped and opium-brimming poppies,That slumber wedded,Mariana!The sunset-crimson poppies are departed.Oh, heavy, heavy are the hours that fall,The lonesome hours of the lonely days!No poppy strews oblivion by the wall,Where lone the last pod sways,Oblivion that was hers of old that happier made her days.Oh, weary, weary is the sky o'er all,The days that creep, the hours that crawl,And weary all the waysShe leans her face against the old stone wa...