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A Song of Autumn
My wind is turned to bitter north,That was so soft a south before;My sky, that shone so sunny bright,With foggy gloom is clouded oerMy gay green leaves are yellow-black,Upon the dank autumnal floor;For love, departed once, comes backNo more again, no more.A roofless ruin lies my home,For winds to blow and rains to pour;One frosty night befell, and lo,I find my summer days are oer:The heart bereaved, of why and howUnknowing, knows that yet beforeIt had what een to Memory nowReturns no more, no more.
Arthur Hugh Clough
Life-Weary
O Thou that walkest with nigh hopeless feetPast the one harbour, built for thee and thine.Doth no stray odour from its table greet,No truant beam from fire or candle shine?At his wide door the host doth stand and call;At every lattice gracious forms invite;Thou seest but a dull-gray, solid wallIn forest sullen with the things of night!Thou cravest rest, and Rest for thee doth crave,The white sheet folded down, white robe apart.--Shame, Faithless! No, I do not mean the grave!I mean Love's very house and hearth and heart.
George MacDonald
Cloud
A fog has destroyed the world so gently.Bloodless trees dissolve in smoke.And shadows hover where shrieks are heard.Burning beasts evaporate like breath.Captured flies are the gas lanterns.And each flickers, still attempting to escape.But to one side, high in the distance, the poisonous moon,The fat fog-spider, lies in wait, smoldering.We, however, loathsome, suited for death,Trample along, crunching this desert splendor.And silently stab the white eyes of miseryLike spears into the swollen night.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Silence
(To Eleonora Duse)We are anhungered after solitude,Deep stillness pure of any speech or sound,Soft quiet hovering over pools profound,The silences that on the desert brood,Above a windless hush of empty seas,The broad unfurling banners of the dawn,A faery forest where there sleeps a Faun;Our souls are fain of solitudes like these.O woman who divined our weariness,And set the crown of silence on your art,From what undreamed-of depth within your heartHave you sent forth the hush that makes us freeTo hear an instant, high above earth's stress,The silent music of infinity?
Sara Teasdale
Supernatural Songs
Ii(Ribb at the Tomb of Baile and Aillinn)Because you have found me in the pitch-dark nightWith open book you ask me what I do.Mark and digest my tale, carry it afarTo those that never saw this tonsured headNor heard this voice that ninety years have cracked.Of Baile and Aillinn you need not speak,All know their tale, all know what leaf and twig,What juncture of the apple and the yew,Surmount their bones; but speak what none ha'veheard.The miracle that gave them such a deathTransfigured to pure substance what had onceBeen bone and sinew; when such bodies joinThere is no touching here, nor touching there,Nor straining joy, but whole is joined to whole;For the intercourse of angels is a lightWhere for its moment both seem lost, consume...
William Butler Yeats
Where
A dark, shadow grey mothrests along the grim hue of brick,its spattered orange cream underwings scream a Halloween defianceto the bleariness of stone and city.And before each fold of its wings,there rests beyond all the pale fireand din of a thousand slow eyedempires, feeling the seetheof their existence spentin a fidgeting cauldronwhere mediocrity campswith her dangerous throne.
Paul Cameron Brown
Night In Arizona
The moon is a charring emberDying into the dark;Off in the crouching mountainsCoyotes bark.The stars are heavy in heaven,Too great for the sky to hold,What if they fell and shatteredThe earth with gold?No lights are over the mesa,The wind is hard and wild,I stand at the darkened windowAnd cry like a child.
Slipping Away.
Slipping away - slipping away!Out of our brief year slips the May;And Winter lingers, and Summer flies;And Sorrow abideth, and Pleasure dies;And the days are short, and the nights are long;And little is right, and much is wrong.Slipping away is the Summer time;It has lost its rhythm and lilting rhyme -For the grace goes out of the day so soon,And the tired head aches in the glare of noon,And the way seems long to the hills that lieUnder the calm of the western sky.Slipping away are the friends whose worthLent a glow to the sad old earth:One by one they slip from our sight;One by one their graves gleam white;Or we count them lost by the crueler deathOf a trust betrayed, or a murdered faith.Slipping away are the hope...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Lassitude.
I will throw by my book. The wearinessOf too much study presses on my brain,And thought's close fetter binds upon my browLike a distraction, and I must give o'er.Morning hath seen me here, and noon, and eve;And midnight with its deep and solemn hushHas look'd upon my labors, and the dawn,With its sweet voices, and its tempting breathHas driven me to rest - and I can bearThe burden of such weariness no more.I have foregone society, and fledFrom a sweet sister's fondness, and from allA home's alluring blandishments, and nowWhen I am thirsting for them, and my heartWould leap at the approaches of their kindAnd gentle offices, they are not here,And I must feel that I am all alone.Oh, for the fame of this forgetful worldHow much we suffe...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Lines by Taj Mahomed
This passion is but an ember Of a Sun, of a Fire, long set;I could not live and remember, And so I love and forget.You say, and the tone is fretful, That my mourning days were few,You call me over forgetful - My God, if you only knew!
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Stanzas
Once I could hail (howe'er serene the sky)The Moon re-entering her monthly round,No faculty yet given me to espyThe dusky Shape within her arms imbound,That thin memento of effulgence lostWhich some have named her Predecessor's ghost. .Young, like the Crescent that above me shone,Nought I perceived within it dull or dim;All that appeared was suitable to OneWhose fancy had a thousand fields to skim;To expectations spreading with wild growth,And hope that kept with me her plighted troth.I saw (ambition quickening at the view)A silver boat launched on a boundless flood;A pearly crest, like Dian's when it threwIts brightest splendor round a leafy wood;But not a hint from under-ground, no signFit for the glimmering brow of Proserpi...
William Wordsworth
The Long Lane
All through the summer night, down the long lane in flower, The moon-white lane,All through the summer night,--dim as a shower, Glimmer and fade the Twain:Over the cricket hosts, throbbing the hour by hour, Young voices bloom and wane.Down the long lane they go, and past one window, pale With visions silver-blurred;Stirring the heart that waits,--the eyes that fail After a spring deferred.Query, and hush, and Ah!--dim through a moon-lit veil, The same one word.Down the long lane, entwined with all the fragrance there; The lane in flower somehowWith youth, and plighted hands, and star-strewn air, And muted 'Thee' and 'Thou':--All the wild bloom an...
Josephine Preston Peabody
In Memory of John William Inchbold
Farewell: how should not such as thou fare well,Though we fare ill that love thee, and that live,And know, whate'er the days wherein we dwellMay give us, thee again they will not give?Peace, rest, and sleep are all we know of death,And all we dream of comfort: yet for thee,Whose breath of life was bright and strenuous breath,We think the change is other than we see.The seal of sleep set on thine eyes to-daySurely can seal not up the keen swift lightThat lit them once for ever. Night can slayNone save the children of the womb of night.The fire that burns up dawn to bring forth noonWas father of thy spirit: how shouldst thouDie as they die for whom the sun and moonAre silent? Thee the darkness holds not now:Them, while they looked upon the light,...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
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...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Sonnet, Occasioned By Reading An Inscription On The Tombstone Of Captain Christensen, Of Krajore, In Norway, Who Died In Consequence Of The Bite Of His Dog, When It Was Mad.
Ah! hapless stranger! who, without a tear,Can this sad record of thy fate survey?No angry tempest laid thee breathless here,Nor hostile sword, nor Nature's mild decay.The fond companion of thy pilgrim feet,Who watch'd thee in thy sleep, who moan'd if miss'd,And sprung with such delight his Lord to greet,Imbu'd with death the hand he oft had kiss'd.And here, remov'd from Love's lamenting eye,Far from thy native cat'racts' awful sound,Far from thy dusky forests' pensive sigh,Thy poor remains repose on alien ground;Yet Pity oft shall sit beside thy stone,And sigh as tho' she mourn'd a brother gone.
John Carr
Nunc Te Bacche Canam.
'Tis done! Henceforth nor joy nor woe Can make or mar my fate; I gaze around, above, below, And all is desolate. Go, bid the shattered pine to bloom; The mourner to be merry; But bid no ray to cheer the tomb In which my hopes I bury! I never thought the world was fair; That 'Truth must reign victorious'; I knew that Honesty was rare; Wealth only meritorious. I knew that Women might deceive, And sometimes cared for money; That Lovers who in Love believe Find gall as well as honey. I knew that "wondrous Classic lore" Meant something most pedantic; That Mathematics were a bore, And Morals un-romantic.<...
Edward Woodley Bowling
The Spirit Medium
Poetry, music, I have loved, and yetBecause of those new deadThat come into my soul and escapeConfusion of the bed,Or those begotten or unbegottenPerning in a band,Or those begotten or unbegotten,For I would not recallSome that being unbegottenAre not individual,But copy some one action,Moulding it of dust or sand,An old ghost's thoughts are lightning,To follow is to die;Poetry and music I have banished,But the stupidityOf root, shoot, blossom or clayMakes no demand.
Psyche, Before The Tribunal Of Venus.
Lift up thine eyes, sweet Psyche! What is sheThat those soft fringes timidly should fallBefore her, and thy spiritual browBe shadowed as her presence were a cloud?A loftier gift is thine than she can give -That queen of beauty. She may mould the browTo perfectness, and give unto the formA beautiful proportion; she may stainThe eye with a celestial blue - the cheekWith carmine of the sunset; she may breatheGrace into every motion, like the playOf the least visible tissue of a cloud;She may give all that is within her ownBright cestus - and one silent look of thine,Like stronger magic, will outcharm it all.Ay, for the soul is better than its frame,The spirit than its temple. What's the brow,Or the eye's lustre, or the step of air,