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Questionings.
I touch but the things which are near; The heavens are too high for my reach: In shadow and symbol and creed, I discern not the soul from the deed, Nor the thought hidden under, from speech;And the thing which I know not I fear.I dare not despair nor despond, Though I grope in the dark for the dawn: Birth and laughter, and bubbles of breath, And tears, and the blank void of death, Round each its penumbra is drawn,--I touch them,--I see not beyond.What voice speaking solemn and slow, Before the beginning for me, From the mouth of the primal First Cause, Shall teach me the thing that I was, Shall point out the thing I shall be,And show me the path that I go?...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Ezekiel
"They hear Thee not, O God! nor see;Beneath Thy rod they mock at Thee;The princes of our ancient lineLie drunken with Assyrian wine;The priests around Thy altar speakThe false words which their hearers seek;And hymns which Chaldea's wanton maidsHave sung in Dura's idol-shadesAre with the Levites' chant ascending,With Zion's holiest anthems blending!On Israel's bleeding bosom set,The heathen heel is crushing yet;The towers upon our holy hillEcho Chaldean footsteps still.Our wasted shrines, who weeps for them?Who mourneth for Jerusalem?Who turneth from his gains away?Whose knee with mine is bowed to pray?Who, leaving feast and purpling cup,Takes Zion's lamentation up?A sad and thoughtful youth, I wentWith...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Her Lover's Step.
Step, step, step, 'tis her lover's walk, She knows his step as well's his talk; He is the favorite of her choice, So his step's familiar as his voice. Step, step, step, she now is wed, And it is now her husband's tread; His homeward step it cheers her life, For she is a kind faithful wife. But he the husband and yet lover, His steps at last do cease forever; And she doth soon hear the tread Of men who do bear out the dead. Her heart it now doth throb with pain, Though she knows sorrow is but vain; For him she never can recall, And no more hear his footsteps fall. But still she hopes he yet will come
James McIntyre
Threnody In May
(In memory of Madison Cawein?)Again the earth, miraculous with May,Unfolds its vernal arras. YesteryearWe strolled together 'neath the greening trees,And heard the robin tune its flute note clear,And watched above the white cloud squadrons veer,And saw their shifting shadows drift awayAdown the Hudson, as ships seek the seas.The scene is still the same. The violetUnlids its virgin eye; its amber oreThe dandelion shows, and yet, and yet,He comes no more, no more!He of the open and the generous heart,The soul that sensed all flowerful loveliness,The nature as the nature of a child;Who found some rapture in the wind's caress,Beauty in humble weed and mint and cress,And sang, with his incomparable art,The magic wonder of the wood ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Sonnet XCIX.
Amor, Fortuna, e la mia mente schiva.THE CAUSES OF HIS WOE. Love, Fortune, and my melancholy mind,Sick of the present, lingering on the past,Afflict me so, that envious thoughts I castOn those who life's dark shore have left behind.Love racks my bosom: Fortune's wintry windKills every comfort: my weak mind at lastIs chafed and pines, so many ills and vastExpose its peace to constant strifes unkind.Nor hope I better days shall turn again;But what is left from bad to worse may pass:For ah! already life is on the wane.Not now of adamant, but frail as glass,I see my best hopes fall from me or fade,And low in dust my fond thoughts broken laid.MACGREGOR. Love, Fortune, and my ever-faithful mind,<...
Francesco Petrarca
To A Fathers Memory
(J. M. D.)I thank Thee Father that I feel Thee near, That it is hand of Thine that s raised to smite,Oh, make Thy loving kindness to appear, Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right!Poor woe-worn watchers! he is going home; No skill can save him, and no love can keep;He served his generation--he is gone, And gathered to his fathers, falls asleep.We've bitter cups to drain--but his is dry; Burdens of care--but care has left his breast;Tears--but they never more shall dim his eye; Labour,--but he has entered into rest.Oh, to be with him, toil and care all past, Sleeping, dear mother earth, within thy breast,I, too, could lay my hand in thine, O death, And gladly enter where the weary rest...
Nora Pembroke
If Grief For Grief Can Touch Thee
If grief for grief can touch thee,If answering woe for woe,If any truth can melt theeCome to me now!I cannot be more lonely,More drear I cannot be!My worn heart beats so wildly'Twill break for thee.And when the world despises,When Heaven repels my prayer,Will not mine angel comfort?Mine idol hear?Yes, by the tears I'm poured,By all my hours of painO I shall surely win thee,Beloved, again!
Emily Bronte
The May Night.
MUSE.Give me a kiss, my poet, take thy lyre;The buds are bursting on the wild sweet-briar.To-night the Spring is born - the breeze takes fire.Expectant of the dawn behold the thrush,Perched on the fresh branch of the first green bush;Give me a kiss, my poet, take thy lyre.POET.How black it looks within the vale!I thought a muffled form did sailAbove the tree-tops, through the air.It seemed from yonder field to pass,Its foot just grazed the tender grass;A vision strange and fair it was.It melts and is no longer there.MUSE.My poet, take thy lyre; upon the lawnNight rocks the zephyr on her veiled, soft breast.The rose, still virgin, holds herself withdrawnFrom the winged, irised wasp with love possessed.
Emma Lazarus
The Shadow Of A Life.
There's a face that beclouds like a shadow my pathway at morn and eve,There's a form that glides before me which my eyes can never leave,When I pore above the hearth and heavy thoughts my bosom fill,I start like a sleeper from dreaming, for it's standing beside me still.When I stroll in the gloom of the evening is that figure before me castWith its strange and measured footfall, like the shadow of something past,All through my summer wandering does it darken the light of the sun,And it sits like a phantom to mock me when the work of the day is done.It is ever present with me like an overhanging blight,Thro' the heaviness of morning and the wakefulness of night,When I bend within my chamber in the attitude of prayer--With a look of wrapt devotion is it kneeling--...
Lennox Amott
Drink.
I.An English village, a summer scene,A homely cottage, a garden green,An opening vista, a cloudless sky,A bee that hums as it passes by;A babe that chuckles among the flowers,A smile that enlivens the mid-day hours,A wife that is fair as the sunny day,A peace that the world cannot take away,A hope that is humble and daily bread,A thankful soul that is comforted,A cosy cot and a slumbering child,A life and a love that are undefiled,A thought that is silent, an earnest prayer,The noiseless step of a phantom there!II.A drunken husband, a wailing wife;Oh, a weary way is the way of life!A heartless threat and a cruel blowAnd grief that the world can never know;A tongue obscene and a will pervers...
The Dedication To A Book Of Stories
There was a green branch hung with many a bellWhen her own people ruled this tragic Eire;And from its murmuring greenness, calm of Faery,A Druid kindness, on all hearers fell.It charmed away the merchant from his guile,And turned the farmer's memory from his cattle,And hushed in sleep the roaring ranks of battle:And all grew friendly for a little while.Ah, Exiles wandering over lands and seas,And planning, plotting always that some morrowMay set a stone upon ancestral Sorrow!I also bear a bell-branch full of ease.I tore it from green boughs winds tore and tossedUntil the sap of summer had grown weary!I tore it from the barren boughs of Eire,That country where a man can be so crossed;Can be so battered, badgered and destroyedThat he's a lo...
William Butler Yeats
In Bonds
Of the poor bird that cannot flyKindly you think and mournfully;For prisoners and for exiles allYou let the tears of pity fall;And very true the grief should beThat mourns the bondage of the free.The soul--she has a fatherland;Binds her not many a tyrant's hand?And the winged spirit has a home,But can she always homeward come?Poor souls, with all their wounds and foes,Will you not also pity those?
George MacDonald
The Crimes Of Peace
Musing upon the tragedies of earth,Of each new horror which each hour gives birth,Of sins that scar and cruelties that blightLife's little season, meant for man's delight,Methought those monstrous and repellent crimesWhich hate engenders in war-heated times,To God's great heart bring not so much despairAs other sins which flourish everywhereAnd in all times - bold sins, bare-faced and proud,Unchecked by college, and by Church allowed,Lifting their lusty heads like ugly weedsAbove wise precepts and religious creeds,And growing rank in prosperous days of peace.Think you the evils of this world would ceaseWith war's cessation? If God's eyes know tears,Methinks He weeps more for the wasted yearsAnd the lost meaning of this earthly life -
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
I Vex Me Not With Brooding On The Years
I vex me not with brooding on the yearsThat were ere I drew breath: why should I thenDistrust the darkness that may fall againWhen life is done? Perchance in other spheres--Dead planets--I once tasted mortal tears,And walked as now among a throng of men,Pondering things that lay beyond my ken,Questioning death, and solacing my fears.Ofttimes indeed strange sense have I of this,Vague memories that hold me with a spell,Touches of unseen lips upon my brow,Breathing some incommunicable bliss!In years foregone, O Soul, was all not well?Still lovelier life awaits thee. Fear not thou!
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
Lines Written In A Hermitage, At Dronningaard, Near Copenhagen.
Delicious gloom! asylum of repose!Within your verdant shades, your tranquil bound,A wretched fugitive[A], oppress'd by woes,The balm of peace, that long had left him, found.Ne'er does the trump of war disturb this grove;Throughout its deep recess the warbling birdDiscourses sweetly of its happy lore,Or distant sounds of rural joy are heard.Life's checquer'd scene is softly pictur'd here;Here the proud moss-rose spreads its transient pride;Close by, the willow drops a dewy tear,And gaudy flow'rs the modest lily hide.Alas! poor Hermit! happy had it beenFor thee, if in these shades thy days had past,If, well contented with the happy scene,Thou ne'er again had fac'd life's stormy blast!And Pity oft shall shed the ...
John Carr
Edith Conant
We stand about this place - we, the memories; And shade our eyes because we dread to read: "June 17th, 1884, aged 21 years and 3 days." And all things are changed. And we - we, the memories, stand here for ourselves alone, For no eye marks us, or would know why we are here. Your husband is dead, your sister lives far away, Your father is bent with age; He has forgotten you, he scarcely leaves the house Any more. No one remembers your exquisite face, Your lyric voice! How you sang, even on the morning you were stricken, With piercing sweetness, with thrilling sorrow, Before the advent of the child which died with you. It is all forgotten, save by us, the memories, Who are forgotten by the world. ...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Torture of Cuauhtemoc
Their strength had fed on this when Death's white armsCame sleeved in vapors and miasmal dew,Curling across the jungle's ferny floor,Becking each fevered brain. On bleak divides,Where Sleep grew niggardly for nipping coldThat twinged blue lips into a mouthed curse,Not back to Seville and its sunny plainsWinged their brief-biding dreams, but once again,Lords of a palace in Tenochtitlan,They guarded Montezuma's treasure-hoard.Gold, like some finny harvest of the sea,Poured out knee deep around the rifted floors,Shiny and sparkling, - arms and crowns and rings:Gold, sweet to toy with as beloved hair, -To plunge the lustful, crawling fingers down,Arms elbow deep, and draw them out again,And watch the glinting metal trickle off,Even as at nigh...
Alan Seeger
Sunset
It is better, O day, that you go to your rest,For you go like a guest who was loth to remain!Swing open, ye gates of the east and the west,And let out the wild shadows the night and the rain.Ye winds, ye are dead, with your voices attuned,That thrilled the green life in the sweet-scented sheaves,When I touched a warm hand which has faded, and swoonedTo a trance of the darkness, and blight on the leaves.I had studied the lore in her maiden-like ways,And the large-hearted love of my Annie was won,Ere Summer had passed into passionate days,Or Autumn made ready her fruits for the Sun.So my life was complete, and the hours that went by,And the moon and the willow-wooed waters around,Might have known that we rested, my Annie and I,In hap...
Henry Kendall