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The Memorial Brass: 186-
"Why do you weep there, O sweet lady,Why do you weep before that brass? -(I'm a mere student sketching the mediaeval)Is some late death lined there, alas? -Your father's? . . . Well, all pay the debt that paid he!""Young man, O must I tell! - My husband's! And underHis name I set mine, and my DEATH! -Its date left vacant till my heirs should fill it,Stating me faithful till my last breath."- "Madam, that you are a widow wakes my wonder!""O wait! For last month I - remarried!And now I fear 'twas a deed amiss.We've just come home. And I am sick and saddenedAt what the new one will say to this;And will he think - think that I should have tarried?"I may add, surely, - with no wish to harm him -That he's a temper - yes, I fear!
Thomas Hardy
A Lament For The Wissahiccon.
The waterfall is calling me With its merry gleesome flow,And the green boughs are beckoning me, To where the wild flowers grow:I may not go, I may not go,To where the sunny waters flow,To where the wild wood flowers blow; I must stay here In prison drear,Oh, heavy life, wear on, wear on,Would God that thou wert done!The busy mill-wheel round and roundGoes turning, with its reckless sound,And o'er the dam the wafers flowInto the foaming stream below,And deep and dark away they glide,To meet the broad, bright river's tide;And all the wayThey murmuring say:"Oh, child! why art thou far away?Come back into the sun, and strayUpon our mossy side!"I may not go, I may not go,
Frances Anne Kemble
Disillusion.
Those unrequited in their love who dieHave never drained life's chief illusion dry.
Madison Julius Cawein
Poor 'Miss 7'
Lone and alone she lies, Poor Miss 7,Five steep flights from the earth, And one from heaven;Dark hair and dark brown eyes, -Not to be sad she tries,Still - still it's lonely lies Poor Miss 7.One day-long watch hath she, Poor Miss 7,Not in some orchard sweet In April Devon -Just four blank walls to see,And dark come shadowily,No moon, no stars, ah me! Poor Miss 7.And then to wake again, Poor Miss 7,To the cold night, to have Sour physic given;Out of some dream of pain,Then strive long hours in vainDeep dreamless sleep to gain: Poor Miss 7.Yet memory softly sings Poor Miss 7Songs full of love and peace And gladness even;Clear...
Walter De La Mare
Tithonus
The woods decay, the woods decay and fall,The vapours weep their burthen to the ground,Man comes and tills the field and lies beneath,And after many a summer dies the swan.Me only cruel immortalityConsumes; I wither slowly in thine arms,Here at the quiet limit of the world,A white-hair'd shadow roaming like a dreamThe ever-silent spaces of the East,Far-folded mists, and gleaming halls of morn.Alas! for this gray shadow, once a man--So glorious in his beauty and thy choice,Who madest him thy chosen, that he seem'dTo his great heart none other than a God!I ask'd thee, "Give me immortality."Then didst thou grant mine asking with a smile,Like wealthy men who care not how they give.But thy strong Hours indignant work'd their wills,And be...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
De Profundis Clamavi
I beg your pity, You, my only love;My fallen heart lies in a deep abyss,A universe of leaden heaviness,Where cursing terrors swim the night above!For six months stands a sun with heatless beams,The other months are spent in total night;It is a polar land to human sightNo greenery, no trees, no running streams!But there is not a horror to surpassThe cruelty of that blank sun's cold glass,And that long night, that Chaos come again!I'm jealous of the meanest of the beastsWho plunge themselves into a stupid sleep -So slowly does the time unwind its skein!
Charles Baudelaire
Try a Smile.
This world's full o' trubbles fowk say, but aw daat it,Yo'll find as mich pleasure as pain;Some grummel at times when they might do withaat it,An oft withaat reason complain.A fraan on a face nivver adds to its beauty,Then let us forget for a whileTheas small disappointments, an mak it a duty,To try the effect ov a smile.Though the sun may be claaded he'll shine aght agean,If we nobbut have patience an wait,An its sewer to luk breeter for th' shadda ther's been;Then let's banish all fooilish consait,If we'd nivver noa sorrow joys on us wod pall,Soa awr hearts let us all reconcileTo tak things as they come, makkin th' best on 'em all,An cheer up a faint heart wi' a smile.
John Hartley
The Tears Of Amynta, For The Death Of Damon.
On a bank, beside a willow,Heaven her covering, earth her pillow,Sad Amynta sigh'd alone:From the cheerless dawn of morningTill the dews of night returning,Singing thus she made her moan:Hope is banish'd,Joys are vanish'd,Damon, my beloved, is gone!Time, I dare thee to discoverSuch a youth and such a lover;Oh, so true, so kind was he!Damon was the pride of nature,Charming in his every feature;Damon lived alone for me;Melting kisses,Murmuring blisses:Who so lived and loved as we?Never shall we curse the morning.Never bless the night returning,Sweet embraces to restore:Never shall we both lie dying,Nature failing, Love supplyingAll the joys he drain'd before:Death come end me,
John Dryden
The Awakening
I said, 'I will place my heart, my heart all broken, Beside the world's torn heart, that it may knowThe comradeship of sorrow that is not spoken, But is carried on wings of all the winds that blow.I will go homeless into homes of grieving, And find my own grief easier to be borne.'So over menacing seas I went, believing Where all was mourning, I would cease to mourn.And now I am here, close to the great world-sorrow, Here where each heart some mighty grief has known;But from each suffering soul I seem to borrow A poignant pain that but augments my own.The earth is like one vast tempestuous ocean, Where struggling beings fight for light and breath:I feel their anguish, feel each keen emotion - Yet through it all, I KNOW T...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Tears Are Tongues.
When Julia chid I stood as mute the whileAs is the fish or tongueless crocodile.Air coin'd to words my Julia could not hear,But she could see each eye to stamp a tear;By which mine angry mistress might descryTears are the noble language of the eye.And when true love of words is destituteThe eyes by tears speak, while the tongue is mute.
Robert Herrick
Rondeau. - I Will Forget.
I will forget those days of mingled blissAnd dear delicious pain, - will cast from meAll dreams of what I know can never be,Even the remembrance of that parting kiss.I knew that some day it would come to thisIn spite of all our sworn fidelity,That I must banish even memory,And, sorrowing, learn to say, nor say amiss I will forget.I register this vow, and am contentThat it be so. Ah me! - yet, if the doorShut on our heaven might be asunder rentEven now, and I could see the way we went,I might retract my vow, and say no more I will forget.
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Elizabeth Childers
Dust of my dust, And dust with my dust, O, child who died as you entered the world, Dead with my death! Not knowing Breath, though you tried so hard, With a heart that beat when you lived with me, And stopped when you left me for Life. It is well, my child. For you never traveled The long, long way that begins with school days, When little fingers blur under the tears That fall on the crooked letters. And the earliest wound, when a little mate Leaves you alone for another; And sickness, and the face of Fear by the bed; The death of a father or mother; Or shame for them, or poverty; The maiden sorrow of school days ended; And eyeless Nature that makes you dri...
Edgar Lee Masters
Requiem.
Taken from men this morning,Carried by men to-day,Met by the gods with bannersWho marshalled her away.One little maid from playmates,One little mind from school, --There must be guests in Eden;All the rooms are full.Far as the east from even,Dim as the border star, --Courtiers quaint, in kingdoms,Our departed are.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Unity
I dreamed that life and time and space were one, And the pure trance of dawn; The increase drawnFrom all the journeys of the travelling sun,And the long mysteries of sound and sight, The whispering rains,And far, calm waters set in lonely plains, And cry of birds at night.I dreamed that these and love and death were one, And all eternity, The life to beTherewith entwined, throughout the ages spun;And so with Grief, my playmate; him I knew One with the rest, -One with the mounting day, the east and west - Lord, is it true?Lord, do I dream? Methinks a key unlocksSome dungeon door, in thrall of blackened towers,On ecstasies, half hid, like chill white flowersBlown in the secret places of the rocks.
Violet Jacob
Revulsion
Though I waste watches framing words to fetterSome spirit to mine own in clasp and kiss,Out of the night there looms a sense 'twere betterTo fail obtaining whom one fails to miss.For winning love we win the risk of losing,And losing love is as one's life were riven;It cuts like contumely and keen ill-usingTo cede what was superfluously given.Let me then feel no more the fateful thrillingThat devastates the love-worn wooer's frame,The hot ado of fevered hopes, the chillingThat agonizes disappointed aim!So may I live no junctive law fulfilling,And my heart's table bear no woman's name.1866.
Bad Dreams III
This was my dream: I saw a ForestOld as the earth, no track nor traceOf unmade man. Thou, Soul, explorest,Though in a trembling rapture, spaceImmeasurable! Shrubs, turned trees,Trees that touch heaven, support its friezeStudded with sun and moon and star:While, oh, the enormous growths that barMine eye from penetrating pastTheir tangled twins where lurks, nay, livesRoyally lone, some brute-type castI the rough, time cancels, man forgives.On, Soul! I saw a lucid CityOf architectural deviceEvery way perfect. Pause for pity,Lightning! nor leave a cicatriceOn those bright marbles, dome and spire,Structures palatial, streets which mireDares not defile, paved all too fineFor human footsteps smirch, not thine,Proud soli...
Robert Browning
Quick And Bitter
The end was quick and bitter.Slow and sweet was the time between us,slow and sweet were the nightswhen my hands did not touch one another in despair but in the loveof your body which came between them.And when I entered into youit seemed then that great happinesscould be measured with precisionof sharp pain. Quick and bitter.Slow and sweet were the nights.Now is bitter and grinding as sand,"Let's be sensible" and similar curses.And as we stray further from lovewe multiply the words,words and sentences so long and orderly.Had we remained togetherwe could have become a silence.
Yehuda Amichai
Anxiety
The hoar-frost crumbles in the sun,The crisping steam of a trainMelts in the air, while two black birdsSweep past the window again.Along the vacant road, a redBicycle approaches; I waitIn a thaw of anxiety, for the boyTo leap down at our gate.He has passed us by; but is itRelief that starts in my breast?Or a deeper bruise of knowing that stillShe has no rest.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence