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Madeline
I.Thou art not steepd in golden languors,No tranced summer calm is thine,Ever varying Madeline.Thro light and shadow thou dost range,Sudden glances, sweet and strange,Delicious spites and darling angers,And airy forms of flitting change.II.Smiling, frowning, evermore,Thou art perfect in love-lore.Revealings deep and clear are thineOf wealthy smiles; but who may knowWhether smile or frown be fleeter?Whether smile or frown be sweeter,Who may know?Frowns perfect-sweet along the browLight-glooming over eyes divine,Like little clouds sun-fringed, are thine,Ever varying Madeline.Thy smile and frown are not aloofFrom one another,Each to each is dearest brother;Hues of the silken...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Growing Old
What is it to grow old?Is it to lose the glory of the form,The lustre of the eye?Is it for beauty to forego her wreath?Yes, but not for this alone.Is it to feel our strength,Not our bloom only, but our strength, decay?Is it to feel each limbGrow stiffer, every function less exact,Each nerve more weakly strung?Yes, this, and more! but not,Ah, 'tis not what in youth we dreamed 'twould be!'Tis not to have our lifeMellowed and softened as with sunset-glow,A golden day's decline!'Tis not to see the worldAs from a height, with rapt prophetic eyes,And heart profoundly stirred;And weep, and feel the fulness of the past,The years that are no more!It is to spend long daysAnd not once feel that we were...
Matthew Arnold
Sonnet CXCVII.
Qual ventura mi fu, quando dall' uno.HE REJOICES AT PARTICIPATING IN HER SUFFERINGS. Strange, passing strange adventure! when from oneOf the two brightest eyes which ever were,Beholding it with pain dis urb'd and dim,Moved influence which my own made dull and weak.I had return'd, to break the weary fastOf seeing her, my sole care in this world,Kinder to me were Heaven and Love than e'enIf all their other gifts together join'd,When from the right eye--rather the right sun--Of my dear Lady to my right eye cameThe ill which less my pain than pleasure makes;As if it intellect possess'd and wingsIt pass'd, as stars that shoot along the sky:Nature and pity then pursued their course.ANON.
Francesco Petrarca
Sonnet.
Though thou return unto the former things,Fields, woods, and gardens, where thy feet have strayedIn other days, and not a bough, branch, bladeOf tree, or meadow, but the same appearsAs when thou lovedst them in former years,They shall not seem the same; the spirit bringsChange from the inward, though the outward beE'en as it was, when thou didst weep to seeIt last, and spak'st that prophecy of pain,"Farewell! I shall not look on ye again!"And so thou never didst - no, though e'en now Thine eyes behold all they so loved of yore, The Thou that did behold them then, no moreLives in this world, it is another Thou.
Frances Anne Kemble
Lines Written In A Young Lady's Album
'Tis not in youth, when life is new, when but to live is sweet,When Pleasure strews her starlike flow'rs beneath our careless feet,When Hope, that has not been deferred, first waves its golden wings,And crowds the distant future with a thousand lovely things; -When if a transient grief o'ershades the spirit for a while,The momentary tear that falls is followed by a smile;Or if a pensive mood, at times, across the bosom steals,It scarcely sighs, so gentle is the pensiveness it feelsIt is not then the, restless soul will seek for one with whomTo share whatever lot it bears, its gladness or its gloom, -Some trusting, tried, and gentle heart, some true and faithful breast,Whereon its pinions it may fold, and claim a place of rest.But oh! when comes the i...
George W. Sands
Among The Timothy.
Long hours ago, while yet the morn was blithe,Nor sharp athirst had drunk the beaded dew,A reaper came, and swung his cradled scytheAround this stump, and, shearing slowly, drewFar round among the clover, ripe for hay,A circle clean and grey;And here among the scented swathes that gleam,Mixed with dead daisies, it is sweet to lieAnd watch the grass and the few-clouded sky,Nor think but only dream.For when the noon was turning, and the heatFell down most heavily on field and wood,I too came hither, borne on restless feet,Seeking some comfort for an aching mood.Ah, I was weary of the drifting hours,The echoing city towers,The blind grey streets, the jingle of the throng,Weary of hope that like a shape of stoneSat near at hand wi...
Archibald Lampman
Morns Like These We Parted;
Morns like these we parted;Noons like these she rose,Fluttering first, then firmer,To her fair repose.Never did she lisp it,And 't was not for me;She was mute from transport,I, from agony!Till the evening, nearing,One the shutters drew --Quick! a sharper rustling!And this linnet flew!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Penury. A Quatrain.
Above his misered embers, gnarled and gray,With toil-twitched limbs he bends; around his hut,Want, like a hobbling hag, goes night and day,Scolding at windows and at doors tight-shut.
Madison Julius Cawein
Passion And Love
A maiden wept and, as a comforter,Came one who cried, "I love thee," and he seizedHer in his arms and kissed her with hot breath,That dried the tears upon her flaming cheeks.While evermore his boldly blazing eyeBurned into hers; but she uncomfortedShrank from his arms and only wept the more.Then one came and gazed mutely in her faceWith wide and wistful eyes; but still aloofHe held himself; as with a reverent fear,As one who knows some sacred presence nigh.And as she wept he mingled tear with tear,That cheered her soul like dew a dusty flower,--Until she smiled, approached, and touched his hand!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
To An Unborn Pauper Child
IBreathe not, hid Heart: cease silently,And though thy birth-hour beckons thee,Sleep the long sleep:The Doomsters heapTravails and teens around us here,And Time-wraiths turn our songsingings to fear.IIHark, how the peoples surge and sigh,And laughters fail, and greetings die:Hopes dwindle; yea,Faiths waste away,Affections and enthusiasms numb;Thou canst not mend these things if thou dost come.IIIHad I the ear of wombed soulsEre their terrestrial chart unrolls,And thou wert freeTo cease, or be,Then would I tell thee all I know,And put it to thee: Wilt thou take Life so?IVVain vow! No hint of mine may henceTo theeward fly: to thy locked senseExplain none can...
Thomas Hardy
Requiem
I.No more for him, where hills look down,Shall Morning crownHer rainy brow with blossom bands!The Morning Hours, whose rosy handsDrop wildflowers of the breaking skiesUpon the sod 'neath which he lies.No more for him! No more! No more!II.No more for him, where waters sleep,Shall Evening heapThe long gold of the perfect days!The Eventide, whose warm hand laysGreat poppies of the afterglowUpon the turf he rests below.No more for him! No more! no more!III.No more for him, where woodlands loom,Shall Midnight bloomThe star-flowered acres of the blue!The Midnight Hours, whose dim hands strewDead leaves of darkness, hushed and deep,Upon the grave where he doth sleep.No more for hi...
Self-Congratulation
Ellen, you were thoughtless onceOf beauty or of grace,Simple and homely in attire,Careless of form and face;Then whence this change? and wherefore nowSo often smooth your hair?And wherefore deck your youthful formWith such unwearied care?Tell us, and cease to tire our earsWith that familiar strain,Why will you play those simple tunesSo often, o'er again?'Indeed, dear friends, I can but sayThat childhood's thoughts are gone;Each year its own new feelings brings,And years move swiftly on:'And for these little simple airs,I love to play them o'erSo much, I dare not promise, now,To play them never more.'I answered, and it was enough;They turned them to depart;They could not read my secret thoughts,
Anne Bronte
Pains Without Profit.
A long life's-day I've taken painsFor very little, or no gains;The evening's come, here now I'll stop,And work no more, but shut up shop.
Robert Herrick
In Memoriam. - Madam Olivia Phelps,
Widow of the late ANSON G. PHELPS, Esq., died at New York, April 24th, 1859, aged 74.When the good mother dieth, and the homeSo long made happy by her boundless loveIs desolate and empty, there are tearsOf filial anguish, not to be represt;And when the many friends who at her sideSought social sympathy and counsel sweet,Or the sad poor, who, for their Saviour's sake,Found bountiful relief, and kind regard,Stand at that altered threshold, and perceiveFaces of strangers from her casement look,There is a pang not to be told in words.Yet, when the christian, having well dischargedA life-long duty, riseth where no sinOr possibility of pain or deathMay follow, should there not be praise to HimWho gives such victory? ...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
In Memoriam. - Mr. John A. Taintor,
Died at Hartford, on Saturday Evening, November 15th, 1862, aged 62 years.A sense of loss is on us. One hath gone Whose all-pervading energy doth leaveA void and silence 'mid the haunts of men And desolation for the hearts that grieveIn his fair mansion, so bereft and lone,Whence the inspiring smile, and cheering voice have flown.Those too there are who eloquently speak Of his firm friendship, not without a tear,Of its strong power to undergird the weak And hold the faltering feet in duty's sphere,While in the cells of want, a broken trustIn bitterness laments, that he is of the dust.In foreign climes, with patriotic eye He sought what might his Country's welfare aid,And the rich flocks of Spain, at his behest
On The Beach At Fontana
Wind whines and whines the shingle,The crazy pierstakes groan;A senile sea numbers each singleSlimesilvered stone.From whining wind and colderGrey sea I wrap him warmAnd touch his trembling fineboned shoulderAnd boyish arm.Around us fear, descendingDarkness of fear aboveAnd in my heart how deep unendingAche of love!
James Joyce
Lines To The Memory Of Mrs. B ----
Ah, stranger! if thy pilgrim footsteps love,By meditation led, to wander here,A suff'ring husband may thy pity move,Who weeps the loss of all his soul holds dear!Cold as this mourning marble is that heart,Which Virtue warm'd with pure and gen'rous heat,Which to each checquer'd scene could joy impart,Nor ceas'd to love until it ceas'd to beat.Yet, gentle spirit! o'er thine early graveShall Consolation, like a seraph, prove,When Sickness clos'd thy faultless life, she gaveAnother angel to the realms above!
John Carr
Another Epitaph
This little vault, this narrow room,Of Love and Beauty is the tomb;The dawning beam, that gan to clearOur clouded sky, lies darkend here,For ever set to us: by DeathSent to enflame the World Beneath.Twas but a bud, yet did containMore sweetness than shall spring again;A budding Star, that might have grownInto a Sun when it had blown.This hopeful Beauty did createNew life in Loves declining state;But now his empire ends, and weFrom fire and wounding darts are free;His brand, his bow, let no man fear:The flames, the arrows, all lie here.
Thomas Carew