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Sorry Her Lot.
Sorry her lot who loves too well,Heavy the heart that hopes but vainly,Had are the sighs that own the spellUttered by eyes that speak too plainly;Heavy the sorrow that bows the headWhen Love is alive and Hope is dead!Sad is the hour when sets the SunDark is the night to Earth's poor daughtersWhen to the ark the wearied oneFlies from the empty waste of waters!Heavy the sorrow that bows the headWhen Love is alive and Hope is dead!
William Schwenck Gilbert
Fall
Sad-hearted spirit of the solitudes,Who comest through the ruin-wedded woods!Gray-gowned with fog, gold-girdled with the gloomOf tawny twilights; burdened with perfumeOf rain-wet uplands, chilly with the mist;And all the beauty of the fire-kissedCold forests crimsoning thy indolent way,Odorous of death and drowsy with decay.I think of thee as seated 'mid the showersOf languid leaves that cover up the flowers, -The little flower-sisterhoods, whom JuneOnce gave wild sweetness to, as to a tuneA singer gives her soul's wild melody, -Watching the squirrel store his granary.Or, 'mid old orchards I have pictured thee:Thy hair's profusion blown about thy back;One lovely shoulder bathed with gipsy black;Upon thy palm one nestling cheek, and sweet<...
Madison Julius Cawein
Ebb Tide
When the long day goes byAnd I do not see your face,The old wild, restless sorrowSteals from its hiding place.My day is barren and broken,Bereft of light and song,A sea beach bleak and windyThat moans the whole day long.To the empty beach at ebb tide,Bare with its rocks and scars,Come back like the sea with singing,And light of a million stars.
Sara Teasdale
Fragment II - Sunset
The day and its delights are done;So all delights and days expire:Down in the dim, sad West the sunIs dying like a dying fire.The fiercest lances of his lightAre spent; I watch him droop and dieLike a great king who falls in fight;None dared the duel of his eyeLiving, but, now his eye is dim,The eyes of all may stare at him.How lovely in his strength at mornHe orbed along the burning blue!The blown gold of his flying hairWas tangled in green-tressèd trees,And netted in the river sandIn gleaming links of amber clear;But all his shining locks are shorn,His brow of its bright crown is bare,The golden sceptre leaves his hand,And deeper, darker, grows the hueOf the dim purple draperiesAnd cloudy banner...
Victor James Daley
In Memoriam - Alice Fane Gunn Stenhouse
The grand, authentic songs that rollAcross grey widths of wild-faced sea,The lordly anthems of the Pole,Are loud upon the lea.Yea, deep and full the South Wind singsThe mighty symphonies that makeA thunder at the mountain springsA whiteness on the lake.And where the hermit hornet hums,When Summer fires his wings with gold,The hollow voice of August comes,Across the rain and cold.Now on the misty mountain tops,Where gleams the crag and glares the fell,Wild Winter, like one hunted, stopsAnd shouts a fierce farewell.Keen fitful gusts shoot past the shoreAnd hiss by moor and moody mereThe heralds bleak that come beforeThe turning of the year.A sobbing spirit wanders whereBy fits and starts...
Henry Kendall
Requiescat.
The roses mourn for her who sleepsWithin the tomb;For her each lily-flower weepsDew and perfume.In each neglected flower-bedEach blossom droops its lovely head,They miss her touch, they miss her tread,Her face of bloom,Of happy bloom.The very breezes grieve for her,A lonely grief;For her each tree is sorrower,Each blade and leaf.The foliage rocks itself and sighs,And to its woe the wind replies,They miss her girlish laugh and cries,Whose life was brief,Was very brief.The sunlight, too, seems pale with care,Or sick with woe;The memory haunts it of her hair,Its golden glow.No more within the bramble-brakeThe sleepy bloom is kissed awakeThe sun is sad for her dear sake,<...
Age
This ugly old crone -Every beauty she hadWhen a maid, when a maid.Her beautiful eyes,Too youthful, too wise,Seemed ever to comeTo so lightless a home,Cold and dull as a stone.And her cheeks - who would guessCheeks cadaverous as thisOnce with colours were gayAs the flower on its spray?Who would ever believeAught could bring one to grieveSo much as to makeLips bent for love's sakeSo thin and so grey?O Youth, come away!As she asks in her lone,This old, desolate crone.She loves us no more;She is too old to careFor the charms that of yoreMade her body so fair.Past repining, past care,She lives but to bearOne or two fleeting yearsEarth's indifference: her tearsHave lost now their...
Walter De La Mare
Kin To Sorrow
Am I kin to Sorrow, That so oft Falls the knocker of my door-- Neither loud nor soft, But as long accustomed, Under Sorrow's hand? Marigolds around the step And rosemary stand, And then comes Sorrow-- And what does Sorrow care For the rosemary Or the marigolds there? Am I kin to Sorrow? Are we kin? That so oft upon my door-- *Oh, come in*!
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Heri, Cras, Hodie
Shines the last age, the next with hope is seen,To-day slinks poorly off unmarked between:Future or Past no richer secret folds,O friendless Present! than thy bosom holds.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Comfort In Tears.
How happens it that thou art sad,While happy all appear?Thine eye proclaims too well that thouHast wept full many a tear."If I have wept in solitude,None other shares my grief,And tears to me sweet balsam are,And give my heart relief."Thy happy friends invite thee now,Oh come, then, to our breast!And let the loss thou hast sustain'dBe there to us confess'd!"Ye shout, torment me, knowing notWhat 'tis afflicteth me;Ah no! I have sustained no loss,Whate'er may wanting be."If so it is, arise in haste!Thou'rt young and full of life.At years like thine, man's blest with strength.And courage for the strife."Ah no! in vain 'twould be to str...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Evening Solace.
The human heart has hidden treasures,In secret kept, in silence sealed;The thoughts, the hopes, the dreams, the pleasures,Whose charms were broken if revealed.And days may pass in gay confusion,And nights in rosy riot fly,While, lost in Fame's or Wealth's illusion,The memory of the Past may die.But there are hours of lonely musing,Such as in evening silence come,When, soft as birds their pinions closing,The heart's best feelings gather home.Then in our souls there seems to languishA tender grief that is not woe;And thoughts that once wrung groans of anguishNow cause but some mild tears to flow.And feelings, once as strong as passions,Float softly back, a faded dream;Our own sharp griefs and wild sensations,The tale...
Charlotte Bronte
A Hamadryad Dies. Sonnet
Low mourned the Oread round the Arcadian hills;The Naiad murmured and the Dryad moaned;The meadow-maiden left her daffodilsTo join the Hamadryades who groanedOver a sister newly fallen dead.That Life might perish out of ArcadyFrom immemorial times was never said;Yet here one lay dead by her dead oak-tree."Who made our Hamadryad cold and mute?"The others cried in sorrow and in wonder."I," answered Death, close by in ashen suit;"Yet fear not me for this, nor start asunder;Arcadian life shall keep its ancient zestThough I be here. My name? - is it not Rest?"
Thomas Runciman
An Old-World Thicket.
..."Una selva oscura." - Dante.Awake or sleeping (for I know not which)I was or was not mazed within a woodWhere every mother-bird brought up her broodSafe in some leafy nicheOf oak or ash, of cypress or of beech,Of silvery aspen trembling delicately,Of plane or warmer-tinted sycamore,Of elm that dies in secret from the core,Of ivy weak and free,Of pines, of all green lofty things that be.Such birds they seemed as challenged each desire;Like spots of azure heaven upon the wing,Like downy emeralds that alight and sing,Like actual coals on fire,Like anything they seemed, and everything.Such mirth they made, such warblings and such chatWith tongue of music in a well-tuned beak,They seemed to speak more wis...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Lines Written In Dejection
When have I last looked onThe round green eyes and the long wavering bodiesOf the dark leopards of the moon?All the wild witches, those most noble ladies,For all their broom-sticks and their tears,Their angry tears, are gone.The holy centaurs of the hills are banished;I have nothing but the harsh sun;Heroic mother moon has vanished,And now that I have come to fifty yearsI must endure the timid sun.
William Butler Yeats
Dead Leaves
DAWNAs though a gipsy maiden with dim look, Sat crooning by the roadside of the year, So, Autumn, in thy strangeness, thou art hereTo read dark fortunes for us from the bookOf fate; thou flingest in the crinkled brook The trembling maple's gold, and frosty-clear Thy mocking laughter thrills the atmosphere,And drifting on its current calls the rookTo other lands. As one who wades, alone, Deep in the dusk, and hears the minor talkOf distant melody, and finds the tone, In some wierd way compelling him to stalkThe paths of childhood over, - so I moan, And like a troubled sleeper, groping, walk. DUSKThe frightened herds of clouds across the sky Trample the sunshine down, and chase the day
James Whitcomb Riley
Lament
How she would have lovedA party to-day! -Bright-hatted and gloved,With table and trayAnd chairs on the lawnHer smiles would have shoneWith welcomings . . . ButShe is shut, she is shut From friendship's spell In the jailing shell Of her tiny cell.Or she would have reignedAt a dinner to-nightWith ardours unfeigned,And a generous delight;All in her abodeShe'd have freely bestowedOn her guests . . . But alas,She is shut under grass Where no cups flow, Powerless to know That it might be so.And she would have soughtWith a child's eager glanceThe shy snowdrops broughtBy the new year's advance,And peered in the rimeOf Candlemas-timeFor crocuses . . . c...
Thomas Hardy
A Reminiscence
The rose to the wind has yielded: all its leavesLie strewn on the graveyard grass, and all their lightAnd colour and fragrance leave our sense and sightBereft as a man whom bitter time bereavesOf blossom at once and hope of garnered sheaves,Of April at once and August. Day to nightCalls wailing, and life to death, and depth to height,And soul upon soul of man that hears and grieves.Who knows, though he see the snow-cold blossom shed,If haply the heart that burned within the rose,The spirit in sense, the life of life be dead?If haply the wind that slays with storming snowsBe one with the wind that quickens? Bow thine head,O Sorrow, and commune with thine heart: who knows?
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Monk's Walk
In this sombre garden closeWhat has come and passed, who knows?What red passion, what white painHaunted this dim walk in vain?Underneath the ivied wall,Where the silent shadows fall,Lies the pathway chill and dampWhere the world-quit dreamers tramp.Just across, where sunlight burns,Smiling at the mourning ferns,Stand the roses, side by side,Nodding in their useless pride.Ferns and roses, who shall sayWhat you witness day by day?Covert smile or dropping eye,As the monks go pacing by.Has the novice come to-dayHere beneath the wall to pray?Has the young monk, lately chidden,Sung his lyric, sweet, forbidden?Tell me, roses, did you noteThat pale father's throbbing throat?Did you hear ...
Paul Laurence Dunbar