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A Fragment
Oh, Youth! could dark futurity revealHer hidden worlds, unlock her cloud-hung gates,Or snatch the keys of mystery from time,Your souls would madden at the piercing sightOf fortune, wielding high her woe-born armsTo crush aspiring genius, seize the wreathWhich fond imagination's hand had weav'd,Strip its bright beams, and give the wreck to air.Forth from Cimmeria's nest of vipers, lo!Pale envy trails its cherish'd form, and views,With eye of cockatrice, the little pileWhich youthful merit had essay'd to raise;From shrouded night his blacker arm he draws,Replete with vigor from each heavenly blast,To cloud the glories of that infant sun,And hurl the fabric headlong to the ground.How oft, alas! through that envenom'd blow,The youth is ...
Thomas Gent
Samuel, Aged Nine Years.
They have left you, little Henry, but they have not left you lonely - Brothers' hearts so knit together could not, might not separate dwell.Fain to seek you in the mansions far away - One lingered only To bid those behind farewell!Gentle Boy! - His childlike nature in most guileless form was moulded, And it may be that his spirit woke in glory unaware,Since so calmly he resigned it, with his hands still meekly folded, Having said his evening prayer.Or - if conscious of that summons - "Speak, O Lord, Thy servant heareth" - As one said, whose name they gave him, might his willing answer be,"Here am I" - like him replying - "At Thy gates my soul appeareth, For behold Thou calledst me!"A deep silence - utter silence, on his earthly home...
Jean Ingelow
Sorrow
Why does the thin grey strandFloating up from the forgottenCigarette between my fingers,Why does it trouble me?Ah, you will understand;When I carried my mother downstairs,A few times only, at the beginningOf her soft-foot malady,I should find, for a reprimandTo my gaiety, a few long grey hairsOn the breast of my coat; and one by oneI let them float up the dark chimney.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Pain And Time Strive Not.
What part of the dread eternityAre those strange minutes that I gain,Mazed with the doubt of love and pain,When I thy delicate face may see,A little while before farewell?What share of the world's yearning-tideThat flash, when new day bare and whiteBlots out my half-dream's faint delight,And there is nothing by my side,And well remembered is farewell?What drop in the grey flood of tearsThat time, when the long day toiled through,Worn out, shows nought for me to do,And nothing worth my labour bearsThe longing of that last farewell?What pity from the heavens above,What heed from out eternity,What word from the swift world for me?Speak, heed, and pity, O tender love,Who knew'st the days before farewell!
William Morris
Tis An Old Tale And Often Told.
Are they indeed the bitterest tears we shed,Those we let fall over the silent dead?Can our thoughts image forth no darker doom,Than that which wraps us in the peaceful tomb?Whom have ye laid beneath that mossy grave,Round which the slender, sunny, grass-blades wave?Who are ye calling back to tread againThis weary walk of life? towards whom, in vain,Are your fond eyes and yearning hearts upraised;The young, the loved, the honoured, and the praised?Come hither; - look upon the faded cheekOf that still woman, who with eyelids meekVeils her most mournful eyes; - upon her browSometimes the sensitive blood will faintly glow,When reckless hands her heart-wounds roughly tear,But patience oftener sits palely there.Beauty has left her - hope and joy have...
Frances Anne Kemble
The Sunset Thoughts Of A Dying Girl.
Friends! do you see in yon sunset sky, That cloud of crimson bright?Soon will its gorgeous colors die In coming dim twilight;E'en now it fadeth ray by ray -Like it I too shall pass away!Look on yon fragile summer flower Yielding its sweet perfume;Soon shall it have lived out its hour, Its beauty and its bloom:Trampled, 'twill perish in the shade -Alas! as quickly shall I fade.Mark you yon planet gleaming clear With steadfast, gentle light,See, heavy dark clouds hovering near, Have veiled its radiance bright -As you vainly search that gloomy spot,You'll look for me and find me not!Turn now to yonder sparkling stream, Where silver ripples play;Dancing within the moon's pale beam -
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
A Letter From A Girl To Her Own Old Age
Listen, and when thy hand this paper presses,O time-worn woman, think of her who blessesWhat thy thin fingers touch, with her caresses.O mother, for the weight of years that break thee!O daughter, for slow time must yet awake thee,And from the changes of my heart must make thee.O fainting traveller, morn is grey in heaven.Dost thou remember how the clouds were driven?And are they calm about the fall of even?Pause near the ending of thy long migration,For this one sudden hour of desolationAppeals to one hour of thy meditation.Suffer, O silent one, that I remind theeOf the great hills that stormed the sky behind thee,Of the wild winds of power that have resigned thee.Know that the mournful plain where thou must wander
Alice Meynell
The Valley Of Unrest
Once it smiled a silent dellWhere the people did not dwell;They had gone unto the wars,Trusting to the mild-eyed stars,Nightly, from their azure towers,To keep watch above the flowers,In the midst of which all dayThe red sun-light lazily lay,Now each visitor shall confessThe sad valleys restlessness.Nothing there is motionless,Nothing save the airs that broodOver the magic solitude.Ah, by no wind are stirred those treesThat palpitate like the chill seasAround the misty Hebrides!Ah, by no wind those clouds are drivenThat rustle through the unquiet HeavenUnceasingly, from morn till even,Over the violets there that lieIn myriad types of the human eye,Over the lilies that waveAnd weep above a nameless grave!
Edgar Allan Poe
Lament II
If I had ever thought to write in praiseOf little children and their simple ways,Far rather had I fashioned cradle verseTo rock to slumber, or the songs a nurseMight croon above the baby on her breast.Setting her charge's short-lived woes at rest.For much more useful are such trifling tasksThan that which sad misfortune this day asks:To weep o'er thy deaf grave, dear maiden mine.And wail the harshness of grim Proserpine.But now I have no choice of subject: thenI shunned a theme scarce fitting riper men,And now disaster drives me on by forceTo songs unheeded by the great concourseOf mortals. Verses that I would not singThe living, to the dead I needs must bring.Yet though I dry the marrow from my bones,Weeping another's death, my grief ato...
Jan Kochanowski
Memory
In silence and in darkness memory wakesHer million sheathèd buds, and breaksThat day-long winter when the light and noiseAnd hard bleak breath of the outward-looking willMade barren her tender soil, when every voiceOf her million airy birds was muffled or still.One bud-sheath breaks:One sudden voice awakes.What change grew in our hearts, seeing one nightThat moth-winged ship drifting across the bay, Her broad sail dimly whiteOn cloudy waters and hills as vague as they?Some new thing touched our spirits with distant delight,Half-seen, half-noticed, as we loitered down,Talking in whispers, to the little town, Down from the narrow hill Talking in whispers, for the air so stillImposed its stillness on our lips, and made
Edward Shanks
Fate Knows no Tears
Just as the dawn of Love was breaking Across the weary world of grey,Just as my life once more was waking As roses waken late in May,Fate, blindly cruel and havoc-making, Stepped in and carried you away.Memories have I none in keeping Of times I held you near my heart,Of dreams when we were near to weeping That dawn should bid us rise and part;Never, alas, I saw you sleeping With soft closed eyes and lips apart,Breathing my name still through your dreaming. - Ah! had you stayed, such things had been!But Fate, unheeding human scheming, Serenely reckless came between -Fate with her cold eyes hard and gleaming Unseared by all the sorrow seen.Ah! well-beloved, I never told you, I did...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Canzone V.
Nella stagion che 'l ciel rapido inchina.NIGHT BRINGS REPOSE TO OTHERS, BUT NOT TO HIM. In that still season, when the rapid sunDrives down the west, and daylight flies to greetNations that haply wait his kindling flame;In some strange land, alone, her weary feetThe time-worn pilgrim finds, with toil fordone,Yet but the more speeds on her languid frame;Her solitude the same,When night has closed around;Yet has the wanderer foundA deep though short forgetfulness at lastOf every woe, and every labour past.But ah! my grief, that with each moment grows,As fast, and yet more fast,Day urges on, is heaviest at its close.When Phoebus rolls his everlasting wheelsTo give night room; and from encircling wood,B...
Francesco Petrarca
Mirrors Of Life And Death.
The mystery of Life, the mysteryOf Death, I seeDarkly as in a glass;Their shadows pass,And talk with me.As the flush of a Morning Sky,As a Morning Sky colorless -Each yields its measure of lightTo a wet world or a dry;Each fares through day to nightWith equal pace,And then each oneIs done.As the Sun with glory and graceIn his face,Benignantly hot,Graciously radiant and keen,Ready to rise and to run, -Not without spot,Not even the Sun.As the MoonOn the wax, on the wane,With night for her noon;Vanishing soon,To appear again.As Roses that droopHalf warm, half chill, in the languid May,And breathe out a scentSweet and faint;Till the wind gives one ...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Demeter.
Demeter sad! the wells of sorrow layEternal gushing in thy lonely path.Methinks I see her now - an awful shapeTall o'er a dragon team in frenzied searchFrom Argive plains unto the jeweled shoresOf the remotest Ind, where Usha's handTinged her grief-cloven brow with kindly touch,And Savitar wheeled genial thro' the skiesO'er palmy regions of the faneless Brahm.In melancholy search I see her roamO'er the steep peaks of Himalayas keenWith the unmellowed frosts of Boreal storms,Then back again with that wild mother woeWrit in the anguished fire of her eyes, -Back where old Atlas groans 'neath weight of worlds,And the Cimmerian twilight glooms the soul.Deep was her sleep in Persia's haunted vales,Where many a languid Philomela moan...
Madison Julius Cawein
Longing
I am not sorry for my soulThat it must go unsatisfied,For it can live a thousand times,Eternity is deep and wide.I am not sorry for my soul,But oh, my body that must goBack to a little drift of dustWithout the joy it longed to know.
Sara Teasdale
Fragment: Apostrophe To Silence.
Silence! Oh, well are Death and Sleep and ThouThree brethren named, the guardians gloomy-wingedOf one abyss, where life, and truth, and joyAre swallowed up - yet spare me, Spirit, pity me,Until the sounds I hear become my soul,And it has left these faint and weary limbs,To track along the lapses of the airThis wandering melody until it restsAmong lone mountains in some...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Despairing Cries
Despairing cries float ceaselessly toward me, day and night,The sad voice of Death--the call of my nearest lover, putting forth, alarmed, uncertain,This sea I am quickly to sail, come tell me,Come tell me where I am speeding--tell me my destination.I understand your anguish, but I cannot help you,I approach, hear, behold--the sad mouth, the look out of the eyes, your mute inquiry,Whither I go from the bed I now recline on, come tell me;Old age, alarmed, uncertain--A young woman's voice appealing to me, for comfort,A young man's voice, Shall I not escape?
Walt Whitman
Tears
Mourn that which will not come again, The joy, the strength of early years. Bow down thy head, and let thy tearsWater the grave where hope lies slain.For tears are like a summer rain, To murmur in a mourner's ears, To soften all the field of fears,To moisten valleys parched with pain.And though thy tears will not awake What lies beneath of young or fair And sleeps so sound it draws no breath,Yet, watered thus, the sod may break In flowers which sweeten all the air, And fill with life the place of death.
Robert Fuller Murray