Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 19 of 206
Previous
Next
Grief.
What though the Eden morns were sweet with songPassing all sweetness that our thought can reach;Crushing its flowers noon's chariot moved alongIn brightness far transcending mortal speech;Yet in the twilight shades did God appear,Oh welcome shadows so that He draw near.Prosperity is flushed with Papal easeAnd grants indulgences to pride of word,Robing our soul in pomp and vanities,Ah! no fit dwelling for our gentle Lord;Grief rends those draperies of pride and sin,And so our Lord will deign to enter in.Then carefully we curb each thought of wrong,We walk more softly, with more reverent feet -As in His presence chamber, hush our tongue,And in the holy quiet, solemn, sweet,We feel His smile, we hear His voice so low,So we can bl...
Marietta Holley
Lament XIX. The Dream
Long through the night hours sorrow was my guestAnd would not let my fainting body rest,Till just ere dawn from out its slow dominionsFlew sleep to wrap me in its dear dusk pinions.And then it was my mother did appearBefore mine eyes in vision doubly dear;For in her arms she held my darling one,My Ursula, just as she used to runTo me at dawn to say her morning prayer,In her white nightgown, with her curling hairFraming her rosy face, her eyes aboutTo laugh, like flowers only halfway out. "Art thou still sorrowing, my son?" Thus spokeMy mother. Sighing bitterly, I woke,Or seemed to wake, and heard her say once more: "It is thy weeping brings me to this shore:Thy lamentations, long uncomforted,Have reached the hidden chambers ...
Jan Kochanowski
Disillusion
For some forty years, and over,Poets had with me their way;And they made me think that SorrowOwned the Night and owned the Day;And the corpse beneath the cloverHad a hopeful word to say.And they made me think that SorrowWas the Shadow in the Sun;And they made me think To-morrowWas a gift to everyone:And the days I used to borrow,Till my credit now is done.And they told me softly, sweetly,That, when Life had lost its glee,I could be consoled completelyBy the Forest or the Sea;And they wrote their rhymes so neatlyThat they quite deluded me.But when Sorrow is at sorest,And the heart weeps silently,Is there healing in the Forest?Is there solace in the Sea?And the God whom thou adorest
Victor James Daley
Gone.
The heavens look down with chilly frown,The sun blinks oot wi' watery e'e,The drift flies fast upon the blast,The naked trees moan shiveringly.The sun is gone, by mists withdrawn,Muffling his head in snow-clouds grey,The earth turns white, against the night,The laden winds drive furiously.The flowers are slain that graced the plain,The earth is locked wi' bitter frost;And my heart cries to stormy skiesAfter the dreary loved and lost.The spring will come, the flowers will bloom,The leaves in beauty clothe the tree,But never more, oh, never more,Will my lost darling come to me.Beyond the skies her happy eyesLook fearlessly in eyes Divine;The bitter smart, the hungry heart,Waiting with empty arms, is mine.
Nora Pembroke
At The Golden Gate
Before the golden gate she stands,With drooping head, with idle handsLoose-clasped, and bent beneath the weightOf unseen woe. Too late, too late!Those carved and fretted,Starred, resettedPanels shall not open everTo her who seeks the perfect mate.Only the tearless enter there:Only the soul that, like a prayer,No bolt can stay, no wall may bar,Shall dream the dreams grief cannot mar.No door of cedar,Alas, shall lead herUnto the stream that shows foreverLove's face like some reflected star!They say that golden barrier hidesA realm where deathless spring abides;Where flowers shall fade not, and there floatsThro' moon-rays mild or sunlit motes -'Mid dewy alleysThat gird the palace,And fountain'd spray...
George Parsons Lathrop
Wine And Grief. (Translations From The Hebrew Poets Of Medaeval Spain.)
With heavy groans did I approach my friends,Heavy as though the mountains I would move.The flagon they were murdering; they pouredInto the cup, wild-eyed, the grape's red blood.No, they killed not, they breathed new life therein.Then, too, in fiery rapture, burned my veins,But soon the fumes had fled. In vain, in vain!Ye cannot fill the breach of the rent heart.Ye crave a sensuous joy; ye strive in vainTo cheat with flames of passion, my despair.So when the sinking sun draws near to night,The sky's bright cheeks fade 'neath those tresses black.Ye laugh - but silently the soul weeps on;Ye cannot stifle her sincere lament.Solomon Ben Judah Gabirol (Died Between 1070-80.)
Emma Lazarus
Music.
Move on, light hands, so strongly tenderly,Now with dropped calm and yearning undersong,Now swift and loud, tumultuously strong,And I in darkness, sitting near to thee,Shall only hear, and feel, but shall not see,One hour made passionately bright with dreams,Keen glimpses of life's splendour, dashing gleamsOf what we would, and what we cannot be.Surely not painful ever, yet not glad,Shall such hours be to me, but blindly sweet,Sharp with all yearning and all fact at strife,Dreams that shine by with unremembered feet,And tones that like far distance make this lifeSpectral and wonderful and strangely sad.
Archibald Lampman
Sonnet CCXIII.
O misera ed orribil visione.HE CANNOT BELIEVE IN HER DEATH, BUT IF TRUE, HE PRAYS GOD TO TAKE HIM ALSO FROM LIFE. O misery! horror! can it, then, be true,That the sweet light before its time is spent,'Mid all its pains which could my life content,And ever with fresh hopes of good renew?If so, why sounds not other channels through,Nor only from herself, the great event?No! God and Nature could not thus consent,And my dark fears are groundless and undue.Still it delights my heart to hope once moreThe welcome sight of that enchanting face,The glory of our age, and life to me.But if, to her eternal home to soar,That heavenly spirit have left her earthly place,Oh! then not distant may my last day be!MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
To --------
I will not mourn thee, lovely one,Though thou art torn away.'Tis said that if the morning sunArise with dazzling rayAnd shed a bright and burning beamAthwart the glittering main,'Ere noon shall fade that laughing gleamEngulfed in clouds and rain.And if thy life as transient proved,It hath been full as bright,For thou wert hopeful and beloved;Thy spirit knew no blight.If few and short the joys of lifeThat thou on earth couldst know,Little thou knew'st of sin and strifeNor much of pain and woe.If vain thy earthly hopes did prove,Thou canst not mourn their flight;Thy brightest hopes were fixed aboveAnd they shall know no blight.And yet I cannot check my sighs,Thou wert so young and fair,<...
Anne Bronte
Undertone
Ah me! too soon the Autumn comesAmong these purple-plaintive hills!Too soon among the forest gumsPremonitory flame she spills,Bleak, melancholy flame that kills.Her white fogs veil the morn that rimsWith wet the moonflow'r's elfin moons;And, like exhausted starlight, dimsThe last slim lily-disk; and swoonsWith scents of hazy afternoons.Her gray mists haunt the sunset skies,And build the west's cadaverous fire,Where Sorrow sits with lonely eyes,And hands that wake her ancient lyre,Beside the ghost of dead Desire.
Madison Julius Cawein
Lonely Days
Lonely her fate was,Environed from sightIn the house where the gate wasPast finding at night.None there to share it,No one to tell:Long she'd to bear it,And bore it well.Elsewhere just so sheSpent many a day;Wishing to go sheContinued to stay.And people withoutBasked warm in the air,But none sought her out,Or knew she was there.Even birthdays were passed so,Sunny and shady:Years did it last soFor this sad lady.Never declaring it,No one to tell,Still she kept bearing it -Bore it well.The days grew chillier,And then she wentTo a city, familiarIn years forespent,When she walked gailyFar to and fro,But now, moving frailly,Could nowhere go.The...
Thomas Hardy
James Lionel Michael
Be his rest the rest he sought:Calm and deep.Let no wayward word or thoughtVex his sleep.Peace the peace that no man knowsNow remainsWhere the wasted woodwind blows,Wakes and wanes.Latter leaves, in Autumns breath,White and sere,Sanctify the scholars death,Lying here.Soft surprises of the sunSwift, sereneOer the mute grave-grasses run,Cold and green.Wet and cold the hillwinds moan;Let them rave!Love that takes a tender toneLights his grave.He who knew the friendless faceSorrows shew,Often sought this quiet placeYears ago.One, too apt to faint and fail,Loved to strayHere where water-shallows wailDay by day.Care that lays her heavy...
Henry Kendall
A Threnody
I.The rainy smell of a ferny dell,Whose shadow no sunray flaws,When Autumn sits in the wayside weedsTelling her beadsOf haws.II.The phantom mist, that is moonbeam-kissed,On hills where the trees are thinned,When Autumn leans at the oak-root's scarp,Playing a harpOf wind.III.The crickets' chirr 'neath brier and burr,By leaf-strewn pools and streams,When Autumn stands 'mid the dropping nuts,With the book, she shuts,Of dreams.IV.The gray "alas" of the days that pass,And the hope that says "adieu,"A parting sorrow, a shriveled flower,And one ghost's hourWith you.
Unloved.
Paler than the water's whiteStood the maiden in the shade,And more silent than the nightWere her lips together laid;Eyes she hid so long and stillBy lids wet with unshed tears,Hands she loosely clasped at will,Though her heart was full of fears.Never, never, never moreMay her soul with joy be moved;Silent, silent, silent, - forHe was silent whom she loved.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Eternal Rest
When the impatient spirit leaves behindThe clogging hours and makes no dear delayTo drop this Nessus-shirt of night and day,To cast the flesh that bound and could not bindThe heart untamable, the tireless mind,In equal dissolution shall the clayThat once was seer or singer flee away,It shall be fire and blown upon the wind.Not us befits such change in radiance dressed,Not us, O Earth, for whom thou biddest ceaseOur grey endurance of the dark and cold.These eyes have watched with grief, and now would rest;Rest we desire, and on thy bosom's peaceThe long slow change to unremembering mould.
Enid Derham
Absence
When she had left us but a little whileMethought I sensed her spirit here and thereAbout my house: upon the empty stairHer robe brusht softly; o'er her chamber stillThere lay her fragrant presence to beguileNumb heart, dead heart. I knelt before her chair,And praying felt her hand laid on my hair,Felt her sweet breath, and guess'd her wistful smile.Then thro' my tears I lookt about the room,But she was gone. I heard my heart beat fast;The street was silent; I could not see her now.Sorrow and I took up our load, and pastTo where our station was with heads bent low,And autumn's death-moan shiver'd thro' the gloom.
Maurice Henry Hewlett
Lines Written At Fredensborg, The Deserted Palace Of The Late Queen Dowager Juliana Maria [A].
Bless'd are the steps of Virtue's queen!Where'er she moves fresh roses bloom;And, when she droops, kind Nature poursHer genuine tears in gentle show'rs,That love to dew the willow greenThat over-canopies her tomb.But, ah! no willing mourner hereAttends to tell the tale of woe:Why is yon statue prostrate thrown?Why has the grass green'd o'er the stone?Why, 'gainst the spider'd casement drear,So sullen seems the wind to blow?How mournful was the lonely bird,Within yon dark neglected grove!Say, was it fancy? From its throatIssu'd a strange and cheerless note;'Twas not so sad as grief I heard,Nor yet so wildly sweet as love.In the deep gloom of yonder dellAmbition's blood-stain'd victims sigh'd;While Time b...
John Carr
Song. Metempsychosis.
When Grief comes this way byWith her wan lip and drooping eye,Bid her welcome, woo her boldly;Soon she'll look on thee less coldly.Her tears soon cease to flow.'Tis now not Grief but Joy we know;From her smiling face the rosesTell the glad metempsychosis.
Thomas Runciman