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At Sunset Time
Adown the west a golden glowSinks burning in the sea,And all the dreams of long agoCome flooding back to me.The past has writ a story strangeUpon my aching heart,But time has wrought a subtle change,My wounds have ceased to smart.No more the quick delight of youth,No more the sudden pain,I look no more for trust or truthWhere greed may compass gain.What, was it I who bared my heartThrough unrelenting years,And knew the sting of misery's dart,The tang of sorrow's tears?'Tis better now, I do not weep,I do not laugh nor care;My soul and spirit half asleepDrift aimless everywhere.We float upon a sluggish stream,We ride no rapids mad,While life is all a tempered dreamAnd every joy half sad.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Uselessness.
Let mine not be that saddest fate of all To live beyond my greater self; to see My faculties decaying, as the treeStands stark and helpless while its green leaves fall.Let me hear rather the imperious call, Which all men dread, in my glad morning time, And follow death ere I have reached my prime,Or drunk the strengthening cordial of life's gall.The lightning's stroke or the fierce tempest blast Which fells the green tree to the earth to-dayIs kinder than the calm that lets it last, Unhappy witness of its own decay. May no man ever look on me and say,"She lives, but all her usefulness is past."
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Lament V
Just as a little olive offshoot growsBeneath its orchard elders' shady rows,No budding leaf as yet, no branching limb,Only a rod uprising, virgin-slim -Then if the busy gardener, weeding outSharp thorns and nettles, cuts the little sprout,It fades and, losing all its living hue,Drops by the mother from whose roots it grew:So was it with my Ursula, my dear;A little space she grew beside us here,Then Death came, breathing pestilence, and sheFell, stricken lifeless, by her parent tree.Persephone, Persephone, this flowOf barren tears! How couldst thou will it so?
Jan Kochanowski
The Suicide.
A shadowed form before the light,A gleaming face against the night,Clutched hands across a halo brightOf blowing hair, - her fixed sightStares down where moving black, below,The river's deathly waves in murmurous silence flow.The moon falls fainting on the sky,The dark woods bow their heads in sorrow,The earth sends up a misty sigh:A soul defies the morrow!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Ghazal Of Majid Shah
Grief is hard upon me, Master, for she has left me;The black dust has covered my pretty one.My heart is black, for the tomb has taken my friend;How pleasantly would go the days if my friend were here.I can only dream of the stature of my friend;The flowers are dying in my heart, my breast is a fading garden.Her breast is a sweet garden now, and her garments are gold flowers;I am an orchard at night, for my friend has gone a journey.I am Majid Shah, a slave that ministers to the dead;Abdel Qadir Gilani, even the Master, shall not save me.From the Pus'hto (Afghans, nineteenth century).
Edward Powys Mathers
Gone
S. M. A.Gone! and there's not a gleam of you,Faces that float into far away;Gone! and we can only dream of youEach as you fade like a star away.Fade as a star in the sky from us,Vainly we look for your light again;Hear ye the sound of a sigh from us?"Come!" and our hearts will be bright again.Come! and gaze on our face once more,Bring us the smiles of the olden days;Come! and shine in your place once more,And change the dark into golden days.Gone! gone! gone! Joy is fled for us;Gone into the night of the nevermore,And darkness rests where you shed for usA light we will miss ~forevermore~.Faces! ye come in the night to us;Shadows! ye float in the sky of sleep;Shadows! ye bring nothing bright to us;...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Waning Year
A Sense of something that is sad and strange;Of something that is felt as death is felt,As shadows, phantoms, in a haunted grange,Around me seems to melt.It rises, so it seems, from the decayOf the dim woods; from withered leaves and weeds,And dead flowers hanging by the woodland waySad, hoary heads of seeds.And from the cricket's song, so feeble now'T is like a sound heard in the heart, a callDreamier than dreams; and from the shaken bough,From which the acorns fall.From scents and sounds it rises, sadly slow,This presence, that hath neither face nor form;That in the woods sits like demented woe,Whispering of wreck and storm.A presence wrought of melancholy grief,And dreams that die; that, in the streaming night,<...
Madison Julius Cawein
Erinna
They sent you in to say farewell to me,No, do not shake your head; I see your eyesThat shine with tears. Sappho, you saw the sunJust now when you came hither, and again,When you have left me, all the shimmeringGreat meadows will laugh lightly, and the sunPut round about you warm invisible armsAs might a lover, decking you with light.I go toward darkness tho I lie so still.If I could see the sun, I should look upAnd drink the light until my eyes were blind;I should kneel down and kiss the blades of grass,And I should call the birds with such a voice,With such a longing, tremulous and keen,That they would fly to me and on the breastBear evermore to tree-tops and to fieldsThe kiss I gave them. Sappho, tell me this,Was I not sometimes fair? ...
Sara Teasdale
Grief And The Sleeve
Tears in the moonlight,You know why,Have marred the flowersOn my rose sleeve.Ask why.From the Japanese of Hide-Yoshi.
Death.
If days should pass without a written word To tell me of thy welfare, and if days Should lengthen out to weeks, until the mazeOf questioning fears confused me, and I heard. Life-sounds as echoes; and one came and said After these weeks of waiting: "He is dead!"Though the quick sword had found the vital part, And the life-blood must mingle with the tears, I think that, as the dying soldier hearsThe cries of victory, and feels his heart Surge with his country's triumph-hour, I could Hope bravely on, and feel that God was good.I could take up my thread of life again And weave my pattern though the colors were Faded forever. Though I might not dareDream often of thee, I should know that when Death came t...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
The Lapse Of Time.
Lament who will, in fruitless tears,The speed with which our moments fly;I sigh not over vanished years,But watch the years that hasten by.Look, how they come, a mingled crowdOf bright and dark, but rapid days;Beneath them, like a summer cloud,The wide world changes as I gaze.What! grieve that time has brought so soonThe sober age of manhood on!As idly might I weep, at noon,To see the blush of morning gone.Could I give up the hopes that glowIn prospect like Elysian isles;And let the cheerful future go,With all her promises and smiles?The future! cruel were the powerWhose doom would tear thee from my heart.Thou sweetener of the present hour!We cannot, no, we will not part.Oh, leave me, still,...
William Cullen Bryant
To Wordsworth.
Poet of Nature, thou hast wept to knowThat things depart which never may return:Childhood and youth, friendship and love's first glow,Have fled like sweet dreams, leaving thee to mourn.These common woes I feel. One loss is mineWhich thou too feel'st, yet I alone deplore.Thou wert as a lone star, whose light did shineOn some frail bark in winter's midnight roar:Thou hast like to a rock-built refuge stoodAbove the blind and battling multitude:In honoured poverty thy voice did weaveSongs consecrate to truth and liberty, -Deserting these, thou leavest me to grieve,Thus having been, that thou shouldst cease to be.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Lines Upon The Death Of The Lady Of Lieutenant-Colonel Adams, Who Lately Died Of A Decline In The East Indies.
When Time a mellowing tint has thrownO'er many a scene to mem'ry dear.It scatters round a charm, unknownWhen first th' impression rested there.But, oh! should distance intervene,Should Ocean's wave, should changeful clime.Divide - how sweeter far the scene!How richer ev'ry tint of time!E'en thus with those (a treasur'd few)Who gladden'd life with many a smile,Tho' long has pass'd the sad adieu,In thought we love to dwell awhile.Then with keen eye, and beating heart,The anxious mind still seeks reliefFrom those who can the tale impart,How pass their day, in joy or grief.If haply health and fortune bless,We feel as if on us they shone;If sickness and if sorrow press,Then feeling makes their woes our own.<...
John Carr
Which
We are both of us sad at heart, But I wonder who can sayWhich has the harder part, Or the bitterer grief to-day.You grieve for a love that was lost Before it had reached its prime;I sit here and count the cost Of a love that has lived its time.Your blossom was plucked in its May, In its dawning beauty and pride;Mine lived till the August day, And reached fruition and died.You pressed its leaves in a book, And you weep sweet tears o'er them.Dry eyed I sit and look On a withered and broken stem.And now that all is told, Which is the sadder, pray,To give up your dream with its gold, Or to see it fade into grey?
Their Sweet Sorrow.
They meet to say farewell: Their wayOf saying this is hard to say. - He holds her hand an instant, wholly Distressed - and she unclasps it slowly.He bends his gaze evasivelyOver the printed page that she Recurs to, with a new-moon shoulder Glimpsed from the lace-mists that enfold her.The clock, beneath its crystal cup,Discreetly clicks - "Quick! Act! Speak up!" A tension circles both her slender Wrists - and her raised eyes flash in splendor,Even as he feels his dazzled own. -Then, blindingly, round either thrown, They feel a stress of arms that ever Strain tremblingly - and "Never! Never!"Is whispered brokenly, with halfA sob, like a belated laugh, - While cloyingly their ...
James Whitcomb Riley
Lament XIV
Where are those gates through which so long agoOrpheus descended to the realms belowTo seek his lost one? Little daughter, IWould find that path and pass that ford wherebyThe grim-faced boatman ferries pallid shadesAnd drives them forth to joyless cypress glades.But do thou not desert me, lovely lute!Be thou the furtherance of my mournful suitBefore dread Pluto, till he shall give earTo our complaints and render up my dear.To his dim dwelling all men must repair,And so must she, her father's joy and heir;But let him grant the fruit now scarce in flowerTo fill and ripen till the harvest hour!Yet if that god doth bear a heart withinSo hard that one in grief can nothing win,What can I but renounce this upper airAnd lose my soul, but also los...
Penseroso
Soulless is all humanity to meTo-night. My keenest longing is to beAlone, alone with God's grey earth that seemsPulse of my pulse and consort of my dreams.To-night my soul desires no fellowship,Or fellow-being; crave I but to slipThro' space on space, till flesh no more can bind,And I may quit for aye my fellow kind.Let me but feel athwart my cheek the lashOf whipping wind, but hear the torrent dashAdown the mountain steep, 'twere more my choiceThan touch of human hand, than human voice.Let me but wander on the shore night-stilled,Drinking its darkness till my soul is filled;The breathing of the salt sea on my hair,My outstretched hands but grasping empty air.Let me but feel the pulse of Nature's soulAthrob on mine...
Emily Pauline Johnson
To 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 sours 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 gypsy black;Upon thy palm one nestling check, and sweet...