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Love And Madness
Hark! from the battlements of yonder towerThe solemn bell has tolled the midnight hour!Roused from drear visions of distempered sleep,Poor Broderick wakesin solitude to weep!"Cease, Memory; cease (the friendless mourner cried)To probe the bosom too severely tried!Oh! ever cease, my pensive thoughts, to strayThrough tie bright fields of Fortune's better day,When youthful Hope, the music of the mind,Tuned all its charms, and Errington was kind!Yet, can I cease, while glows this trembling frame,In sighs to speak thy melancholy name!I hear thy spirit wail in every storm!In midniglit shades I view thy passing form!Pale as in that sad hour when doomed to feel!Deep in thy perjured heart, the bloody steel!Demons of Vengeance! ye, ...
Thomas Campbell
Lagrimas.
God send me tears!Loose the fierce band that binds my tired brain,Give me the melting heart of other years, And let me weep again! Before me passThe shapes of things inexorably true.Gone is the sparkle of transforming dew From every blade of grass. In life's high noonAimless I stand, my promised task undone,And raise my hot eyes to the angry sun That will go down too soon. Turned into gallAre the sweet joys of childhood's sunny reign;And memory is a torture, love a chain That binds my life in thrall. And childhood's painCould to me now the purest rapture yield;I pray for tears as in his parching field The husbandman for rain.
John Hay
For Ever
Out of the body for ever,Wearily sobbing, Oh, whither?A Soul that hath wasted its chancesFloats on the limitless ether.Lost in dim, horrible blankness;Drifting like wind on a sea,Untraversed and vacant and moaning,Nor shallow nor shore on the lee!Helpless, unfriended, forsaken;Haunted and tracked by the Past,With fragments of pitiless voices,And desolate faces aghast!One saith It is well that he goethNaked and fainting with cold,Who worshipped his sweet-smelling garments,Arrayed with the cunning of old!Hark! how he crieth, my brothers,With pain for the glittering thingsHe saw on the shoulders of Rulers,And the might in the mouths of the Kings!This Soul hath been one of the idlersW...
Henry Kendall
Longing.
Look westward o'er the steaming rain-washed slopes, Now satisfied with sunshine, and beholdThose lustrous clouds, as glorious as our hopes, Softened with feathery fleece of downy gold, In all fantastic, huddled shapes uprolled,Floating like dreams, and melting silently,In the blue upper regions of pure sky.The eye is filled with beauty, and the heart Rejoiced with sense of life and peace renewed;And yet at such an hour as this, upstart Vague myriad longing, restless, unsubdued, And causeless tears from melancholy mood,Strange discontent with earth's and nature's best,Desires and yearnings that may find no rest.
Emma Lazarus
Reflections On A Tree In Autumn.
The tree, with its leaves in luxuriance shading My path in the tune-yielding time of the year, Now sighs in its dirge, while its foliage, fading, Descends to its sepulchre withered and sere. And yet I regard it with feelings the fonder, With feelings of mingled compassion and pain, As in pity I gaze on its branches, and ponder Of once fragrant beauty what fragments remain. For that barren tree with adornment so fleeting, That blows in the autumn wind bleak and forlorn, Bespeaks the sad state of a heart that is beating, Bereft of the pleasures that once it has borne.
W. M. MacKeracher
Sonnet II
Time does not bring relief; you all have lied Who told me time would ease me of my pain! I miss him in the weeping of the rain; I want him at the shrinking of the tide; The old snows melt from every mountain-side, And last year's leaves are smoke in every lane; But last year's bitter loving must remain Heaped on my heart, and my old thoughts abide! There are a hundred places where I fear To go,--so with his memory they brim! And entering with relief some quiet place Where never fell his foot or shone his face I say, "There is no memory of him here!" And so stand stricken, so remembering him!
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Griefs.
Jove may afford us thousands of reliefs,Since man expos'd is to a world of griefs.
Robert Herrick
Harmony Of Evening
Now those days arrive when, stem throbbing,each flower sheds its fragrance like a censer:sounds and scents twine in the evening air:languorous dizziness, Melancholy dancing!Each flower sheds its fragrance like a censer:the violin quivers, a heart thats suffering:languorous dizziness, Melancholy dancing!the sky is lovely, sad like a huge altar.The violin quivers, a heart thats suffering:a heart, hating the vast black void, so tender!the sky is lovely, sad like a huge altar:the sun is drowned, in its own blood congealing.A heart, hating the vast black void, so tender:each trace of the luminous past its gathering!The sun is drowned, in its own blood congealingA vessel of the host, your memory shines there.
Charles Baudelaire
Canzone IV.
Si è debile il filo a cui s' attene.HE GRIEVES IN ABSENCE FROM LAURA. The thread on which my weary life dependsSo fragile is and weak,If none kind succour lends,Soon 'neath the painful burden will it break;Since doom'd to take my sad farewell of her,In whom begins and endsMy bliss, one hope, to stirMy sinking spirit from its black despair,Whispers, "Though lost awhileThat form so dear and fair,Sad soul! the trial bear,For thee e'en yet the sun may brightly shine,And days more happy smile,Once more the lost loved treasure may be thine."This thought awhile sustains me, but againTo fail me and forsake in worse excess of pain.Time flies apace: the silent hours and swiftSo urge his journey on,
Francesco Petrarca
Ghazal Of Sayyid Ahmad
My heart is torn by the tyranny of women very quietly;Day and night my tears are wearing away my cheeks very quietly.Life is a red thing like the sun setting very quietly;Setting quickly and heavily and very quietly.If you are to buy heaven by a good deed, to-day the market is open;To-morrow is a day when no man buys,And the caravan is broken up very quietly.The kings are laughing and the slaves are laughing; but for your sakeSayyid Ahmad is walking and mourning very quietly.From the Pus'hto (Afghans, nineteenth century).
Edward Powys Mathers
The Misanthrope Reclaimed - ACT II.
The verge of Creation. Enter Werner and Spirit.Werner.We have outtravelled light and sound:The harmonies that pealed around us, asThrough yon array of dim and distant worldsWe winged our flight, have wholly died away,Or come to us so faintly echoed, thatOur ears must watch and wait to catch them.Those stars are now like watch-fires, which though seenBlazing afar, send not their light to makeThe path of the benighted wandererMore plain and cheerful.Before us stretches one vast field of gloom,So dense as to appear impenetrable: -Darkness, that has a body and a form,Both palpable to touch and sight, acrossOur path a barrier rears that seems to barOur farther progress. If there be, beyondThis wall of blackness, aught of myst...
George W. Sands
The Brightness
Away, away--Through that strange void and vastBrimmed with dying day;Away,So that I feelOnly the windOf the world's swift-rolling wheel.See what a mazeOf whirling rays!The sharp windWeakens; the airIs but thin air,Not fume and flying fire....O, heart's desire,Now thou art stillAnd the air chill.And but a stemOf clear cold lightShines in this stony dark.Farewell, world of sense,Too fair, too fairTo be so false!Hence, henceRosy memories,Delight of ears, hands, eyes.RiseWhen I bid, O thouTide of the dark,Whelming the pale last,Reflection of that vastToo-fair deceit.Ah, sweetTo miss the vexing heatOf the heart's desire:Only ...
John Frederick Freeman
Memory-Bells.
Up from the spirit-depths ringing, Softly your melody swells,Sweet as a seraphim's singing, Tender-toned memory-bells! The laughter of childhood, The song of the wildwood,The tinkle of streams through the echoing dell, The voice of a mother, The shout of a brother.Up from life's morning melodiously swell.Up from the spirit-depths ringing Richly your melody swells,Sweet reminiscences bringing, Joyous-toned memory-bells! - Youth's beautiful bowers, Her dew-spangled flowers,The pictures which Hope of futurity drew, - Love's rapturous vision Of regions Elysian,In glowing perspect...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
The Maiden's Lament.
The clouds fast gather, The forest-oaks roarA maiden is sitting Beside the green shore,The billows are breaking with might, with might,And she sighs aloud in the darkling night,Her eyelid heavy with weeping."My heart's dead within me, The world is a void;To the wish it gives nothing, Each hope is destroyed.I have tasted the fulness of bliss belowI have lived, I have loved, Thy child, oh take now,Thou Holy One, into Thy keeping!""In vain is thy sorrow, In vain thy tears fall,For the dead from their slumbers They ne'er can recall;Yet if aught can pour comfort and balm in thy heart,Now that love its sweet pleasures no more can impart,Speak thy wish, and thou granted shalt find it!""...
Friedrich Schiller
The Destruction Of Babylon.
An awful vision floats before my sight,Black as the storm and fearful as the night:Thy fall, oh Babylon!--the awful doomPronounced by Heaven to hurl thee to the tomb,Peals in prophetic thunder in mine ear--The voice of God foretelling ruin near! Hark! what strange murmurs from the hills arise,Like rushing torrents from the bursting skies!Loud as the billows of the restless tide,In strange confusion flowing far and wide,Ring the deep tones of horror and dismay,The shriek--the shout--the battle's stern array--The gathering cry of nations from afar--The tramp of steeds--the tumult of the war--Burst on mine ear, and o'er thy fated towersHovers despair, and fierce destruction lowers;Within the fire--without the vengeful sword;Who lead...
Susanna Moodie
The Death Of Regret
I opened my shutter at sunrise, And looked at the hill hard by,And I heartily grieved for the comrade Who wandered up there to die.I let in the morn on the morrow, And failed not to think of him then,As he trod up that rise in the twilight, And never came down again.I undid the shutter a week thence, But not until after I'd turnedDid I call back his last departure By the upland there discerned.Uncovering the casement long later, I bent to my toil till the gray,When I said to myself, "Ah what ails me, To forget him all the day!"As daily I flung back the shutter In the same blank bald routine,He scarcely once rose to remembrance Through a month of my facing the scene.
Thomas Hardy
Absence
How shall I cheat the heavy hours, of theeDeprived, of thy kind looks and converse sweet,Now that the waving grove the dark storms beat,And wintry winds sad sounding o'er the lea,[1]Scatter the sallow leaf! I would believe,Thou, at this hour, with tearful tendernessDost muse on absent images, and pressIn thought my hand, and say: Oh do not grieve,Friend of my heart! at wayward fortune's power;One day we shall be happy, and each hourOf pain forget, cheered by the summer ray.These thoughts beguile my sorrow for thy loss,And, as the aged pines their dark heads toss,Oft steal the sense of solitude away.So am I sadly soothed, yet do I castA wishful glance upon the seasons past,And think how different was the happy tide,When thou, wi...
William Lisle Bowles
The Parting
She passed the thorn-trees, whose gaunt branches tossedTheir spider-shadows round her; and the breeze,Beneath the ashen moon, was full of frost,And mouthed and mumbled to the sickly trees,Like some starved hag who sees her children freeze.Dry-eyed she waited by the sycamore.Some stars made misty blotches in the sky.And all the wretched willows on the shoreLooked faded as a jaundiced cheek or eye.She felt their pity and could only sigh.And then his skiff ground on the river rocks.Whistling he came into the shadow madeBy that dead tree. He kissed her dark brown locks;And round her form his eager arms were laid.Passive she stood, her secret unbetrayed.And then she spoke, while still his greeting kissAched in her hair. She did not...
Madison Julius Cawein