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Love, Hope, Desire, And Fear.
And many there were hurt by that strong boy,His name, they said, was Pleasure,And near him stood, glorious beyond measureFour Ladies who possess all emperyIn earth and air and sea,Nothing that lives from their award is free.Their names will I declare to thee,Love, Hope, Desire, and Fear,And they the regents areOf the four elements that frame the heart,And each diversely exercised her artBy force or circumstance or sleightTo prove her dreadful mightUpon that poor domain.Desire presented her [false] glass, and thenThe spirit dwelling thereWas spellbound to embrace what seemed so fairWithin that magic mirror,And dazed by that bright error,It would have scorned the [shafts] of the avengerAnd death, and penitence, and danger,...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Dirge
CONCORD, 1838I reached the middle of the mountUp which the incarnate soul must climb,And paused for them, and looked around,With me who walked through space and time.Five rosy boys with morning lightHad leaped from one fair mother's arms,Fronted the sun with hope as bright,And greeted God with childhood's psalms.Knows he who tills this lonely fieldTo reap its scanty corn,What mystic fruit his acres yieldAt midnight and at morn?In the long sunny afternoonThe plain was full of ghosts;I wandered up, I wandered down,Beset by pensive hosts.The winding Concord gleamed below,Pouring as wide a floodAs when my brothers, long ago,Came with me to the wood.But they are gone,--the holy ...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Sonnet - To An Octogenarian
Affections lose their object; Time brings forthNo successors; and, lodged in memory,If love exist no longer, it must die,Wanting accustomed food, must pass from earth,Or never hope to reach a second birth.This sad belief, the happiest that is leftTo thousands, share not Thou; howe'er bereft,Scorned, or neglected, fear not such a dearth.Though poor and destitute of friends thou art,Perhaps the sole survivor of thy race,One to whom Heaven assigns that mournful partThe utmost solitude of age to face,Still shall be left some corner of the heartWhere Love for living Thing can find a place.
William Wordsworth
Consolation
O but there is wisdomIn what the sages said;But stretch that body for a whileAnd lay down that headTill I have told the sagesWhere man is comforted.How could passion run so deepHad I never thoughtThat the crime of being bornBlackens all our lot?But where the crime's committedThe crime can be forgot.
William Butler Yeats
The Chamber Over The Gate
Is it so far from theeThou canst no longer see,In the Chamber over the Gate,That old man desolate,Weeping and wailing soreFor his son, who is no more? O Absalom, my son!Is it so long agoThat cry of human woeFrom the walled city came,Calling on his dear name,That it has died awayIn the distance of to-day? O Absalom, my son!There is no far or near,There is neither there nor here,There is neither soon nor late,In that Chamber over the Gate,Nor any long agoTo that cry of human woe, O Absalom, my son!From the ages that are pastThe voice sounds like a blast,Over seas that wreck and drown,Over tumult of traffic and town;And from ages yet to beCome the echoes back to...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Hopeless.
I think through the long, long evenings,Such thoughts of intensest pain,And I hope and watch for her coming,But I hope and watch in vain,My life is a long, long journeyOver a barren moor,With nought but my own dark shadowHastening on before.I'm weary of all this watching,Aweary of life and thought;For there's little hope in the distance,And for peace - I know it not!Oh, why must we think and shudder,And shudder and think again?When life's but a dance of shadowsHaunting a barren plain!
Charles Sangster
Michael Robartes Bids His Beloved Be At Peace
I hear the Shadowy Horses, their long manes a-shake,Their hoofs heavy with tumult, their eyes glimmering white;The North unfolds above them clinging, creeping night,The East her hidden joy before the morning break,The West weeps in pale dew and sighs passing away,The South is pouring down roses of crimson fire:O vanity of Sleep, Hope, Dream, endless Desire,The Horses of Disaster plunge in the heavy clay:Beloved, let your eyes half close, and your heart beatOver my heart, and your hair fall over my breast,Drowning loves lonely hour in deep twilight of rest,And hiding their tossing manes and their tumultuous feet.
Memories.
Here where LOVE lies perishèd,Look not in upon the dead;Lest the shadowy curtains, shakenIn my Heart's dark chamber, wakenGhosts, beneath whose garb of sorrowWhilom gladness bows his head:When you come at morn to-morrow,Look not in upon the dead,Here where LOVE lies perishèd.Here where LOVE lies cold interred,Let no syllable be heard;Lest the hollow echoes, housingIn my Soul's deep tomb, arousingWake a voice of woe, once laughterClaimed and clothed in joy's own word:When you come at dusk or after,Let no syllable be heard,Here where LOVE lies cold interred.
Madison Julius Cawein
Peace.
An angel spoke with me, and lo, he hoardedMy falling tears to cheer a flower's face!For, so it seems, in all the heavenly spaceA wasted grief was never yet recorded.Victorious calm those holy tones affordedUnto my soul, whose outcry, in disgrace,Changed to low music, leading to the placeWhere, though well armed, with futile end awarded,My past lay dead. "Wars are of earth!" he cried;"Endurance only breathes immortal air.Courage eternal, by a world defied,Still wears the front of patience, smooth and fair."Are wars so futile, and is courage peace?Take, then, my soul, thus gently thy release!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
A Morning Walk
"Lie there," I said, "my Sorrow! lie thou there!And I will drink the lissome air,And see if yet the heavens have gained their blue."Then rose my Sorrow as an aged man,And stared, as such a one will stare,A querulous doubt through tears that freshly ran;Wherefore I said: "Content! thou shalt go too."So went we throughthe sunlit crocus-glade,I and my Sorrow, casting shadeOn all the innocent things that upward pree,And coax for smiles: but, as I went, I bowed,And whispered "Be no whit afraid!He will pass sad and gentle as a cloud,It is my Sorrow leave him unto meAnd every floweret in that happy placeYearned up into the weary faceWith pitying love, and held its golden breath,Regardless seeming he, as though withinWas not...
Thomas Edward Brown
The Village Street
In these rapid, restless shadows,Once I walked at eventide,When a gentle, silent maiden,Walked in beauty at my sideShe alone there walked beside meAll in beauty, like a bride.Pallidly the moon was shiningOn the dewy meadows nigh;On the silvery, silent rivers,On the mountains far and highOn the oceans star-lit waters,Where the winds a-weary die.Slowly, silently we wanderedFrom the open cottage door,Underneath the elms long branchesTo the pavement bending oer;Underneath the mossy willowAnd the dying sycamore.With the myriad stars in beautyAll bedight, the heavens were seen,Radiant hopes were bright around me,Like the light of stars serene;Like the mellow midnight splendorOf the Night...
Abijah Ide
The Admonition.
Seest thou those diamonds which she wearsIn that rich carcanet;Or those, on her dishevell'd hairs,Fair pearls in order set?Believe, young man, all those were tearsBy wretched wooers sent,In mournful hyacinths and rue,That figure discontent;Which when not warmed by her view,By cold neglect, each oneCongeal'd to pearl and stone;Which precious spoils upon herShe wears as trophies of her honour.Ah then, consider, what all this implies:She that will wear thy tears would wear thine eyes.
Robert Herrick
Her Going. - Suggested By A Picture.
She stood in the open door,She blessed them faint and low:"I must go," she said, "must goAway from the light of the sun,Away from you, every one;Must see your eyes no more,--Your eyes, that love me so."I should not shudder thus,Nor weep, nor be afraid.Nor cling to you so dismayed,Could I only pierce with ray eyesWhere the dark, dark shadow lies;Where something hideousIs hiding, perhaps," she said.Then slowly she went from them,Went down the staircase grim,With trembling heart and limb;Her footfalls echoedIn the silence vast and dead,Like the notes of a requiem,Not sung, but uttered.For a little way and a blackShe groped as grope the blind,Then a sudden radiance shined,And a visio...
Susan Coolidge
Eurydice.
Oh come, Eurydice!The Stygian deeps are pastWell-nigh; the light dawns fast.Oh come, Eurydice!The gods have heard my song!My love's despairing cryFilled hell with melody, -And the gods heard my song.I knew no life but thee;Persephone was moved;She, too, hath lived, hath loved;She saw I lived for thee.I may not look on thee,Such was the gods' decree; -Till sun and earth we seeNo kiss, no smile for thee!The way is rough, is hard;I cannot hear thy feetSwift following; speak, my Sweet, -Is the way rough and hard?"Oh come, Eurydice!"I turn: "our woe is o'er,I will not lose thee more!"I cry: "Eurydice!"O father Hermes, help!I see her fade awayBack from the...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
A Ghost And A Dream
Rain will fall on the fading flowers,Winds will blow through the dripping tree,When Fall leads in her tattered HoursWith Death to keep them company.All night long in the weeping weather,All night long in the garden grey,A ghost and a dream will talk togetherAnd sad are the things they will have to say:Old sad things of the bough that's broken;Heartbreak things of the leaf that's dead;Old sad things no tongue hath spoken;Sorrowful things no man hath said.
Fragment. Trionfo Della Morte.
Now since nor grief nor fear was longer there,Each thought on her fair face was clear to see,Composed into the calmness of despair -Not like a flame extinguished violently,But one consuming of its proper light.Even so, in peace, serene of soul, passed she.Even as a lamp, so lucid, softly-bright,Whose sustenance doth fail by slow degrees,Wearing unto the end, its wonted plight.Not pale, but whiter than the snow one seesFlaking a hillside through the windless air.Like one o'erwearied, she reposed in peaceAs 't were a sweet sleep filled each lovely eye,The soul already having fled from there.And this is what dull fools have named to die.Upon her fair face death itself seemed fair.
Emma Lazarus
Readjustment.
After the earthquake shock or lightning dartComes a recoil of silence o'er the lands,And then, with pulses hot and quivering hands,Earth calls up courage to her mighty heart,Plies every tender, compensating art,Draws her green, flowery veil above the scar,Fills the shrunk hollow, smooths the riven plain,And with a century's tendance heals againThe seams and gashes which her fairness mar.So we, when sudden woe like lightning sped,Finds us and smites us in our guarded place,After one brief, bewildered moment's space,By the same heavenly instinct taught and led,Adjust our lives to loss, make friends with pain,Bind all our shattered hopes and bid them bloom again.
Comfort Ye, Comfort Ye My People
(Noel.)By the sad fellowship of human suffering, By the bereavements that are thine and mine,I venture--oh, forgive me!--with this offering, I would it were to thee God's oil and wineI too have suffered--is it then surprising If to thy sacred grief I enter in?My spirit draws near thine all sympathising, Sorrow, like love, "makes aliens near of kin."Thou'rt weeping for thy gathered blossoms, mother, The Lord had need of him, and called him soon,In morning freshness ere the dews of heaven Were chased before the burning rays of noon.Thy darling child, like to God's summer blossom, Was very fair and pleasant to the sight,The sunny head that rested on thy bosom, The loving eyes that were thy hear...
Nora Pembroke