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For Ever.
The happiness that man, whilst prison'd here,Is wont with heavenly rapture to compare,The harmony of Truth, from wavering clear,Of Friendship that is free from doubting care,The light which in stray thoughts alone can cheerThe wise, the bard alone in visions fair,In my best hours I found in her all this,And made mine own, to mine exceeding bliss.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Wishes (Prose Fable)
When the Great Mogul held empire, there were certain little sprites who used to undertake all sorts of tasks helpful to mankind. They would do housework, stable-work, and even gardening. But if one interfered with them, all would be spoilt.One of these friendly sprites cultivated the garden of a worthy family living near the Ganges. His duties were performed deftly and noiselessly. He loved not only his master and mistress, but the garden also. Possibly the zephyrs, who are said to be friends of the sprites, helped him in his tasks. At any rate he did his very best, and never ceased in his efforts to load his hosts with every pleasure. To prove his zeal he would have stayed with these people for ever, in spite of the natural propensity of his kind for waywardness. But his mischievous fellow-sprites fell to plotting. They induc...
Jean de La Fontaine
The Happy Change.
How blest thy creature is, O God,When, with a single eye,He views the lustre of thy word,The dayspring from on high!Through all the storms that veil the skies,And frown on earthly things,The Sun of Righteousness he eyes,With healing on his wings.Struck by that light, the human heart,A barren soil no more,Sends the sweet smell of grace abroad,Where serpents lurkd before.[1]The soul a dreary province onceOf Satans dark domain,Feels a new empire formd within,And owns a heavenly reign.The glorious orb, whose golden beamsThe fruitful year control,Since first, obedient to thy word,He started from the goal;Has cheerd the nations with the joysHis or...
William Cowper
Apportionment.
How often in our search for joy belowHoping for happiness we chance on woe.
Madison Julius Cawein
Eudaemon
O happiness, I know not what far seas,Blue hills and deep, thy sunny realms surround,That thus in Music's wistful harmoniesAnd concert of sweet soundA rumor steals, from some uncertain shore,Of lovely things outworn or gladness yet in store:Whether thy beams be pitiful and come,Across the sundering of vanished years,From childhood and the happy fields of home,Like eyes instinct with tearsFelt through green brakes of hedge and apple-boughRound haunts delightful once, desert and silent now;Or yet if prescience of unrealized loveStartle the breast with each melodious air,And gifts that gentle hands are donors ofStill wait intact somewhere,Furled up all golden in a perfumed placeWithin the folded petals of forthcoming days.<...
Alan Seeger
Joy
What were this life without her?Joy, whose young face is sweetWith dreams that flit about her,And rapture wild of feet!With hope, that knows no languor,And love, that knows no sighs,And mirth, like some rich anger,High-sparkling in her eyes.Come! bid adieu to Sorrow;And arm in arm with Joy,We 'll journey towards Tomorrow,And let no Care decoyOur souls from all clean Pleasures,That take from Time's lean handThe hour-glass he treasures,And change to gold its sand.
The House Of Life
All wondering, and eager-eyed, within her porticoI made my plea to Hostess Life, one morning long ago."Pray show me this great house of thine, nor close a single door;But let me wander where I will, and climb from floor to floor!For many rooms, and curious things, and treasures great and smallWithin your spacious mansion lie, and I would see them all."Then Hostess Life turned silently, her searching gaze on me,And with no word, she reached her hand, and offered up the key.It opened first the door of Hope, and long I lingered there,Until I spied the room of Dreams, just higher by a stair.And then a door whereon the one word "Happiness" was writ;But when I tried the little key I could not make it fit.It turned the lock of Pleasure's r...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Calm After Storm.
The storm hath passed; I hear the birds rejoice; the hen, Returned into the road again, Her cheerful notes repeats. The sky serene Is, in the west, upon the mountain seen: The country smiles; bright runs the silver stream. Each heart is cheered; on every side revive The sounds, the labors of the busy hive. The workman gazes at the watery sky, As standing at the door he sings, His work in hand; the little wife goes forth, And in her pail the gathered rain-drops brings; The vendor of his wares, from lane to lane, Begins his daily cry again. The sun returns, and with his smile illumes The villas on the neighboring hills; Through open terraces and balconies, The genial light pervades the ...
Giacomo Leopardi
Try a Smile.
This world's full o' trubbles fowk say, but aw daat it,Yo'll find as mich pleasure as pain;Some grummel at times when they might do withaat it,An oft withaat reason complain.A fraan on a face nivver adds to its beauty,Then let us forget for a whileTheas small disappointments, an mak it a duty,To try the effect ov a smile.Though the sun may be claaded he'll shine aght agean,If we nobbut have patience an wait,An its sewer to luk breeter for th' shadda ther's been;Then let's banish all fooilish consait,If we'd nivver noa sorrow joys on us wod pall,Soa awr hearts let us all reconcileTo tak things as they come, makkin th' best on 'em all,An cheer up a faint heart wi' a smile.
John Hartley
Satisfaction For Suffering
For all our works a recompence is sure;'Tis sweet to think on what was hard t'endure.
Robert Herrick
Compensation.
For each ecstatic instantWe must an anguish payIn keen and quivering ratioTo the ecstasy.For each beloved hourSharp pittances of years,Bitter contested farthingsAnd coffers heaped with tears.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Life's Joys.
I have been pondering what our teachers call The mystery of Pain; and lo! my thought After it's half-blind reaching out has caughtThis truth and held it fast. We may not fall Beyond our mounting; stung by life's annoy, Deeper we feel the mystery of Joy.Sometimes they steal across us like a breath Of Eastern perfume in a darkened room, These joys of ours; we grope on through the gloomSeeking some common thing, and from its sheath Unloose, unknowing, some bewildering scent Of spice-thronged memories of the Orient.Sometimes they dart across our turbid sky Like a quick flash after a heated day. A moment, where the sombrous shadows layWe see a glory. Though it passed us by No earthly power can filch that ...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Smiles.
There is the warm, congenial smile, Benign, and honest, too,Free from deception, fraud, and guile; The smile of friendship true.There is the smile most fair to see,Which wreathes the modest glanceOf spotless maiden purity; The smile of innocence.There is the smile of woman's love, That potent, siren spell,Which uplifts men to heaven above, Or lures them down to hell!There is the vain, derisive smile, Of cynical conceit;The drunken leer, the grimace vile, Of lives with crime replete.There is the smile of vacancy, Expressionless, we findOn idiot physiognomy, The vacuum of a mind.There is a smile, which more than tears Or language can express;The grim d...
Alfred Castner King
Few Fortunate.
Many we are, and yet but few possessThose fields of everlasting happiness.
Happiness And Vision.
TOGETHER at the altar weIn vision oft were seen by thee,Thyself as bride, as bridegroom I.Oft from thy mouth full many a kissIn an unguarded hour of blissI then would steal, while none were by.The purest rapture we then knew,The joy those happy hours gave too,When tasted, fled, as time fleets on.What now avails my joy to me?Like dreams the warmest kisses flee,Like kisses, soon all joys are gone.
Attainment
Use all your hidden forces. Do not missThe purpose of this life, and do not waitFor circumstance to mould or change your fate;In your own self lies Destiny. Let thisVast truth cast out all fear, all prejudice,All hesitation. Know that you are great,Great with divinity. So dominateEnvironment, and enter into bliss.Love largely and hate nothing. Hold no aimThat does not chord with universal good.Hear what the voices of the Silence say -All joys are yours if you put forth your claim.Once let the spiritual laws be understood,Material things must answer and obey.
Character Of The Happy Warrior
Who is the happy Warrior? Who is heThat every man in arms should wish to be?It is the generous Spirit, who, when broughtAmong the tasks of real life, hath wroughtUpon the plan that pleased his boyish thought:Whose high endeavours are an inward lightThat makes the path before him always bright;Who, with a natural instinct to discernWhat knowledge can perform, is diligent to learn;Abides by this resolve, and stops not there,But makes his moral being his prime care;Who, doomed to go in company with Pain,And Fear, and Bloodshed, miserable train!Turns his necessity to glorious gain;In face of these doth exercise a powerWhich is our human natures highest dower:Controls them and subdues, transmutes, bereavesOf their bad influence, and their goo...
William Wordsworth
Passing Events.
Passing events, - tell, what are they I pray?Are they some novelty? - Nay, nay, nay!Ever since the world its course began,Since the breath of life was breathed into man,Still rolling on with the wane of time,Through every nation, in every clime;In every spot where man has his home,Ever they long for events to come.Hours or days or years it may be,Before hopes realization they see;And no sooner it comes than it hastes away,And others rush after no longer to stay.And there scarcely is time to know its in sight,E'er its found to be leaving with marvellous flight,And what had been longed for with eager intent,Is chronicled but as a passing event.Hope's joys are uncertain; - anxiety rules,Expectancy's paradise, peopled by fools;