Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 31 of 206
Previous
Next
Song Of Yoomy
Departed the pride, and the glory of Mardi:The vaunt of her isles sleeps deep in the sea,That rolls o'er his corse with a hush,His warriors bend over their spears,His sisters gaze upward and mourn.Weep, weep, for Adondo is dead!The sun has gone down in a shower;Buried in clouds the face of the moon;Tears stand in the eyes of the starry skies,And stand in the eyes of the flowers;And streams of tears are the trickling brooks,Coursing adown the mountains.--Departed the pride, and the glory of Mardi:The vaunt of her isles sleeps deep in the sea.Fast falls the small rain on its bosom that sobs,--Not showers of rain, but the tears of Oro.
Herman Melville
Verses By Lady Geralda
Why, when I hear the stormy breathOf the wild winter windRushing o'er the mountain heath,Does sadness fill my mind?For long ago I loved to lieUpon the pathless moor,To hear the wild wind rushing byWith never ceasing roar;Its sound was music then to me;Its wild and lofty voiceMade by heart beat exultinglyAnd my whole soul rejoice.But now, how different is the sound?It takes another tone,And howls along the barren groundWith melancholy moan.Why does the warm light of the sunNo longer cheer my eyes?And why is all the beauty goneFrom rosy morning skies?Beneath this lone and dreary hillThere is a lovely vale;The purling of a crystal rill,The sighing of the gale,The s...
Anne Bronte
Prayer
Let me not know how sins and sorrows glideAlong the sombre city of our rage,Or why the sons of men are heavy-eyed.Let me not know, except from printed page,The pain of litter love, of baffled pride,Or sickness shadowing with a long presage.Let me not know, since happy some have diedQuickly in youth or quietly in age,How faint, how loud the bravest hearts have cried.
James Elroy Flecker
The Song of Arda
Low as a lute, my love, beneath the callOf storm, I hear a melancholy wind;The memorably mournful wind of yoreWhich is the very brother of the oneThat wanders, like a hermit, by the moundOf Death, in lone Annatanam. A songWas shaped for this, what time we heard outsideThe gentle falling of the faded leafIn quiet noons: a song whose theme doth turnOn gaps of Ruin and the gay-green cliftsBeneath the summits haunted by the moon.Yea, much it travels to the dens of dole;And in the midst of this strange rhyme, my lords,Our Desolation like a phantom sitsWith wasted cheeks and eyes that cannot weepAnd fastened lips crampt up in marvellous pain.A song in whose voice is the voice of the foamAnd the rhyme of the wintering wave,And the to...
Henry Kendall
For Others.
Weeping for another's woe,Tears flow then that would not flowWhen our sorrow was our own,And the deadly, stiffening blowWas upon our own heart givenIn the moments that have flown!Cringing at another's cryIn the hollow world of griefStills the anguish of our painFor the fate that made us dieTo our hopes as sweet as vain;And our tears can flow again!One storm blows the night this way,But another brings the day.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Far, Far Away Is Mirth Withdrawn
Far, far away is mirth withdrawn'Tis three long hours before the mornAnd I watch lonely, drearilySo come thou shade commune with meDeserted one! thy corpse lies coldAnd mingled with a foreign mouldYear after year the grass grows greenAbove the dust where thou hast been.I will not name thy blighted nameTarnished by unforgotton shameThough not because my bosom tornJoins the mad world in all its scornThy phantom face is dark with woeTears have left ghastly traces there,Those ceaseless tears! I wish their flowCould quench thy wild despair.They deluge my heart like the rainOn cursed Gomorrah's howling plainYet when I hear thy foes derideI must cling closely to thy sideOur mutual foes, they will n...
Emily Bronte
To A Shade
If you have revisited the town, thin Shade,Whether to look upon your monument(I wonder if the builder has been paid)Or happier thoughted when the day is spentTo drink of that salt breath out of the seaWhen grey gulls flit about instead of men,And the gaunt houses put on majesty:Let these content you and be gone again;For they are at their old tricks yet.A manOf your own passionate serving kind who had broughtIn his full hands what, had they only known,Had given their childrens children loftier thought,Sweeter emotion, working in their veinsLike gentle blood, has been driven from the place,And insult heaped upon him for his painsAnd for his open-handedness, disgrace;An old foul mouth that slandered you had setThe pack upon him.
William Butler Yeats
Sonnet XCII.
Behold that Tree, in Autumn's dim decay, Stript by the frequent, chill, and eddying Wind; Where yet some yellow, lonely leaves we find Lingering and trembling on the naked spray,Twenty, perchance, for millions whirl'd away! Emblem, alas! too just, of Humankind! Vain MAN expects longevity, design'd For few indeed; and their protracted dayWhat is it worth that Wisdom does not scorn? The blasts of Sickness, Care, and Grief appal, That laid the Friends in dust, whose natal mornRose near their own; - and solemn is the call; - Yet, like those weak, deserted leaves forlorn, Shivering they cling to life, and fear to fall!
Anna Seward
Cui Bono?
A clamour by day and a whisper by night,And the Summer comes with the shining noons,With the ripple of leaves, and the passionate lightOf the falling suns and the rising moons.And the ripple of leaves and the purple and redDie for the grapes and the gleam of the wheat,And then you may pause with the splendours, or treadOn the yellow of Autumn with lingering feet.You may halt with the face to a flying sea,Or stand like a gloom in the gloom of things,When the moon drops down and the desolate leaIs troubled with thunder and desolate wings.But alas for the grey of the wintering eves,And the pondering storms and the ruin of rains;And alas for the Spring like a flame in the leaves,And the green of the woods and the gold of the lanes!
Song.
Once as the aureole Day left the earth, Faded, a twilight soul, Memory, had birth:Young were her sister souls, Sorrow and Mirth. Dark mirrors are her eyes: Wherein who gaze See wan effulgencies Flicker and blaze -Lorn fleeting shadows of beautiful days. Scan those deep mirrors well After long years: Lo! what aforetime fell In rain of tears,In radiant glamour-mist now reappears. See old wild gladness Tamed now and coy; Grief that was madness Turned into joy.Fate cannot harr...
Thomas Runciman
Despair.
We catch a glimpse of it, gaunt and gray, When the golden sunbeams are all abroad; We sober a moment, then softly say: The world still lies in the hand of God. We watch it stealthily creeping o'er The threshold leading to somebody's soul; A shadow, we cry, it cannot be more When faith is one's portion and Heaven one's goal. A ghost that comes stealing its way along, Affrighting the weak with its gruesome air, But who that is young and glad and strong Fears for a moment to meet Despair? To this heart of ours we have thought so bold All uninvited it comes one day - Lo! faith grows wan, and love grows cold, And the heaven of our dreams lies far away.
Jean Blewett
Sonnet LXXIII. Translation.
He who a tender long-lov'd Wife survives, Sees himself sunder'd from the only mind Whose hopes, and fears, and interests, were combin'd, And blended with his own. - No more she lives!No more, alas! her death-numb'd ear receives His thoughts, that trace the Past, or anxious wind The Future's darkling maze! - His wish refin'd, The wish to please, exists no more, that givesThe will its energy, the nerves their tone! - He feels the texture of his quiet torn, And stopt the settled course that Action drew;Life stands suspended - motionless - till thrown By outward causes, into channels new; - But, in the dread suspense, how sinks the Soul forlorn!
Go Back
When winds of March by the springtime bidden Over the great earth race and shout,Forth from my breast where it long hath hidden My same old sorrow comes creeping out.I think each winter -its life is ended, For it makes no stir while the snows lie deep.I say to myself, 'Its soul has blended Into the past where it lay asleep.'But as soon as the sun, like some fond lover, Smiles and kisses the earth's round cheeks,This sad, sad sorrow throws off its cover, And out of the depths of its anguish, speaks.In every bud by the wayside springing It finds a sword for its half-healed wounds;In every note that the thrush is singing It hears the saddest of minor sounds.In the cup of gold that the sun is spilling...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Fame.
Oh ye! who all life's energies combineThe fadeless laurel round your brows to twine,Pause but one moment in your brief career,Nor seek for glory in a mortal sphere.Can figures traced upon the shifting sandWashed by the mighty tide, its force withstand?Time's stern resistless torrent onward flows,The restless waves above your labours close,And He who bids the bounding billows rollSweeps out the feeble record from the soul. The glorious hues that flush the evening skyMelt into night, and on her bosom die;Through the wide fields of heaven's immensityThe gold-tipped billows of that crimson seaFlash on the awe-struck gazer's dazzled sight,The rich out-gushings from the fount of light;Yet oft, concealed beneath that splendid form,We ha...
Susanna Moodie
Second Song (Three Songs of Zahir-u-Din)
How much I loved that way you hadOf smiling most, when very sad,A smile which carried tender hints Of delicate tints And warbling birds, Of sun and spring,And yet, more than all other thing,Of Weariness beyond all Words!None other ever smiled that way, None that I know, -The essence of all Gaiety lay,Of all mad mirth that men may know,In that sad smile, serene and slow,That on your lips was wont to play.It needed many delicate linesAnd subtle curves and roseate tintsTo make that weary radiant smile;It flickered, as beneath the vinesThe sunshine through green shadow glintsOn the pale path that lies below,Flickered and flashed, and died away,But the strange thoughts it woke meanwhile ...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Early Sorrows.
Full many a sharp, sad, unexpected thornFinds room to wound Life's lacerated flower,Which subtle fate, to every mortal born,Guides unprevented in an early hour.Ah, cruel thorns, too soon I felt your power;Your throbbing shoots of never-ceasing painHope's blossoms in their bud did long devour,And left continued my sad eyes to strainOn wilder'd spots chok'd up with Sorrow's weeds,Alas, that's shaken but too many seedsTo leave me room for Hopes to bud again.But Fate may torture, while it is decreed,Where all my hope's unblighted blooms remain,That Heaven's recompense shall this succeed.
John Clare
Whene'er I See Those Smiling Eyes.
Whene'er I see those smiling eyes, So full of hope, and joy, and light,As if no cloud could ever rise, To dim a heaven so purely bright--I sigh to think how soon that brow In grief may lose its every ray,And that light heart, so joyous now, Almost forget it once was gay.For time will come with all its blights, The ruined hope, the friend unkind,And love, that leaves, where'er it lights, A chilled or burning heart behind:--While youth, that now like snow appears, Ere sullied by the darkening rain,When once 'tis touched by sorrow's tears Can ever shine so bright again.
Thomas Moore
Moods
I am the still rain falling,Too tired for singing mirth,Oh, be the green fields calling,Oh, be for me the earth!I am the brown bird piningTo leave the nest and fly,Oh, be the fresh cloud shining,Oh, be for me the sky!
Sara Teasdale