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Happy the feeling from the bosom thrownIn perfect shape (whose beauty Time shall spareThough a breath made it) like a bubble blownFor summer pastime into wanton air;Happy the thought best likened to a stoneOf the sea-beach, when, polished with nice care,Veins it discovers exquisite and rare,Which for the loss of that moist gleam atoneThat tempted first to gather it. That here,O chief of Friends! such feelings I present,To thy regard, with thoughts so fortunate,Were a vain notion; but the hope is dear,That thou, if not with partial joy elate,Wilt smile upon this gift with more than mild content!
William Wordsworth
Enchantment.
The deep seclusion of this forest path,O'er which the green boughs weave a canopy,Along which bluet and anemoneSpread a dim carpet; where the twilight hathHer dark abode; and, sweet as aftermath,Wood-fragrance breathes, has so enchanted me,That yonder blossoming bramble seems to beSome sylvan resting, rosy from her bath:Has so enspelled me with tradition's dreams,That every foam-white stream that twinkling flows,And every bird that flutters wings of tan,Or warbles hidden, to my fancy seemsA Naiad dancing to a Faun who blowsWild woodland music on the pipes of Pan.
Madison Julius Cawein
Putrefaction.
Putrefaction is the endOf all that nature doth intend.
Robert Herrick
The Rainbow
My heart leaps up when I beholdA Rainbow in the sky:So was it when my life began;So is it now I am a man;So be it when I shall grow old,Or let me die!The Child is father of the man;And I wish my days to beBound each to each by natural piety.
The Flitting
I've left my own old home of homes,Green fields and every pleasant place;The summer like a stranger comes,I pause and hardly know her face.I miss the hazel's happy green,The blue bell's quiet hanging blooms,Where envy's sneer was never seen,Where staring malice never comes.I miss the heath, its yellow furze,Molehills and rabbit tracks that leadThrough beesom, ling, and teazel burrsThat spread a wilderness indeed;The woodland oaks and all belowThat their white powdered branches shield,The mossy paths: the very crowCroaks music in my native field.I sit me in my corner chairThat seems to feel itself from home,And hear bird music here and thereFrom hawthorn hedge and orchard come;I hear, but all is strange and ne...
John Clare
Upon The Sight Of A Beautiful Picture Painted By Sir G. H. Beaumont, Bart
Praised be the Art whose subtle power could stayYon cloud, and fix it in that glorious shape;Nor would permit the thin smoke to escape,Nor those bright sunbeams to forsake the day;Which stopped that band of travellers on their way,Ere they were lost within the shady wood;And showed the Bark upon the glassy floodFor ever anchored in her sheltering bay.Soul-soothing Art! whom Morning, Noontide, Even,Do serve with all their changeful pageantry;Thou, with ambition modest yet sublime,Here, for the sight of mortal man, hast givenTo one brief moment caught from fleeting timeThe appropriate calm of blest eternity.
Titian
Would that such hills and cities round us sang, Such vistas of the actual earth and man As kindled Titian when his life began; Would that this latter Greek could put his gold, Wisdom and splendor in our brushes bold Till Greece and Venice, children of the sun, Become our every-day, and we aspire To colors fairer far, and glories higher.
Vachel Lindsay
The Longest Day
Let us quit the leafy arbor,And the torrent murmuring by;For the sun is in his harbor,Weary of the open sky.Evening now unbinds the fettersFashioned by the glowing light;All that breathe are thankful debtorsTo the harbinger of night.Yet by some grave thoughts attendedEve renews her calm career;For the day that now is ended,Is the longest of the year.Dora! sport, as now thou sportest,On this platform, light and free;Take thy bliss, while longest, shortest,Are indifferent to thee!Who would check the happy feelingThat inspires the linnet's song?Who would stop the swallow, wheelingOn her pinions swift and strong?Yet at this impressive season,Words which tenderness can speakFrom the t...
Earth The Healer, Earth The Keeper.
So swift the hours are movingUnto the time un-proved:Farewell my love unloving,Farewell my love beloved!What! are we not glad-hearted?Is there no deed to do?Is not all fear departedAnd Spring-tide blossomed new?The sails swell out above us,The sea-ridge lifts the keel;For They have called who love us,Who bear the gifts that heal:A crown for him that winneth,A bed for him that fails,A glory that beginnethIn never-dying tales.Yet now the pain is endedAnd the glad hand grips the sword,Look on thy life amendedAnd deal out due award.Think of the thankless morning,The gifts of noon unused;Think of the eve of scorning,The night of prayer refused.And yet. The life be...
William Morris
Fragment Of A Mythological Hymn To Love.[1]
Blest infant of eternity! Before the day-star learned to move,In pomp of fire, along his grand career, Glancing the beamy shafts of lightFrom his rich quiver to the farthest sphere, Thou wert alone, oh Love! Nestling beneath the wings of ancient Night, Whose horrors seemed to smile in shadowing thee.No form of beauty soothed thine eye, As through the dim expanse it wandered wide;No kindred spirit caught thy sigh, As o'er the watery waste it lingering died.Unfelt the pulse, unknown the power, That latent in his heart was sleeping,--Oh Sympathy! that lonely hour Saw Love himself thy absence weeping.But look, what glory through the darkness beams!Celestial airs along the water glide:--...
Thomas Moore
The Clear Vision
I did but dream. I never knewWhat charms our sternest season wore.Was never yet the sky so blue,Was never earth so white before.Till now I never saw the glowOf sunset on yon hills of snow,And never learned the bough's designsOf beauty in its leafless lines.Did ever such a morning breakAs that my eastern windows see?Did ever such a moonlight takeWeird photographs of shrub and tree?Rang ever bells so wild and fleetThe music of the winter street?Was ever yet a sound by halfSo merry as you school-boy's laugh?O Earth! with gladness overfraught,No added charm thy face hath found;Within my heart the change is wrought,My footsteps make enchanted ground.From couch of pain and curtained roomForth to thy light and...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Consistency
Should painter attach to a fair human headThe thick, turgid neck of a stallion,Or depict a spruce lass with the tail of a bass,I am sure you would guy the rapscallion.Believe me, dear Pisos, that just such a freakIs the crude and preposterous poemWhich merely abounds in a torrent of sounds,With no depth of reason below 'em.'T is all very well to give license to art,--The wisdom of license defend I;But the line should be drawn at the fripperish spawnOf a mere cacoethes scribendi.It is too much the fashion to strain at effects,--Yes, that's what's the matter with Hannah!Our popular taste, by the tyros debased,Paints each barnyard a grove of Diana!Should a patron require you to paint a marine,Would you work in ...
Eugene Field
Influence Of Natural Objects
In Calling Forth and Strengthening the Imaginationin Boyhood and Early YouthWisdom and Spirit of the Universe!Thou Soul, that art the Eternity of thought!And giv'st to forms and images a breathAnd everlasting motion! not in vain,By day or star-light, thus from my first dawnOf childhood didst thou intertwine for meThe passions that build up our human soul,Not with the mean and vulgar works of man,But with high objects, with enduring things,With life and nature; purifying thusThe elements of feeling and of thought,And sanctifying by such disciplineBoth pain and fear, until we recognizeA grandeur in the beatings of the heart.Nor was this fellowship vouchsafed to meWith stinted kindness. In November days,When vapours rolling down ...
Dora.
A waxing moon that, crescent yet,In all its silver beauty set,And rose no more in the lonesome nightTo shed full-orbed its longed-for light.Then was it dark; on wold and lea, In home, in heart, the hours were drear.Father and mother could no light see, And the hearts trembled and there was fear.- So on the mount, Christ's chosen three,Unware that glory it did shroud,Feared when they entered into the cloud.She was the best part of love's fairAdornment, life's God-given care,As if He bade them guard His own,Who should be soon anear His throne.Dutiful, happy, and who sayWhen childhood smiles itself away,'More fair than morn shall prove the day.'Sweet souls so nigh to God that rest,How shall be bettering of your best!<...
Jean Ingelow
To Dora
"'A little onward lend thy guiding handTo these dark steps, a little further on!'"What trick of memory to 'my' voice hath broughtThis mournful iteration? For though Time,The Conqueror, crowns the Conquered, on this browPlanting his favourite silver diadem,Nor he, nor minister of his intentTo run before him hath enrolled me yet,Though not unmenaced, among those who leanUpon a living staff, with borrowed sight.O my own Dora, my beloved child!Should that day come but hark! the birds saluteThe cheerful dawn, brightening for me the east;For me, thy natural leader, once againImpatient to conduct thee, not as erstA tottering infant, with compliant stoopFrom flower to flower supported; but to curbThy nymph-like step swift-bounding o'er the lawn,<...
Recreation.
Give me a cottage embower'd in trees,Far from the press and the din of the town;There let me loiter and live at my ease,Happier far than the King with his crown.There let the music that's sweeter than wordsWaken my soul's inarticulate song,Murmur of zephyrs and warbling of birds,Babble of waters that hurry along.Under the shade of the maple and beechLet me in tranquil contentment recline,Learning what nature and solitude teach,Charming philosophy, human, divine;Finding how trivial the myriad thingsLife is concern'd with, to seek or to shun;Seeing the sources whence blessedness springs,Gathering strength for the work to be done.
W. M. MacKeracher
Sonnet CLIX.
Stiamo, Amor, a veder la gloria nostra.TO LOVE, ON LAURA WALKING ABROAD. Here stand we, Love, our glory to behold--How, passing Nature, lovely, high, and rare!Behold! what showers of sweetness falling there!What floods of light by heaven to earth unroll'd!How shine her robes, in purple, pearls, and gold,So richly wrought, with skill beyond compare!How glance her feet!--her beaming eyes how fairThrough the dark cloister which these hills enfold!The verdant turf, and flowers of thousand huesBeneath yon oak's old canopy of state,Spring round her feet to pay their amorous duty.The heavens, in joyful reverence, cannot chooseBut light up all their fires, to celebrateHer praise, whose presence charms their awful beauty.
Francesco Petrarca
The White Doe Of Rylstone, Or, The Fate Of The Nortons - Canto First
From Bolton's old monastic towerThe bells ring loud with gladsome power;The sun shines bright; the fields are gayWith people in their best arrayOf stole and doublet, hood and scarf,Along the banks of crystal Wharf,Through the Vale retired and lowly,Trooping to that summons holy.And, up among the moorlands, seeWhat sprinklings of blithe company!Of lasses and of shepherd grooms,That down the steep hills force their way,Like cattle through the budded brooms;Path, or no path, what care they?And thus in joyous mood they hieTo Bolton's mouldering Priory.What would they there? Full fifty yearsThat sumptuous Pile, with all its peers,Too harshly hath been doomed to tasteThe bitterness of wrong and waste:Its courts are ravaged; bu...