Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 33 of 206
Previous
Next
Surprise.
When the stunned soul can first lift tired eyes On her changed world of ruin, waste and wrack,Ah, what a pang of aching sharp surprise Brings all sweet memories of the lost past back,With wild self-pitying grief of one betrayed,Duped in a land of dreams where Truth is dead!Are these the heavens that she deemed were kind? Is this the world that yesterday was fair?What painted images of folk half-blind Be these who pass her by, as vague as air?What go they seeking? there is naught to find.Let them come nigh and hearken her despair.A mocking lie is all she once believed, And where her heart throbbed, is a cold dead stone.This is a doom we never preconceived, Yet now she cannot fancy it undone.Part of herse...
Emma Lazarus
I See Around Me Tombstones Grey
I see around me tombstones greyStretching their shadows far away.Beneath the turf my footsteps treadLie low and lone the silent dead,Beneath the turf, beneath the mould,Forever dark, forever cold,And my eyes cannot hold the tearsThat memory hoards from vanished yearsFor Time and Death and Mortal painGive wounds that will not heal again,Let me remember half the woeI've seen and heard and felt below,And Heaven itself, so pure and blest,Could never give my spirit rest,Sweet land of light! thy children fairKnow nought akin to our despair,Nor have they felt, nor can they tellWhat tenants haunt each mortal cell,What gloomy guests we hold within,Torments and madness, tears and sin!Well, may they live in ectasyTheir long e...
Emily Bronte
White Fog
Heaven-invading hills are drownedIn wide moving waves of mist,Phlox before my door are woundIn dripping wreaths of amethyst.Ten feet away the solid earthChanges into melting cloud,There is a hush of pain and mirth,No bird has heart to speak aloud.Here in a world without a sky,Without the ground, without the sea,The one unchanging thing is I,Myself remains to comfort me.
Sara Teasdale
Moly
When by the wall the tiger-flower swingsA head of sultry slumber and aroma;And by the path, whereon the blown rose flingsIts obsolete beauty, the long lilies foam aWhite place of perfume, like a beautiful breast -Between the pansy fire of the west,And poppy mist of moonrise in the east,This heartache will have ceased.The witchcraft of soft music and sweet sleep -Let it beguile the burthen from my spirit,And white dreams reap me as strong reapers reapThe ripened grain and full blown blossom near it;Let me behold how gladness gives the wholeThe transformed countenance of my own soul -Between the sunset and the risen moonLet sorrow vanish soon.And these things then shall keep me company:The elfins of the dew; the spirit of laught...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Paradox
I am the mother of sorrows,I am the ender of grief;I am the bud and the blossom,I am the late-falling leaf.I am thy priest and thy poet,I am thy serf and thy king;I cure the tears of the heartsick,When I come near they shall sing.White are my hands as the snowdrop;Swart are my fingers as clay;Dark is my frown as the midnight,Fair is my brow as the day.Battle and war are my minions,Doing my will as divine;I am the calmer of passions,Peace is a nursling of mine.Speak to me gently or curse me,Seek me or fly from my sight;I am thy fool in the morning,Thou art my slave in the night.Down to the grave will I take thee,Out from the noise of the strife;Then shalt thou see me and know me--...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Lines Written Amidst The Ruins Of A Church On The Coast Of Suffolk.
"What hast thou seen in the olden time, Dark ruin, lone and gray?""Full many a race from thy native clime, And the bright earth, pass away.The organ has pealed in these roofless aisles, And priests have knelt to prayAt the altar, where now the daisy smiles O'er their silent beds of clay."I've seen the strong man a wailing child, By his mother offered here;I've seen him a warrior fierce and wild; I've seen him on his bier,His warlike harness beside him laid In the silent earth to rust;His plumed helm and trusty blade To moulder into dust!"I've seen the stern reformer scorn The things once deemed divine,And the bigot's zeal with gems adorn The altar's sacred shrine.I've seen the si...
Susanna Moodie
Feroza
The evening sky was as green as Jade, As Emerald turf by Lotus lake,Behind the Kafila far she strayed, (The Pearls are lost if the Necklace break!)A lingering freshness touched the air From palm-trees, clustered around a Spring,The great, grim Desert lay vast and bare, But Youth is ever a careless thing.The Raiders threw her upon the sand, Men of the Wilderness know no laws,They tore the Amethysts off her hand, And rent the folds of her veiling gauze.They struck the lips that they might have kissed, Pitiless they to her pain and fear,And wrenched the gold from her broken wrist, No use to cry; there were none to hear.Her scarlet mouth and her onyx eyes, Her braided hair in its silken sheen...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Barcaroles.
I.Over the lapsing lagune all the dayUrging my gondola with oar-strokes light,Always beside one shadowy waterwayI pause and peer, with eager, jealous sight,Toward the Piazza where Pepita stands,Wooing the hungry pigeons from their flight.Dark the canal; but she shines like the sun,With yellow hair and dreaming, wine-brown eyes.Thick crowd the doves for food. She gives ME none.She sees and will not see. Vain are my sighs.One slow, reluctant stroke. Aha! she turns,Gestures and smiles, with coy and feigned surprise.Shifting and baffling is our Lido track,Blind and bewildering all the currents flow.Me they perplex not. In the midnight blackI hold my way secure and fearless row,But ah! what chart have I to her, my Sea,W...
Susan Coolidge
Death
Out of the shadows of sadness,Into the sunshine of gladness,Into the light of the blest;Out of a land very dreary,Out of a world very weary,Into the rapture of rest.Out of to-day's sin and sorrow,Into a blissful to-morrow,Into a day without gloom;Out of a land filled with sighing,Land of the dead and the dying,Into a land without tomb.Out of a life of commotion,Tempest-swept oft as the ocean,Dark with the wrecks drifting o'er;Into a land calm and quiet,Never a storm cometh nigh it,Never a wreck on its shore.Out of a land in whose bowersPerish and fade all the flowers:Out of the land of decay,Into the Eden where fairestOf flowerets, and sweetest and rarest,Never shall wither away....
Abram Joseph Ryan
Weariness.
This April sun has wakened into cheer The wintry paths of thought, and tinged with gold These threadbare leaves of fancy brown and old.This is for us the wakening of the year And May's sweet breath will draw the waiting soul To where in distance lies the longed-for goal.The summer life will still all questioning, The leaves will whisper peace, and calm will be The wild, vast, blue, illimitable sea.And we shall hush our murmurings, and bring To Nature, green below and blue above, A whole life's worshipping, a whole life's love.We will not speak of sometime fretting fears, We will not think of aught that may arise In future hours to cloud our golden skies.Some souls there are who love their woes and tears,
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Time and Life
I.Time, thy name is sorrow, says the strickenHeart of life, laid waste with wasting flameEre the change of things and thoughts requicken,Time, thy name.Girt about with shadow, blind and lame,Ghosts of things that smite and thoughts that sickenHunt and hound thee down to death and shame.Eyes of hours whose paces halt or quickenRead in bloodred lines of loss and blame,Writ where cloud and darkness round it thicken,Time, thy name.II.Nay, but rest is born of me for healing,So might haply time, with voice represt,Speak: is grief the last gift of my dealing?Nay, but rest.All the world is wearied, east and west,Tired with toil to watch the slow sun wheeling,Twelve loud hours of life's laborious ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Threnody
Watching here alone by the fire whereat last yearSat with me the friend that a week since yet was near,That a week has borne so far and hid so deep,Woe am I that I may not weep,May not yearn to behold him here.Shame were mine, and little the love I bore him were,Now to mourn that better he fares than love may fareWhich desires, and would not have indeed, its will,Would not love him so worse than ill,Would not clothe him again with care.Yet can love not choose but remember, hearts but ache,Eyes but darken, only for one vain thought's poor sake,For the thought that by this hearth's now lonely sideTwo fast friends, on the day he died,Looked once more for his hand to take.Let thy soul forgive them, and pardon heal the sin,Though their hearts be hea...
Chione
Scarcely a breath about the rocky stairMoved, but the growing tide from verge to verge,Heaving salt fragrance on the midnight air,Climbed with a murmurous and fitful surge.A hoary mist rose up and slowly sheathedThe dripping walls and portal granite-stepped,And sank into the inner court, and creptFrom column unto column thickly wreathed.In that dead hour of darkness before dawn,When hearts beat fainter, and the hands of deathAre strengthened, - with lips white and drawnAnd feverish lids and scarcely moving breath,The hapless mother, tender Chione,Beside the earth-cold figure of her child,After long bursts of weeping sharp and wildLay broken, silent in her agony.At first in waking horror racked and boundShe lay, and then a gradual st...
Archibald Lampman
Poppy And Mandragora
Let us go far from here!Here there is sadness in the early year:Here sorrow waits where joy went laughing late:The sicklied face of heaven hangs like hateAbove the woodland and the meadowland;And Spring hath taken fire in her handOf frost and made a dead bloom of her face,Which was a flower of marvel once and grace,And sweet serenity and stainless glow.Delay not. Let us go.Let us go far awayInto the sunrise of a fairer May:Where all the nights resign them to the moon,And drug their souls with odor and soft tune,And tell their dreams in starlight: where the hoursTeach immortality with fadeless flowers;And all the day the bee weights down the bloom,And all the night the moth shakes strange perfume,Like music, from the flower-bel...
Psyche
She is not fair, as some are fair,Cold as the snow, as sunshine gay:On her clear brow, come grief what may,She suffers not too stern an air;But, grave in silence, sweet in speech,Loves neither mockery nor disdain;Gentle to all, to all doth teachThe charm of deeming nothing vain.She join'd me: and we wander'd on;And I rejoiced, I cared not why,Deeming it immortalityTo walk with such a soul alone.Primroses pale grew all around,Violets, and moss, and ivy wild;Yet, drinking sweetness from the ground,I was but conscious that she smiled.The wind blew all her shining hairFrom her sweet brows; and she, the while,Put back her lovely head, to smileOn my enchanted spirit there.Jonquils and pansies round her headGl...
Robert Laurence Binyon
Revulsion.
I see the starting buds, I catch the gleam In the near distance of a sun-kissed pool, The blessed April air blows soft and cool,Small wonder if all sorrow grows a dream, And we forget that close around us lie A city's poor, a city's misery.Of every outward vision there is some Internal counterpart. To-day I know The blessedness of living, and the glowOf life's dear spring-tide. I can bid thee come In thought and wander where the fields are fair With bursting life, and I, rejoicing, there.Yet have I passed, Beloved, through the vale Of dark dismay, and felt the dews of death Upon my brow, have measured out my breathCounting my hours of joy, as misers quail At every footfall in the quiet night ...
Abba Thule's Lament For His Son Prince Le Boo
I climb the highest cliff; I hear the soundOf dashing waves; I gaze intent around;I mark the gray cope, and the hollownessOf heaven, and the great sun, that comes to blessThe isles again; but my long-straining eye,No speck, no shadow can, far off, descry,That I might weep tears of delight, and say,It is the bark that bore my child away!Sun, that returnest bright, beneath whose eyeThe worlds unknown, and out-stretched waters lie,Dost thou behold him now! On some rude shore,Around whose crags the cheerless billows roar,Watching the unwearied surges doth he stand,And think upon his father's distant land!Or has his heart forgot, so far away,These native woods, these rocks, and torrents gray,The tall bananas whispering to the breeze,The shores...
William Lisle Bowles
Their Sweet Sorrow
They meet to say farewell: Their wayOf saying this is hard to say.He holds her hand an Instant, whollyDistressed - and she unclasps it slowly,He lends his gaze evasivelyOver the printed page that sheRecurs to, with a new-moon shoulderGlimpsed from the lace-mists that infold her.The clock, beneath its crystal cup,Discreetly clicks"Quick! Act! Speak up!"A tension circles both her slenderWrists - and her raised eyes flash in splendor,Even as he feels his dazzled own.Then blindingly, round either thrown,They feel a stress of arms that everStrain tremblingly - and "Never! Never!"Is whispered brokenly, with halfA sob, like a belated laugh,While cloyingly their blurred kiss closes,Sweet as the dew's lip to the...
James Whitcomb Riley