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Dirge For The Year.
1.Orphan Hours, the Year is dead,Come and sigh, come and weep!Merry Hours, smile instead,For the Year is but asleep.See, it smiles as it is sleeping,Mocking your untimely weeping.2.As an earthquake rocks a corseIn its coffin in the clay,So White Winter, that rough nurse,Rocks the death-cold Year to-day;Solemn Hours! wail aloudFor your mother in her shroud.3.As the wild air stirs and swaysThe tree-swung cradle of a child,So the breath of these rude daysRocks the Year: - be calm and mild,Trembling Hours, she will ariseWith new love within her eyes.4.January gray is here,Like a sexton by her grave;February bears the bier,March with grief doth howl and rave,And April weep...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Resurrection.
I thought I had forever lost, Alas, though still so young, The tender joys and sorrows all, That unto youth belong; The sufferings sweet, the impulses Our inmost hearts that warm; Whatever gives this life of ours Its value and its charm. What sore laments, what bitter tears O'er my sad state I shed, When first I felt from my cold heart Its gentle pains had fled! Its throbs I felt no more; my love Within me seemed to die; Nor from my frozen, senseless breast Escaped a single sigh! I wept o'er my sad, hapless lot; The life of life seemed lost; The earth an arid wilderness, Locked in eternal frost;
Giacomo Leopardi
A Dirge
A bell tolls on in my heartAs though in my ears a knellHad ceased for awhile to swell,But the sense of it would not partFrom the spirit that bears its partIn the chime of the soundless bell.Ah dear dead singer of sorrow,The burden is now not thineThat grief bade sound for a signThrough the songs of the night whose morrowHas risen, and I may not borrowA beam from its radiant shrine.The burden has dropped from theeThat grief on thy life bound fast;The winter is over and pastWhose end thou wast fain to see.Shall sorrow not comfort meThat is thine no longer, at last?Good day, good night, and good morrow,Men living and mourning say.For thee we could only prayThat night of the day might borrowSuch comfort as dreams...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Written in Cananore
IWho was it held that Love was soothing or sweet?Mine is a painful fire, at its whitest heat.Who said that Beauty was ever a gentle joy?Thine is a sword that flashes but to destroy.Though mine eyes rose up from thy Beauty's banquet, calm and refreshed,My lips, that were granted naught, can find no rest.My soul was linked with thine, through speech and silent hours,As the sound of two soft flutes combined, or the scent of sister flowers.But the body, that wretched slave of the Sultan, Mind,Who follows his master ever, but far behind,Nothing was granted him, and every rebellious cellRises up with angry protest, "It is not well!Night is falling; thou hast departed; I am alone;And the Last Sweetness of Love thou hast n...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Joy In The Morning
The night of affliction, with its long hours of sadness,Will soon pass away to be remembered no more;And the weeping will end in a morning of gladness;For no sorrow is known on the evergreen shore.In this world we shall have tribulation and sorrow;'Tis enough for the subject to be as his king;But if we are faithful, joy will come with the morrow,And with the blood-washed a new song shall we sing.
Joseph Horatio Chant
Nay, not To-night
Nay, not to-night; - the slow, sad rain is fallingSorrowful tears, beneath a grieving sky,Far off a famished jackal, faintly calling,Renders the dusk more lonely with its cry.The mighty river rushes, sobbing, seawards,The shadows shelter faint mysterious fears,I turn mine eyes for consolation theewards,And find thy lashes tremulous with tears.If some new soul, asearch for incarnation,Should, through our kisses, enter Life again,It would inherit all our desolation,All the soft sorrow of the slanting rain.When thou desirest Love's supreme surrender,Come while the morning revels in the light,Bulbuls around us, passionately tender,Singing among the roses red and white.Thus, if it be my sweet and sacred duty,Subservient...
Stone Guide
She was fading - into the stone into rifled shadows heavy with fallen light, rippled boughs of splitting fruit & droopy leaves to a sallow body under clumsy years that ripped the tunic of her coat while bleating the dismal age with each petal fall of a stockinged foot.
Paul Cameron Brown
Sympathy.
Therefore I dare reveal my private woe,The secret blots of my imperfect heart,Nor strive to shrink or swell mine own desert,Nor beautify nor hide. For this I know,That even as I am, thou also art.Thou past heroic forms unmoved shalt go,To pause and bide with me, to whisper low:"Not I alone am weak, not I apartMust suffer, struggle, conquer day by day.Here is my very cross by strangers borne,Here is my bosom-sun wherefrom I prayHourly deliverance - this my rose, my thorn.This woman my soul's need can understand,Stretching o'er silent gulfs her sister hand."
Emma Lazarus
Eclogue III. The Funeral.
The coffin [1] as I past across the lane Came sudden on my view. It was not here, A sight of every day, as in the streets Of the great city, and we paus'd and ask'd Who to the grave was going. It was one, A village girl, they told us, who had borne An eighteen months strange illness, and had pined With such slow wasting that the hour of death Came welcome to her. We pursued our way To the house of mirth, and with that idle talk That passes o'er the mind and is forgot, We wore away the time. But it was eve When homewardly I went, and in the air Was that cool freshness, that discolouring shade That makes the eye turn inward. Then I heard Over the vale the heavy toll of death Sound slow; it made ...
Robert Southey
Love And Death
Shall we, too, rise forgetful from our sleep,And shall my soul that lies within your handRemember nothing, as the blowing sandForgets the palm where long blue shadows creepWhen winds along the darkened desert sweep?Or would it still remember, tho' it spannedA thousand heavens, while the planets fannedThe vacant ether with their voices deep?Soul of my soul, no word shall be forgot,Nor yet alone, beloved, shall we seeThe desolation of extinguished suns,Nor fear the void wherethro' our planet runs,For still together shall we go and notFare forth alone to front eternity.
Sara Teasdale
Feelings Of A Noble Biscayan At One Of Those Funerals
Yet, yet, Biscayans! we must meet our FoesWith firmer soul, yet labour to regainOur ancient freedom; else 'twere worse than vainTo gather round the bier these festal shows.A garland fashioned of the pure white roseBecomes not one whose father is a slave:Oh, bear the infant covered to his grave!These venerable mountains now encloseA people sunk in apathy and fear.If this endure, farewell, for us, all good!The awful light of heavenly innocenceWill fail to illuminate the infant's bier;And guilt and shame, from which is no defense,Descend on all that issues from our blood.
William Wordsworth
Parted.
My spirit holds you, Dear,Though worlds away," -This to their absent onesMany can say."Thoughts, fancies, hopes, desires,All must be yours;Sweetest my memories stillOf our past hours."I can say more than thisNow, lover mine, -Here can I feel your kissWarmer than wine,Feel your arms folding me,Know that quick breathThat aye my soul would stirEven in death.'Tis not a memory, Love,Thoughts of the past,Fleeting remembrancesWhich may not last, -But, as I shut my eyesKnow I the signThat you are here, yourself,Bodily, mine. -So, Love, I cannot say"My spirit fliesOver the widening space,Under dull skies,To where your spirit is...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Forsaken And Forlorn
The house is silent, it is late at night, I am alone. From the balcony I can hear the Isar moan, Can see the whiteRift of the river eerily, between the pines, under a sky of stone.Some fireflies drift through the middle air Tinily. I wonder whereEnds this darkness that annihilates me.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Reverie: Zahir-u-Din
Alone, I wait, till her twilight gate The Night slips quietly through,With shadow and gloom, and purple bloom, Flung over the Zenith blue.Her stars that tremble, would fain dissemble Light over lovers thrown, -Her hush and mystery know no history Such as day may own.Day has record of pleasure and pain,But things that are done by Night remain For ever and ever unknown.For a thousand years, 'neath a thousand skies, Night has brought men love;Therefore the old, old longings rise As the light grows dim above.Therefore, now that the shadows close, And the mists weird and white,While Time is scented with musk and rose; Magic with silver light.I long for love; will you grant me some?...
Memorial Day For The War Dead
Memorial day for the war dead.Add nowthe grief of all your losses to their grief,even of a woman that has left you.Mixsorrow with sorrow, like time-saving history,which stacks holiday and sacrifice and mourningon one day for easy, convenient memory.Oh, sweet world soaked, like bread,in sweet milk for the terrible toothless God."Behind all this some great happiness is hiding."No use to weep inside and to scream outside.Behind all this perhaps some great happiness is hiding.Memorial day.Bitter salt is dressed upas a little girl with flowers.The streets are cordoned off with ropes,for the marching together of the living and the dead.Children with a grief not their own march slowly,like stepping over broken glass.The flautis...
Yehuda Amichai
The Cross.
The cross I bear no man shall knowNo man can ease the cross I bear!Alas! the thorny path of woeUp the steep hill of care!There is no word to comfort me;No sign to help my bended head;Deep night lies over land and sea,And silence dark and dread.To strive, it seems, that I was born,For that which others shall obtain;The disappointment and the scornAlone for me remain.One half my life is overpast;The other half I contemplateMeseems the past doth but forecastA darker future state.Sick to the heart of that which makesMe hope and struggle and desire,The aspiration here that achesWith ineffectual fire;While inwardly I know the lack,The insufficiency of power,Each past day's retrospect m...
Madison Julius Cawein
Rizpah
Said one who led the spears of swarthy Gad,To Jesses mighty son: My Lord, O King,I, halting hard by Gibeons bleak-blown hillThree nightfalls past, saw dark-eyed Rizpah, cladIn dripping sackcloth, pace with naked feetThe flinty rock where lie unburied yetThe sons of her and Saul; and he whose postOf watch is in those places desolate,Got up, and spake unto thy servant hereConcerning her yea, even unto me:Behold, he said, the woman seeks not rest,Nor fire, nor food, nor roof, nor any hauntWhere sojourns man; but rather on yon rockAbideth, like a wild thing, with the slain,And watcheth them, lest evil wing or pawShould light upon the comely faces dead,To spoil them of their beauty. Three long moonsHath Rizpah, daughter of Aiah, dwelt
Henry Kendall
Farewell To Arcady
With sombre mien, the Evening grayComes nagging at the heels of Day,And driven faster and still fasterBefore the dusky-mantled Master,The light fades from her fearful eyes,She hastens, stumbles, falls, and dies.Beside me Amaryllis weeps;The swelling tears obscure the deepsOf her dark eyes, as, mistily,The rushing rain conceals the sea.Here, lay my tuneless reed away,--I have no heart to tempt a lay.I scent the perfume of the roseWhich by my crystal fountain grows.In this sad time, are roses blowing?And thou, my fountain, art thou flowing,While I who watched thy waters springAm all too sad to smile or sing?Nay, give me back my pipe again,It yet shall breathe this single strain:Farewell to Arcady!
Paul Laurence Dunbar