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Edith Conant
We stand about this place - we, the memories; And shade our eyes because we dread to read: "June 17th, 1884, aged 21 years and 3 days." And all things are changed. And we - we, the memories, stand here for ourselves alone, For no eye marks us, or would know why we are here. Your husband is dead, your sister lives far away, Your father is bent with age; He has forgotten you, he scarcely leaves the house Any more. No one remembers your exquisite face, Your lyric voice! How you sang, even on the morning you were stricken, With piercing sweetness, with thrilling sorrow, Before the advent of the child which died with you. It is all forgotten, save by us, the memories, Who are forgotten by the world. ...
Edgar Lee Masters
In Memory - James T. Fields
As a guest who may not stayLong and sad farewells to sayGlides with smiling face away,Of the sweetness and the zestOf thy happy life possessedThou hast left us at thy best.Warm of heart and clear of brain,Of thy sun-bright spirit's waneThou hast spared us all the pain.Now that thou hast gone away,What is left of one to sayWho was open as the day?What is there to gloss or shun?Save with kindly voices noneSpeak thy name beneath the sun.Safe thou art on every side,Friendship nothing finds to hide,Love's demand is satisfied.Over manly strength and worth,At thy desk of toil, or hearth,Played the lambent light of mirth,Mirth that lit, but never burned;All thy blame to pity ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Love's Doubt.
'Tis love that blinds my heart and eyes, - I sometimes say in doubting dreams, - The face that near me perfect seemsCold Memory paints in fainter dyes.'Twas but love's dazzled eyes - I say - That made her seem so strangely bright; The face I worshipped yesternight,I dread to meet it changed to-day.As, when dies out some song's refrain, And leaves your eyes in happy tears, Awake the same fond idle fears, -It cannot sound so sweet again.You wait and say with vague annoy, "It will not sound so sweet again," Until comes back the wild refrainThat floods your soul with treble joy.So when I see my love again Fades the unquiet doubt away, While shines her beauty like the dayOver my...
John Hay
Hours Continuing Long
Hours continuing long, sore and heavy-hearted,Hours of the dusk, when I withdraw to a lonesome and unfrequented spot, seating myself, leaning my face in my hands;Hours sleepless, deep in the night, when I go forth, speeding swiftly the country roads, or through the city streets, or pacing miles and miles, stifling plaintive cries;Hours discouraged, distracted--for the one I cannot content myself without, soon I saw him content himself without me;Hours when I am forgotten, (O weeks and months are passing, but I believe I am never to forget!)Sullen and suffering hours! (I am ashamed--but it is useless--I am what I am;)Hours of my torment--I wonder if other men ever have the like, out of the like feelings?Is there even one other like me--distracted--his friend, his lover, lost to him?Is he too ...
Walt Whitman
On a Street
I dread that street its haggard faceI have not seen for eight long years;A mothers curse is on the place,(Theres blood, my reader, in her tears).No child of man shall ever track,Through filthy dust, the singers feetA fierce old memory drags me back;I hate its name I dread that street.Upon the lap of green, sweet lands,Whose months are like your English Mays,I try to hide in Lethes sandsThe bitter, old Bohemian days.But sorrow speaks in singing leaf,And trouble talketh in the tide;The skirts of a stupendous griefAre trailing ever at my side.I will not say who suffered there,Tis best the name aloof to keep,Because the world is very fairIts light should sing the dark to sleep.But, let me whisper, in that st...
Henry Kendall
The Bride
The little white bride is left alone With him, her lord; the guests have gone; The festal hall is dim. No jesting now, nor answering mirth. The hush of sleep falls on the earth And leaves her here with him. Why should there be, O little white bride, When the world has left you by his side, A tear to brim your eyes? Some old love-face that comes again, Some old love-moment sweet with pain Of passionate memories? Does your heart yearn back with last regret For the maiden meads of mignonette And the fairy-haunted wood, That you had not withheld from love, A little while, the fre...
John Charles McNeill
Leander To Hero.
I.Brows wan thro' blue-black tressesWet with sharp rain and kisses;Locks loose the sea-wind scatters,Like torn wings fierce for flight;Cold brows, whose sadness flatters,One kiss and then - good-night.II.Can this thy love undo meWhen in the heavy waves?Nay; it must make unto meTheir groaning backs but slaves!For its magic doth indue meWith strength o'er all their graves.III.Weep not as heavy-heartedBefore I go! For thouWilt follow as we parted -A something hollow-hearted,Dark eyes whence cold tears started,Gray, ghostly arms out-dartedTo take me, even as now,To drag me, their weak lover,To caves where sirens hover,Deep caves the dark waves cover,Down...
Madison Julius Cawein
Hope Dieth: Love Liveth.
Strong are thine arms, O love, & strongThine heart to live, and love, and long;But thou art wed to grief and wrong:Live, then, and long, though hope be dead!Live on, & labour thro' the years!Make pictures through the mist of tears,Of unforgotten happy fears,That crossed the time ere hope was dead.Draw near the place where once we stoodAmid delight's swift-rushing flood,And we and all the world seemed goodNor needed hope now cold and dead.Dream in the dawn I come to theeWeeping for things that may not be!Dream that thou layest lips on me!Wake, wake to clasp hope's body dead!Count o'er and o'er, and one by oneThe minutes of the happy sunThat while agone on kissed lips shone,Count on, rest not, for hope is dead.Weep...
William Morris
Faith And Despondency.
"The winter wind is loud and wild,Come close to me, my darling child;Forsake thy books, and mateless play;And, while the night is gathering gray,We'll talk its pensive hours away;"Ierne, round our sheltered hallNovember's gusts unheeded call;Not one faint breath can enter hereEnough to wave my daughter's hair,And I am glad to watch the blazeGlance from her eyes, with mimic rays;To feel her cheek, so softly pressed,In happy quiet on my breast,"But, yet, even this tranquillityBrings bitter, restless thoughts to me;And, in the red fire's cheerful glow,I think of deep glens, blocked with snow;I dream of moor, and misty hill,Where evening closes dark and chill;For, lone, among the mountains cold,Lie those that I h...
Emily Bronte
Consalvo.
Approaching now the end of his abode On earth, Consalvo lay; complaining once, Of his hard fate, but now quite reconciled, When, in the midst of his fifth lustre, o'er His head oblivion, so longed-for, hung. As for some time, so, on his dying day, He lay, abandoned by his dearest friends: For in the world, few friends to him will cling, Who shows that he is weary of the world. Yet she was at his side, by pity led, In his lone wretchedness to comfort him, Who was alone and ever in his thought; Elvira, for her loveliness renowned; And knowing well her power; that a look, A single sweet and gracious word from her, A thousand-fold repeated in the heart, Devoted, of her hapless...
Giacomo Leopardi
Ex Anima.
The gloomy hours of silence wake Remembrance and her train, And phantoms through the fancies chase The mem'ries that remain; And hidden in the dark embrace Of days that now are gone, I see a form, a fairy form, And fancy hurries on! I see the old familiar smile, I hear the tender tone, I greet the softness of the glance That cheered me when alone; The ruby chains of rich romance That bound our bosoms o'er, I still can know, I still can feel, As they were felt before. I name the vows, the fresh young vows, That we together said; What matters it? She can not know; She slumbers with the dead! Again the fields ...
Freeman Edwin Miller
The Falling Of The Leaves
Autumn is over the long leaves that love us,And over the mice in the barley sheaves;Yellow the leaves of the rowan above us,And yellow the wet wild-strawberry leaves.The hour of the waning of love has beset us,And weary and worn are our sad souls now;Let us patt, ere the season of passion forget us,With a kiss and a tear on thy drooping brow.
William Butler Yeats
The Lover Tells Of The Rose In His Heart
All things uncomely and broken, all things worn outand old,The cry of a child by the roadway, the creak of a lum-bering cart,The heavy steps of the ploughman, splashing thewintry mould,Are wronging your image that blossoms a rose in thedeeps of my heart.The wrong of unshapely things is a wrong too greatto be told;I hunger to build them anew and sit on a green knollapart,With the earth and the sky and the water, re-made, likea casket of goldFor my dreams of your image that blossoms a rose inthe deeps of my heart.
The Cruel Maid
And, cruel maid, because I seeYou scornful of my love, and me,I'll trouble you no more, but goMy way, where you shall never knowWhat is become of me; there IWill find me out a path to die,Or learn some way how to forgetYou and your name for ever;yetEre I go hence, know this from me,What will in time your fortune be;This to your coyness I will tell;And having spoke it once, Farewell.The lily will not long endure,Nor the snow continue pure;The rose, the violet, one daySee both these lady-flowers decay;And you must fade as well as they.And it may chance that love may turn,And, like to mine, make your heart burnAnd weep to see't; yet this thing do,That my last vow commends to you;When you shall see that I am dead,
Robert Herrick
The Noble Lady's Tale
I"We moved with pensive paces,I and he,And bent our faded facesWistfully,For something troubled him, and troubled me."The lanthorn feebly lightenedOur grey hall,Where ancient brands had brightenedHearth and wall,And shapes long vanished whither vanish all."'O why, Love, nightly, daily,'I had said,'Dost sigh, and smile so palely,As if shedWere all Life's blossoms, all its dear things dead?'"'Since silence sets thee grieving,'He replied,'And I abhor deceivingOne so tried,Why, Love, I'll speak, ere time us twain divide.'"He held me, I remember,Just as whenOur life was June - (SeptemberIt was then);And we walked on, until he spoke again."'Susie, an Irish...
Thomas Hardy
Eliza.
Tune - "Gilderoy."I. From thee, Eliza, I must go, And from my native shore; The cruel Fates between us throw A boundless ocean's roar: But boundless oceans roaring wide Between my love and me, They never, never can divide My heart and soul from thee!II. Farewell, farewell, Eliza dear, The maid that I adore! A boding voice is in mine ear, We part to meet no more! The latest throb that leaves my heart, While death stands victor by, That throb, Eliza, is thy part, And thine that latest sigh!
Robert Burns
Woman's Love
Sweet lies! the sweetest ever heard,To her he said:Her heart remembers every wordNow he is dead.I ask:" If thus his lies can makeYour young heart grieve for his false sake,Had he been true what had you doneFor true love's sake?""Upon his grave there in the sun,Avoided now of all but one,I'd lay my heart with all its ache,And let it break, and let it break."And falsehood! fairer ne'er was seenThan he put on:Her heart recalls each look and mienNow he is gone.I ask: "If thus his treacheryCan hold your heart with lie on lie,What had you done for manly love,Love without lie?""There in the grass that grows aboveHis grave, where all could know thereof,I'd lay me down without a sigh,
A Thought
There never was a valley without a faded flower,There never was a heaven without some little cloud;The face of day may flash with light in any morning hour,But evening soon shall come with her shadow-woven shroud.There never was a river without its mists of gray,There never was a forest without its fallen leaf;And joy may walk beside us down the windings of our way,When, lo! there sounds a footstep, and we meet the face of grief.There never was a seashore without its drifting wreck,There never was an ocean without its moaning wave;And the golden gleams of glory the summer sky that fleck,Shine where dead stars are sleeping in their azure-mantled grave.There never was a streamlet, however crystal clear,Without a shadow resting in the ripples of i...
Abram Joseph Ryan