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Parting.
There's no use in weeping,Though we are condemned to part:There's such a thing as keepingA remembrance in one's heart:There's such a thing as dwellingOn the thought ourselves have nursed,And with scorn and courage tellingThe world to do its worst.We'll not let its follies grieve us,We'll just take them as they come;And then every day will leave usA merry laugh for home.When we've left each friend and brother,When we're parted wide and far,We will think of one another,As even better than we are.Every glorious sight above us,Every pleasant sight beneath,We'll connect with those that love us,Whom we truly love till death!In the evening, when we're sittingBy the fire, perchance alone,
Charlotte Bronte
Death
Nor dread nor hope attendA dying animal;A man awaits his endDreading and hoping all;Many times he died,Many times rose again.A great man in his prideConfronting murderous menCasts derision uponSupersession of breath;He knows death to the bone --Man has created death.
William Butler Yeats
And The Laughter Of The Young And Gay Was Far Too Glad And Loud.
Hush, hush! my thoughts are resting on a changeless world of bliss;Oh! come not with the voice of mirth to lure them back to this.'Tis true, we've much of sadness in our weary sojourn here,That fades, and leaves no deeper trace than childhood's reckless tear;But there are woes which scathe the heart till all its bloom is o'er,A deadly blight we feel but once, that once for evermore.Oh, then, 'tis sweet on fancy's wing to cleave that bright domain!The loved and the redeemed are there, why lure me back again?The cadences of gladness to your hearts may yet be dear;They have no melody for mine, all, all is desert here.The sunshine still is bright to you, the moonlight and the flowers;To me they tell a harrowing tale of dear departed hours.I would not cu...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
I Remembered
There never was a mood of mine,Gay or heart-broken, luminous or dull,But you could ease me of its feverAnd give it back to me more beautiful.In many another soul I broke the bread,And drank the wine and played the happy guest,But I was lonely, I remembered you;The heart belong to him who knew it best.
Sara Teasdale
A Night-Storm.
Let this rough fragment lend its mossy seat;Let Contemplation hail this lone retreat:Come, meek-eyed goddess, through the midnight gloom,Born of the silent awe which robes the tomb!This gothic front, this antiquated pile,The bleak wind howling through each mazy aisle;Its high gray towers, faint peeping through the shade,Shall hail thy presence, consecrated maid!Whether beneath some vaulted abbey's dome,Where ev'ry footstep sounds in every tomb;Where Superstition, from the marble stone,Gives every sound, a pilgrim-spirit's groan:Pensive thou readest by the moon's full glareThe sculptured children of Affection's tear;Or in the church-yard lone thou sitt'st to weepO'er some sad wreck, beneath the tufty heap--Perchance some victim to Seduction's sp...
Thomas Gent
Autumn.
Yes! yes! I dare say it is so,And you should be pitied, but how could I know,Watching alone by the moon-lit bay;But that is past for many a day,For the woman that loved, died years ago, Years ago.She had loving eyes, with a wistful lookIn their depths that day, and I know you tookHer face in your hands and read it o'er,As if you should never see it more;You were right, for she died long years ago, Years ago.Had I trusted you - for trust, you knowWill keep love's fire forever aglow;Then what would have mattered storm or sun,But the watching - the waiting, all is done;For the woman that loved, died years ago, Years ago.Yes; I think you are constant, true and good,I am tired, and would love you if I cou...
Marietta Holley
To Fausta
Joy comes and goes: hope ebbs and flows,Like the wave.Change doth unknit the tranquil strength of men.Love lends life a little grace,A few sad smiles: and then.Both are laid in one cold place,In the grave.Dreams dawn and fly: friends smile and die,Like spring flowers.Our vaunted life is one long funeral.Men dig graves, with bitter tears,For their dead hopes; and all,Mazd with doubts, and sick with fears,Count the hours.We count the hours: these dreams of ours,False and hollow,Shall we go hence and find they are not dead?Joys we dimly apprehend,Faces that smild and fled,Hopes born here, and born to end,Shall we follow?
Matthew Arnold
The April Boughs
It was not then her heart broke--That moment when she knewThat all her faith held holiestWas utterly untrue.It was not then her heart broke--That night of prayer and tearsWhen first she dared the thought of lifeThrough all the empty years.But when beneath the April boughsShe felt the blossoms stir,The careless mirth of yesterdayCame near and smiled at her.Old singing lingered in the wind,Old joy came close again,Oh, underneath the April boughs,I think her heart broke then.
Theodosia Garrison
Masked.
Lying alone I dreamed a dream last night:Methought that Joy had come to comfort meFor all the past, its suffering and slight,Yet in my heart I felt this could not be.All that he said unreal seemed and strange,Too beautiful to last beyond to-morrow;Then suddenly his features seemed to change,The mask of joy dropped from the face of Sorrow.
Madison Julius Cawein
Love And Death
What time the mighty moon was gathering lightLove paced the thymy plots of Paradise,And all about him rolld his lustrous eyes;When, turning round a cassia, full in view,Death, walking all alone beneath a yew,And talking to himself, first met his sight.You must begone, said Death, these walks are mine.Love wept and spread his sheeny vans for flight;Yet ere he parted said, This hour is thine:Thou art the shadow of life, and as the treeStands in the sun and shadows all beneath,So in the light of great eternityLife eminent creates the shade of death.The shadow passeth when the tree shall fall,But I shall reign for ever over all.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Lines Written During A Gale Of Wind.
Oh nature! though the blast is yelling, Loud roaring through the bending tree,There's sorrow in man's darksome dwelling, There's rapture still with thee!I gaze upon the clouds wind-driven, The white storm-crested deep;My heart with human cares is riven-- O'er these--I cannot weep.'Tis not the rush of wave or wind That wakes my anxious fears,That presses on my troubled mind, And fills my eyes with tears;I feel the icy breath of sorrow My ardent spirit chill,The dark--dark presage of the morrow, The sense of coming ill.I hear the mighty billows rave; There's music in their roar,When strong in wrath the wind-lashed wave Springs on the groaning shore;A solemn pleasu...
Susanna Moodie
The Irreparable
How can we kill the long, the old RemorseThat lives, writhes, twists itselfAnd mines us as the worm devours the dead,The cankerworm the oak?How can we choke the old, the long Remorse?And what brew, or what philtre, or what wineCould drown this enemy,As deadly as the avid courtesan,And patient as the ant?In what brew? in what philtre? in what wine?Oh, say it if you know, sweet sorceress!To this my anguished soul,Like one who's dying, crushed by wounded men,Stamped, trampled by a horse's hoof.Oh, say it if you know, sweet sorceress,To this man whom the wolf already sniffsAnd whom the crow surveys,This broken soldier! Must he then despairOf having cross and tomb,This dying man the wolf already sniffs!
Charles Baudelaire
Murmurs In The Gloom
(Nocturne)I wayfared at the nadir of the sunWhere populations meet, though seen of none;And millions seemed to sigh aroundAs though their haunts were nigh around,And unknown throngs to cry aroundOf things late done."O Seers, who well might high ensample show"(Came throbbing past in plainsong small and slow),"Leaders who lead us aimlessly,Teachers who train us shamelessly,Why let ye smoulder flamelesslyThe truths ye trow?"Ye scribes, that urge the old medicament,Whose fusty vials have long dried impotent,Why prop ye meretricious things,Denounce the sane as vicious things,And call outworn factitious thingsExpedient?"O Dynasties that sway and shake us so,Why rank your magnanimities so low...
Thomas Hardy
Upon A Dying Lady
IHer CourtesyWith the old kindness, the old distinguished graceShe lies, her lovely piteous head amid dull red hairPropped upon pillows, rouge on the pallor of her face.She would not have us sad because she is lying there,And when she meets our gaze her eyes are laughter-lit,Her speech a wicked tale that we may vie with herMatching our broken-hearted wit against her wit,Thinking of saints and of Petronius Arbiter.IICertain Artists bring her Dolls and DrawingsBring where our Beauty liesA new modelled doll, or drawing,With a friends or an enemysFeatures, or maybe showingHer features when a tressOf dull red hair was flowingOver some silken dressCut in the Turkish fashion,Or it may...
Summer Portents
Come, let us quaff the brimming cupOf sorrow, bitterness, and pain;For clearly, things are warming upAgain.Observe with what awakened powersThe vulgar Sun resumes the rightOf rising in the hallowed hoursOf night.Bound to the village water-wheel,The motive bullock bows his crest,And signals forth a mute appealFor rest.His neck is galled beneath the yoke:His patient eyes are very dim:Life is a dismal sort of jokeTo him.Yet one there is, to whom the oxIs kin; who knows, as habitat,The cold, unsympathetic box,Or mat;Who urges on, with wearied arms,The punkah's rhythmic, laboured sweep,Nor dares to contemplate the charmsOf sleep.Now 'mid a host of lesser thing...
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
Sîta.
Three happy children in a darkened room!What do they gaze on with wide-open eyes?A dense, dense forest, where no sunbeam pries,And in its centre a cleared spot.--There bloomGigantic flowers on creepers that embraceTall trees; there, in a quiet lucid lakeThe white swans glide; there, "whirring from the brake,"The peacock springs; there, herds of wild deer race;There, patches gleam with yellow waving grain;There, blue smoke from strange altars rises light,There, dwells in peace, the poet-anchorite.But who is this fair lady? Not in vainShe weeps,--for lo! at every tear she shedsTears from three pairs of young eyes fall amain,And bowed in sorrow are the three young heads.It is an old, old story, and the layWhich has evoked sad Sîta from the past
Toru Dutt
The Wayfarer
Love entered in my heart one day,A sad, unwelcome guest;But when he begged that he might stay,I let him wait and rest.He broke my sleep with sorrowing,And shook my dreams with tears,And when my heart was fain to sing,He stilled its joy with fears.But now that he has gone his way,I miss the old sweet pain,And sometimes in the night I prayThat he may come again.
Dejection
O Father, I am in the dark, My soul is heavy-bowed:I send my prayer up like a lark, Up through my vapoury shroud, To find thee, And remind theeI am thy child, and thou my father,Though round me death itself should gather.Lay thy loved hand upon my head, Let thy heart beat in mine;One thought from thee, when all seems dead, Will make the darkness shine About me And throughout me!And should again the dull night gather,I'll cry again, Thou art my father.
George MacDonald