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Fragments Of Ancient Poetry, Fragment VI
Son of the noble Fingal, Oscian,Prince of men! what tears run downthe cheeks of age? what shades thymighty soul?Memory, son of Alpin, memorywounds the aged. Of former times aremy thoughts; my thoughts are of thenoble Fingal. The race of the king returninto my mind, and wound me withremembrance.One day, returned from the sport ofthe mountains, from pursuing the sonsof the hill, we covered this heath withour youth. Fingal the mighty was here,and Oscur, my son, great in war. Fairon our sight from the sea, at once, avirgin came. Her breast was like thesnow of one night. Her cheek like thebud of the rose. Mild was her bluerolling eye: but sorrow was big in herheart.Fingal renowned in war! she cries,
James Macpherson
Perfectness.
All perfect things are saddening in effect. The autumn wood robed in its scarlet clothes, The matchless tinting on the royal rose Whose velvet leaf by no least flaw is flecked, Love's supreme moment, when the soul unchecked Soars high as heaven, and its best rapture knows - These hold a deeper pathos than our woes, Since they leave nothing better to expect. Resistless change, when powerless to improve, Can only mar. The gold will pale to gray; Nothing remains tomorrow as to-day; The lose will not seem quite so fait, and love Must find its measures of delight made less. Ah, how imperfect is all Perfectness!
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Sonnet CLXXVIII.
S' una fede amorosa, un cor non finto.THE MISERY OF HIS LOVE. If faith most true, a heart that cannot feign,If Love's sweet languishment and chasten'd thought,And wishes pure by nobler feelings taught,If in a labyrinth wanderings long and vain,If on the brow each pang pourtray'd to bear,Or from the heart low broken sounds to draw,Withheld by shame, or check'd by pious awe,If on the faded cheek Love's hue to wear,If than myself to hold one far more dear,If sighs that cease not, tears that ever flow,Wrung from the heart by all Love's various woe,In absence if consumed, and chill'd when near,--If these be ills in which I waste my prime,Though I the sufferer be, yours, lady, is the crime.DACRE. ...
Francesco Petrarca
Deniehys Lament
Spirit of Loveliness! Heart of my heart!Flying so far from me, Heart of my heart!Above the eastern hill, I know the red leaves thrill,But thou art distant still, Heart of my heart!Sinning, Ive searched for thee, Heart of my heart!Sinning, Ive dreamed of thee, Heart of my heart!I know no end nor gain; amongst the paths of painI follow thee in vain, Heart of my heart!Much have I lost for thee, Heart of my heart!Not counting the cost for thee, Heart of my heart!Through all this year of years thy form as mist appears,So blind am I with tears, Heart of my heart!Mighty and mournful now, Heart of my heart!Cometh the Shadow-Face, Heart of my heart!The friends Ive left for thee, their sad eyes trouble meI cannot bear to be, Heart of my he...
Henry Kendall
The Lament Of The Looking-Glass
Words from the mirror softly passTo the curtains with a sigh:"Why should I trouble again to glassThese smileless things hard by,Since she I pleasured once, alas,Is now no longer nigh!""I've imaged shadows of coursing cloud,And of the plying limbOn the pensive pine when the air is loudWith its aerial hymn;But never do they make me proudTo catch them within my rim!"I flash back phantoms of the nightThat sometimes flit by me,I echo roses red and white -The loveliest blooms that be -But now I never hold to sightSo sweet a flower as she."
Thomas Hardy
Afternoon In February
The day is ending,The night is descending;The marsh is frozen,The river dead.Through clouds like ashesThe red sun flashesOn village windowsThat glimmer red.The snow recommences;The buried fencesMark no longerThe road o'er the plain;While through the meadows,Like fearful shadows,Slowly passesA funeral train.The bell is pealing,And every feelingWithin me respondsTo the dismal knell;Shadows are trailing,My heart is bewailingAnd tolling withinLike a funeral bell.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Sonnet CXXIV.
Quel sempre acerbo ed onorato giorno.HE RECALLS HER AS HE SAW HER WHEN IN TEARS. That ever-painful, ever-honour'd daySo left her living image on my heartBeyond or lover's wit or poet's art,That oft to it will doting memory stray.A gentle pity softening her bright mien,Her sorrow there so sweet and sad was heard,Doubt in the gazer's bosom almost stirr'dGoddess or mortal, which made heaven serene.Fine gold her hair, her face as sunlit snow,Her brows and lashes jet, twin stars her eyne,Whence the young archer oft took fatal aim;Each loving lip--whence, utterance sweet and lowHer pent grief found--a rose which rare pearls line,Her tears of crystal and her sighs of flame.MACGREGOR. That ever-hon...
Time's Changes In A Household.
They grew together side by side,They filled one house with gleeTheir graves are severed far and wide -By mountain stream and tree.Mrs. HemansThey were as fair and bright a band as ever filled with prideParental hearts whose task it was children beloved to guide;And every care that love upon its idols bright may showerWas lavished with impartial hand upon each fair young flower.Theirs was the father's merry hour sharing their childish bliss,The mother's soft breathed benison and tender, nightly kiss;While strangers who by chance might see their joyous graceful play,To breathe some word of fondness kind would pause upon their way.But years rolled on, and in their course Time many changes brought,And sorrow in that household gay ...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
The Student Gone.
So soon he fell, the world will never know What possibilities within him lay,What hopes irradiated his young life,With high ambition and with ardor rife; But ah! the speedy summons came, and so He passed away. So soon he fell, there lie unfinished plans By others misapplied, misunderstood;And doors are barred that wait the master-key -That wait his magic Open Sesame! - To that assertive power that commands The multitude. Too soon he fell! Was he not born to prove What manhood and integrity might be -How one from all base elements apartMight walk serene, in purity of heart, His face the bright transparency of love And sympathy? The student ranks are closed, there i...
Hattie Howard
Revealment
A Sense of sadness in the golden air,A pensiveness, that has no part in care,As if the Season, by some woodland pool,Braiding the early blossoms in her hair,Seeing her loveliness reflected there,Had sighed to find herself so beautiful.A breathlessness, a feeling as of fear,Holy and dim as of a mystery near,As if the World about us listening went,With lifted finger, and hand-hollowed ear,Hearkening a music that we cannot hear,Haunting the quickening earth and firmament.A prescience of the soul that has no name,Expectancy that is both wild and tame,As if the Earth, from out its azure ringOf heavens, looked to see, as white as flame,As Perseus once to chained Andromeda came,The swift, divine revealment of the Spring.
Madison Julius Cawein
Sonnet.
Hopeless! Despairless! like that Indian wiseFree of desire, save no desire to know.To gain that sweet Nirvana each one tries,Thinks to assuage soul-wearing passion so.From the white rest, the ante-natal bliss,Not loth, the wondrous wondering soul awakes;Now drawn to that illusion, now to this,With gathering strength each devious pathway takes;Till at the noon of life his aims decline;Evermore earthward bend the tiring eyes,Evermore earthward, till with no surpriseThey see Nirvana from Earth's bosom shine.The still kind mother holds her child againIn blank desirelessness without a stain.
Thomas Runciman
Nutting
It seems a day(I speak of one from many singled out)One of those heavenly days that cannot die;When, in the eagerness of boyish hope,I left our cottage-threshold, sallying forthWith a huge wallet oer my shoulders slung,A nutting-crook in hand; and turned my stepsTowrd some far-distant wood, a Figure quaint,Tricked out in proud disguise of cast-off weedsWhich for that service had been husbanded,By exhortation of my frugal Dame,Motley accoutrement, of power to smileAt thorns, and brakes, and brambles,, and, in truth,More ragged than need was! Oer pathless rocks,Through beds of matted fern, and tangled thickets,Forcing my way, I came to one dear nookUnvisited, where not a broken boughDrooped with its withered leaves, ungracious sign...
William Wordsworth
Marianna Alcoforando
The sparrows wake beneath the convent eaves;I think I have not slept the whole night through.But I am old; the aged scarcely knowThe times they wake and sleep, for life burns down;They breathe the calm of death before they die.The long night ends, the day comes creeping in,Showing the sorrows that the darkness hid,The bended head of Christ, the blood, the thorns,The wall's gray stains of damp, the pallet bedWhere little Sister Marta dreams of saints,Waking with arms outstretched imploringlyThat seek to stay a vision's vanishing.I never had a vision, yet for meOur Lady smiled while all the convent sleptOne winter midnight hushed around with snow,I thought she might be kinder than the rest,And so I came to kneel before her feet,Sick with lo...
Sara Teasdale
A Rich Man's Reverie.
The years go by, but they little seemLike those within our dream;The years that stood in such luring guise,Beckoning us into Paradise,To jailers turn as time goes byGuarding that fair land, By-and-By,Where we thought to blissfully rest,The sound of whose forests' balmy leavesSwaying to dream winds strangely sweet,We heard in our bed 'neath the cottage eaves,Whose towers we saw in the western skiesWhen with eager eyes and tremulous lip,We watched the silent, silver shipOf the crescent moon, sailing out and awayO'er the land we would reach some day, some day.But years have flown, and our weary feetHave never reached that Isle of the Blest;But care we have felt, and an aching breast,A lifelong struggle, grief, unrest,That h...
Marietta Holley
Beauty
Sometimes, slow moving through unlovely days,The need to look on beauty falls on meAs on the blind the anguished wish to see,As on the dumb the urge to rage or praise;Beauty of marble where the eyes may gazeTill soothed to peace by white serenity,Or canvas where one master hand sets freeGreat colours that like angels blend and blaze.O, there be many starved in this strange wise--For this diviner food their days deny,Knowing beyond their vision beauty standsWith pitying eyes--with tender, outstretched hands,Eager to give to every passer-byThe loveliness that feeds a soul's demands.
Theodosia Garrison
To The Unattainable: Lament Of Mahomed Akram
I would have taken Golden Stars from the sky for your necklace,I would have shaken rose-leaves for your rest from all the rose-trees.But you had no need; the short sweet grass sufficed for your slumber,And you took no heed of such trifles as gold or a necklace.There is an hour, at twilight, too heavy with memory.There is a flower that I fear, for your hair had its fragrance.I would have squandered Youth for you, and its hope and its promise,Before you wandered, careless, away from my useless passion.But what is the use of my speech, since I know of no words to recall you?I am praying that Time may teach, you, your Cruelty, me, Forgetfulness.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Days Of Vanity.
A dream that waketh,Bubble that breaketh,Song whose burden sigheth,A passing breath,Smoke that vanisheth, -Such is life that dieth.A flower that fadeth,Fruit the tree sheddeth,Trackless bird that flieth,Summer time brief,Falling of the leaf, -Such is life that dieth.A scent exhaling,Snow waters failing,Morning dew that drieth,A windy blast,Lengthening shadows cast, -Such is life that dieth.A scanty measure,Rust-eaten treasure,Spending that nought buyeth,Moth on the wing,Toil unprofiting, -Such is life that dieth.Morrow by morrowSorrow breeds sorrow,For this my song sigheth;From day to nightWe lapse out of sight, -Such is life that dieth.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Consolation
I Had this thought awhile ago,My darling cannot understandWhat I have done, or what would doIn this blind bitter land.And I grew weary of the sunUntil my thoughts cleared up again,Remembering that the best I have doneWas done to make it plain;That every year I have cried, At lengthMy darling understands it all,Because I have come into my strength,And words obey my call.That had she done so who can sayWhat would have shaken from the sieve?I might have thrown poor words awayAnd been content to live.
William Butler Yeats