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And Ask Ye Why These Sad Tears Stream?
Te somnia nostra reducunt.OVID.And ask ye why these sad tears stream?Why these wan eyes are dim with weeping?I had a dreama lovely dream,Of her that in the grave is sleeping.I saw her as twas yesterday,The bloom upon her cheek still glowing;And round her playd a golden ray,And on her brows were gay flowers blowing.With angel-hand she swept a lyre,A garland red with roses bound it;Its strings were wreathd with lambent fireAnd amaranth was woven round it.I saw her mid the realms of light,In everlasting radiance gleaming;Co-equal with the seraphs bright,Mid thousand thousand angels beaming.I strove to reach her, when, behold,Those fairy forms of bliss Elysian,And all that rich scene wrapt...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Death Of The Old Year.
The weary Old Year is dead at last;His corpse 'mid the ruins of Time is cast,Where the mouldering wrecks of lost Thought lie,And the rich-hued blossoms of Passion dieTo a withering grass that droops o'er his grave,The shadowy Titan's refuge cave.Strange lights from pale moony Memory lieOn the weedy columns beneath its eye;And strange is the sound of the ghostlike breeze,In the lingering leaves on the skeleton trees;And strange is the sound of the falling shower,When the clouds of dead pain o'er the spirit lower;Unheard in the home he inhabiteth,The land where all lost things are gathered by Death.Alone I reclined in the closing year;Voice, nor breathing, nor step was near;And I said in the weariness of my breast:Weary Old Year, thou...
George MacDonald
Unrest.
In the youth of the year, when the birds were building, When the green was showing on tree and hedge,And the tenderest light of all lights was gilding The world from zenith to outermost edge,My soul grew sad and longingly lonely! I sighed for the season of sun and rose,And I said, "In the Summer and that time only Lies sweet contentment and blest repose."With bee and bird for her maids of honor Came Princess Summer in robes of green.And the King of day smiled down upon her And wooed her, and won her, and made her queen.Fruit of their union and true love's pledges, Beautiful roses bloomed day by day,And rambled in gardens and hid in hedges Like royal children in sportive play.My restless soul for a little seas...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Ballad of Death
Kneel down, fair Love, and fill thyself with tears,Girdle thyself with sighing for a girthUpon the sides of mirth,Cover thy lips and eyelids, let thine earsBe filled with rumour of people sorrowing;Make thee soft raiment out of woven sighsUpon the flesh to cleave,Set pains therein and many a grievous thing,And many sorrows after each his wiseFor armlet and for gorget and for sleeve.O Loves lute heard about the lands of death,Left hanged upon the trees that were therein;O Love and Time and Sin,Three singing mouths that mourn now underbreath,Three lovers, each one evil spoken of;O smitten lips wherethrough this voice of mineCame softer with her praise;Abide a little for our ladys love.The kisses of her mouth were more than win...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Afternoon.
Small, shapeless drifts of cloudSail slowly northward in the soft-hued sky, With blur half-tints and rolling summits bright,By the late sun caressed; slight hazes shroud All things afar; shineth each leaf anigh With its own warmth and light. O'erblown by Southland airs,The summer landscape basks in utter peace: In lazy streams the lazy clouds are seen;Low hills, broad meadows, and large, clear-cut squares Of ripening corn-fields, rippled by the breeze, With shifting shade and sheen. Hark! and you may not hearA sound less soothing than the rustle cool Of swaying leaves, the steady wiry droneOf unseen crickets, sudden chirpings clear Of happy birds, the tinkle of the pool, Chafed ...
Emma Lazarus
Memory
The mother of the Muses, we are taught,Is Memory: she has left me; they remain,And shake my shoulder, urging me to singAbout the summer days, my loves of old.Alas! alas! is all I can reply.Memory has left with me that name alone,Harmonious name, which other bards may sing,But her bright image in my darkest hourComes back, in vain comes back, calld or uncalld.Forgotten are the names of visitorsReady to press my hand but yesterday;Forgotten are the names of earlier friendsWhose genial converse and glad countenanceAre fresh as ever to mine ear and eye;To these, when I have written and besoughtRemembrance of me, the word Dear aloneHangs on the upper verge, and waits in vain.A blessing wert thou, O oblivion,If thy stream carried only w...
Walter Savage Landor
A Sickness Of This World It Most Occasions
A sickness of this world it most occasionsWhen best men die;A wishfulness their far conditionTo occupy.A chief indifference, as foreignA world must beThemselves forsake contented,For Deity.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Sonnet XX.
When in the widening circle of rebirthTo a new flesh my travelled soul shall come,And try again the unremembered earthWith the old sadness for the immortal home,Shall I revisit these same differing fieldsAnd cull the old new flowers with the same sense,That some small breath of foiled remembrance yields,Of more age than my days in this pretence?Shall I again regret strange faces lostOf which the present memory is forgotAnd but in unseen bulks of vagueness tossedOut of the closed sea and black night of Thought? Were thy face one, what sweetness will't not be, Though by blind feeling, to remember thee!
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
Alone
The noon's greygolden meshes makeAll night a veil,The shorelamps in the sleeping lakeLaburnum tendrils trail.The sly reeds whisper to the nightA name, her name,And all my soul is a delight,A swoon of shame.
James Joyce
September Melodies
IThe summer is over!'Tis windy and chilly.The flowers are dead in the dale.All beauty has faded,The rose and the lilyIn death-sleep lie withered and pale.Now hurries the stormwindA mournful processionOf leaves and dead flowers along,Now murmurs the forestIts dying confession,And hushed is the holiest song.Their "prayers of departure"The wild birds are singing,They fly to the wide stormy main.Oh tell me, ye loved ones,Whereto are ye winging?Oh answer: when come ye again?Oh hark to the wailingFor joys that have vanished!The answer is heavy with pain:Alas! We know onlyThat hence we are banished--But God knows of coming again!IIThe Tkiy...
Morris Rosenfeld
At Eventide
Poor and inadequate the shadow-playOf gain and loss, of waking and of dream,Against lifes solemn background needs must seemAt this late hour. Yet, not unthankfully,I call to mind the fountains by the way,The breath of flowers, the bird-song on the spray,Dear friends, sweet human loves, the joy of givingAnd of receiving, the great boon of livingIn grand historic years when LibertyHad need of word and work, quick sympathiesFor all who fail and suffer, songs relief,Natures uncloying loveliness; and chief,The kind restraining hand of Providence,The inward witness, the assuring senseOf an Eternal Good which overliesThe sorrow of the world, Love which outlivesAll sin and wrong, Compassion which forgivesTo the uttermost, and Justice whose cle...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Hymn To Physical Pain
Dread Mother of ForgetfulnessWho, when Thy reign begins,Wipest away the Soul's distress,And memory of her sins.The trusty Worm that dieth not,The steadfast Fire also,By Thy contrivance are forgotIn a completer woe.Thine are the lidless eyes of nightThat stare upon our tears,Through certain hours which in our sightExceed a thousand years:Thine is the thickness of the DarkThat presses in our pain,As Thine the Dawn that bids us markLife's grinning face again.Thine is the weariness outwornNo promise shall relieve,That says at eve, "Would God 'twere morn"At morn, "Would God 'twere eve!"And when Thy tender mercies ceaseAnd life unvexed is due,Instant upon the false releaseThe Wor...
Rudyard
The Widower
For a season there must be painFor a little, little spaceI shall lose the sight of her face,Take back the old life againWhile She is at rest in her place.For a season this pain must endure,For a little, little whileI shall sigh more often than smileTill time shall work me a cure,And the pitiful days beguile.For that season we must be apart,For a little length of years,Till my life's last hour nears,And, above the beat of my heart,I hear Her voice in my ears.But I shall not understandBeing set on some later love,Shall not know her for whom I strove,Till she reach me forth her hand,Saying, "Who but I have the right?"And out of a troubled nightShall draw me safe to the land.
To Eleonora Duse I
Oh beauty that is filled so full of tears,Where every passing anguish left its trace,I pray you grant to me this depth of grace:That I may see before it disappears,Blown through the gateway of our hopes and fearsTo death's insatiable last embrace,The glory and the sadness of your face,Its longing unappeased through all the years.No bitterness beneath your sorrow clings;Within the wild dark falling of your hairThere lies a strength that ever soars and sings;Your mouth's mute weariness is not despair.Perhaps among us craven earth-born thingsGod loves its silence better than a prayer.
Sara Teasdale
When Love Goes
IO mother, I am sick of love,I cannot laugh nor lift my head,My bitter dreams have broken me,I would my love were dead."Drink of the draught I brew for thee,Thou shalt have quiet in its stead."IIWhere is the silver in the rain,Where is the music in the sea,Where is the bird that sang all dayTo break my heart with melody?"The night thou badst Love fly away,He hid them all from thee."
Limbo
The sole true Something, This! In Limbo DenIt frightens Ghosts as Ghosts here frighten menFor skimming in the wake it mock'd the careOf the old Boat-God for his Farthing Fare ;Tho' Irus' Ghost itself he ne'er frown'd blacker on,The skin and skin-pent Druggist crost the Acheron,Styx, and with Puriphlegethon Cocytus,(The very names, methinks, might thither fright us)Unchang'd it cross'd, & shall some fated HourBe pulveris'd by Demogorgon's powerAnd given as poison to annilate SoulsEven now It shrinks them! they shrink in as Moles(Nature's mute Monks, live Mandrakes of the ground)Creep back from Light, then listen for its Sound;See but to dread, and dread they know not whyThe natural Alien of their negative Eye. 'Tis a strange pla...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Hush, Sweet Lute.
Hush, sweet Lute, thy songs remind me Of past joys, now turned to pain;Of ties that long have ceased to bind me, But whose burning marks remain.In each tone, some echo falleth On my ear of joys gone by;Every note some dream recalleth Of bright hopes but born to die.Yet, sweet Lute, though pain it bring me, Once more let thy numbers thrill;Tho' death were in the strain they sing me, I must woo its anguish still.Since no time can e'er recover Love's sweet light when once 'tis set,--Better to weep such pleasures over, Than smile o'er any left us yet.
Thomas Moore
Margaret At Her Spinning-Wheel.
My heart is sad,My peace is o'er;I find it neverAnd nevermore.When gone is he,The grave I see;The world's wide allIs turned to gall.Alas, my headIs well-nigh crazed;My feeble mindIs sore amazed.My heart is sad,My peace is o'er;I find it neverAnd nevermore.For him from the windowAlone I spy;For him aloneFrom home go I.His lofty step,His noble form,His mouth's sweet smile,His glances warm,His voice so fraughtWith magic bliss,His hand's soft pressure,And, ah, his kiss!My heart is sad,My peace is o'er;I find it neverAnd nevermore....
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe