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Beauty
I have seen dawn and sunset on moors and windy hillsComing in solemn beauty like slow old tunes of Spain:I have seen the lady April bringing the daffodils,Bringing the springing grass and the soft warm April rain.I have heard the song of the blossoms and the old chant of the sea,And seen strange lands from under the arched white sails of ships;But the loveliest thing of beauty God ever has shown to me,Are her voice, and her hair, and eyes, and the dear red curve of her lips.
John Masefield
To ------
With a copy of Woolman's journal.Maiden! with the fair brown tressesShading o'er thy dreamy eye,Floating on thy thoughtful foreheadCloud wreaths of its sky.Youthful years and maiden beauty,Joy with them should still abide,Instinct take the place of Duty,Love, not Reason, guide.Ever in the New rejoicing,Kindly beckoning back the Old,Turning, with the gift of Midas,All things into gold.And the passing shades of sadnessWearing even a welcome guise,As, when some bright lake lies openTo the sunny skies,Every wing of bird above it,Every light cloud floating on,Glitters like that flashing mirrorIn the self-same sun.But upon thy youthful foreheadSomething like a ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Philosophers.
The principle by which each thingToward strength and shape first tended,The pulley whereon Zeus the ringOf earth, that loosely used to swing,With cautiousness suspended,he is a clever man, I vow,Who its real name can tell me now,Unless to help him I consent'Tis: ten and twelve are different!Fire burns, 'tis chilly when it snows,Man always is two-footed,The sun across the heavens goes,This, he who naught of logic knowsFinds to his reason suited.Yet he who metaphysics learns,Knows that naught freezes when it burnsKnows that what's wet is never dry,And that what's bright attracts the eye.Old Homer sings his noble lays,The hero goes through dangers;The brave man duty's call obeys,And did so, even in the day...
Friedrich Schiller
Beyond.
Beyond yon dim old mountain's shadowy height, The restless sun droops low his grand old face;While downward sweeps the trembling veil of night, To hide the earth; the frost king's filmy laceRests on the mountain's hoary snow-crowned head, And adds to it a softened grace; the lightWhich dies afar in faint and fading red In purple shadows circles near. The flightOf birds across the vast and silent plains Awakes the echoes of the sleeping earth;Of all the summer beauty naught remains, There come no tidings of the spring's glad birth.Beyond the valley and far-off height The birds in wandering do take their way;Ah, whither is their strange and trackless flight Amid the dying embers of the day;
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
The New Moon.
When, as the garish day is done,Heaven burns with the descended sun,'Tis passing sweet to mark,Amid that flush of crimson light,The new moon's modest bow grow bright,As earth and sky grow dark.Few are the hearts too cold to feelA thrill of gladness o'er them steal,When first the wandering eyeSees faintly, in the evening blaze,That glimmering curve of tender raysJust planted in the sky.The sight of that young crescent bringsThoughts of all fair and youthful thingsThe hopes of early years;And childhood's purity and grace,And joys that like a rainbow chaseThe passing shower of tears.The captive yields him to the dreamOf freedom, when that virgin beamComes out upon the air:And painfully the sick man t...
William Cullen Bryant
The Brook
To it the forest tellsThe mystery that haunts its heart and foldsIts form in cogitation deep, that holdsThe shadow of each myth that dwellsIn nature be it Nymph or Fay or FaunAnd whispering of them to the dales and dells,It wanders on and on.To it the heaven showsThe secret of its soul; true imagesOf dreams that form its aspect; and with theseReflected in its countenance it goes,With pictures of the skies, the dusk and dawn,Within its breast, as every blossom knows,For them to gaze upon.Through it the world-soul sendsIts heart's creating pulse that beats and singsThe music of maternity whence springsAll life; and shaping earthly ends,From the deep sources of the heavens drawn,Planting its ways with beauty, on it we...
Madison Julius Cawein
Light
First-born of the creating Voice! Minister of God's Spirit, who wast sent Waiting upon him first, what time he went Moving about mid the tumultuous noise Of each unpiloted element Upon the face of the void formless deep! Thou who didst come unbodied and alone Ere yet the sun was set his rule to keep, Or ever the moon shone, Or e'er the wandering star-flocks forth were driven! Thou garment of the Invisible, whose skirt Sweeps, glory-giving, over earth and heaven! Thou comforter, be with me as thou wert When first I longed for words, to be A radiant garment for my thought, like thee! We lay us down in sorrow, Wrapt in the old mantle of our mother Night; In vexing dreams we strive ...
George MacDonald
Vitascope Pictures.
A young girl stands Upon the sands,And waves her hands-- Flirtation.A fresh young man With shoes of tan,Looks spick and span-- Expectation.They walk the beach, She seems a peachJust out of reach-- Vexation.Ah what is this? A sound of blissA kiss, a kiss-- Elation.A father lean Upon the scene,Looks awful mean-- (Curtain.)
Edwin C. Ranck
Prudence
Theme no poet gladly sung,Fair to old and foul to young;Scorn not thou the love of parts,And the articles of arts.Grandeur of the perfect sphereThanks the atoms that cohere.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
An Epistle To A Friend.
Villula,..........et pauper agelle,Me tibi, et hos unâ mecum, et quos semper amavi,Commendo.PREFACE.Every reader turns with pleasure to those passages of Horace, and Pope, and Boileau, which describe how they lived and where they dwelt; and which, being interspersed among their satirical writings, derive a secret and irresistible grace from the contrast, and are admirable examples of what in Painting is termed repose.We have admittance to Horace at all hours. We enjoy the company and conversation at his table; and his suppers, like Plato's, 'non solum in præsentia, sed etiam postero die jucundæ sunt.' But when we look round as we sit there, we find ourselves in a Sabine farm, and not in a Roman villa. His windows have every charm of prospect; but his furniture might have descended from...
Samuel Rogers
An Autumn Landscape
No wind there is that either pipes or moans;The fields are cold and still; the skyIs covered with a blue-gray sheetOf motionless cloud; and at my feetThe river, curling softly by,Whispers and dimples round its quiet gray stones.Along the chill green slope that dips and heavesThe road runs rough and silent, linedWith plum-trees, misty and blue-gray,And poplars pallid as the day,In masses spectral, undefined,Pale greenish stems half hid in dry gray leaves.And on beside the river's sober edgeA long fresh field lies black. Beyond,Low thickets gray and reddish stand,Stroked white with birch; and near at hand,Over a little steel-smooth pond,Hang multitudes of thin and withering sedge.Across a waste and solitary rise
Archibald Lampman
The Country Gods
I dwell, with all things great and fair:The green earth and the lustral air,The sacred spaces of the sea,Day in, day out, companion me.Pure-faced, pure-thoughted, folk are mineWith whom to sit and laugh and dine;In every sunlit room is heardLove singing, like an April bird,And everywhere the moonlit eyesOf beauty guard our paradise;While, at the ending of the day,To the kind country gods we pray,And dues of our fair living pay.Thus, when, reluctant, to the townI go, with country sunshine brown,So small and strange all seems to me -the boonfellow of the sea -That these town-people say and be:Their insect lives, their insect talk,Their busy little insect walk,Their busy little insect stings -And all the while t...
Richard Le Gallienne
What is Life?
And what is Life?--An hour-glass on the run,A mist retreating from the morning sun,A busy, bustling, still repeated dream;Its length?--A minute's pause, a moment's thought;And happiness?-A bubble on the stream,That in the act of seizing shrinks to nought.What are vain Hopes?--The puffing gale of morn,That of its charms divests the dewy lawn,And robs each floweret of its gem,--and dies;A cobweb hiding disappointment's thorn,Which stings more keenly through the thin disguise.And thou, O Trouble?--Nothing can suppose,(And sure the power of wisdom only knows,)What need requireth thee:So free and liberal as thy bounty flows,Some necessary cause must surely be;But disappointments, pains, and every woeDevoted wretches feel,The ...
John Clare
To Isabel
A Beautiful Little Girl.Fair as some sea-child, in her coral bower, Decked with the rare, rich treasures of the deep;Mild as the spirit of the dream whose power Bears back the infant's soul to heaven, in sleepBrightens the hues of summer's first-born flower Pure as the tears repentant mourners weepO'er deeds to which the siren, Sin, beguiled, -Art thou, sweet, smiling, bright-eyed cherub child.Thy presence is a spell of holiness, From which unhallowed thoughts shrink blushing back, -Thy smile is a warm light that shines to bless, As beams the beacon o'er the wanderer's track, -Thy voice is music, at whose sounds Distress Unbinds her writhing victim from the rackOf misery, and charmed by what she hears,Forgets her w...
George W. Sands
Art
In placid hours well-pleased we dreamOf many a brave unbodied scheme.But form to lend, pulsed life create,What unlike things must meet and mate:A flame to melt--a wind to freeze;Sad patience--joyous energies;Humility--yet pride and scorn;Instinct and study; love and hate;Audacity--reverence. These must mate,And fuse with Jacob's mystic heart,To wrestle with the angel--Art.
Herman Melville
Blue Bells.
Bonny little Blue-bellsMid young brackens green,'Neath the hedgerows peepingModestly between;Telling us that SummerIs not far away,When your beauties blend withBlossoms of the May.Sturdy, tangled hawthorns,Fleck'd with white or red,Whilst their nutty incense,All around is shed.Bonny drooping Blue-bells,Happy you must beWith your beauties sheltered'Neath such fragrant tree.You need fear no rival, -Other blossoms blown,With their varied beautiesBut enhance your own.Steals the soft wind gently,'Round th' enchanted spot,Sets your bells a-ringingThough we hear them not.Idle Fancy wandersAs you shake and swing,Our hearts shape the messageWe would have you bring....
John Hartley
Identity
1An individual spider webidentifies a species:an order of instinct prevailsthrough all accidents of circumstance,though possibility ishigh along the peripheries ofspiderwebs:you can go allaround the fringing attachmentsand finddisorder ripe,entropy rich, high levels of random,numerous occasions of accident:2the possible settingsof a web are infinite:how doesthe spider keepidentitywhile creating the webin a particular place?how and to what extentand by what modes of chemistryand control?it iswonderfulhow things work: I will tell youabout itbecauseit is interestingand because whatever ismoves ...
A. R. Ammons
Alma Venus
Only a breath - hardly a breath! The shoreIs still a huddled alabaster floorOf shelving ice and shattered slabs of cold,Stern wreckage of the fiercely frozen wave,Gleaming in mailed wastes of white and gold;As though the sea, in an enchanted grave,Of fearful crystal locked, no more shall stirSoftly, all lover, to the April moon:Hardly a breath! yet was I now awareOf a most delicate balm upon the air,Almost a voice that almost whispered "soon"!Not of the earth it was - no living thingMoves in the iron landscape far or near,Saving, in raucous flight, the winter crow,Staining the whiteness with its ebon wing,Or silver-sailing gull, or 'mid the drearRock cedars, like a summer soul astray,A lone red squirrel makes believe to play,N...