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Ours To Endure.
We speak of the world that passes away, -The world of men who lived years ago,And could not feel that their hearts' quick glowWould fade to such ashen lore to-day.We hear of death that is not our woe,And see the shadow of funerals creepingOver the sweet fresh roads by the reaping;But do we weep till our loved ones go?When one is lost who is greater than we,And loved us so well that death should reprieveOf all hearts this one to us; when we must leaveHis grave, - the past will break like the sea!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Sonnet: - XXII.
Dark, dismal day - the first of many such!The wind is sighing through the plaintive trees,In fitful gusts of a half-frenzied woe;Affrighted clouds the hand might almost touch,Their black wings bend so mournfully and low,Sweep through the skies like night-winds o'er the seas.There is no chirp of bird through all the grove,Save that of the young fledgeling rudely flungFrom its warm nest; and like the clouds aboveMy soul is dark, and restless as the breezeThat leaps and dances over Couchiching.Soon will the last duett be sweetly sung;But through the years to come our hearts will ringWith memories, as dear as time and love can bring.
Charles Sangster
Inscriptions - Supposed To Be Found In And Near A Hermit's Cell, 1818 - I
Hopes what are they? Beads of morningStrung on slender blades of grass;Or a spider's web adorningIn a strait and treacherous pass.What are fears but voices airy?Whispering harm where harm is not;And deluding the unwaryTill the fatal bolt is shot!What is glory? in the socketSee how dying tapers fare!What is pride? a whizzing rocketThat would emulate a star.What is friendship? do not trust her,Nor the vows which she has made;Diamonds dart their brightest lustreFrom a palsy-shaken head.What is truth? a staff rejected;Duty? an unwelcome clog;Joy? a moon by fits reflectedIn a swamp or watery bog;Bright, as if through ether steering,To the Traveller's eye it shone:He hath hailed it re-...
William Wordsworth
A Funeral Elogy
Ask not why hearts turn Magazines of passions,And why that grief is clad in sev'ral fashions;Why She on progress goes, and doth not borrowThe smallest respite from th'extreams of sorrow,Her misery is got to such an height,As makes the earth groan to support its weight,Such storms of woe, so strongly have beset her,She hath no place for worse, nor hope for better;Her comfort is, if any for her be,That none can shew more cause of grief then she.Ask not why some in mournfull black are clad;The Sun is set, there needs must be a shade.Ask not why every face a sadness shrowdes;The setting Sun ore-cast us hath with Clouds.Ask not why the great glory of the SkyeThat gilds the stars with heavenly Alchamy,Which all the world doth lighten with his rayes,<...
Anne Bradstreet
The Voice in the Wild Oak
(Written in the shadow of 1872.)Twelve years ago, when I could faceHigh heavens dome with different eyesIn days full-flowered with hours of grace,And nights not sad with sighsI wrote a song in which I stroveTo shadow forth thy strain of woe,Dark widowed sister of the grove!Twelve wasted years ago.But youth was then too young to findThose high authentic syllables,Whose voice is like the wintering windBy sunless mountain fells;Nor had I sinned and suffered thenTo that superlative degreeThat I would rather seek, than men,Wild fellowship with thee!But he who hears this autumn dayThy more than deep autumnal rhyme,Is one whose hair was shot with greyBy Grief instead of Time.He has no need, like m...
Henry Kendall
A Dream of Fair Women
I read, before my eyelids dropt their shade,The Legend of Good Women, long agoSung by the morning star of song, who madeHis music heard below;Dan Chaucer, the first warbler, whose sweet breathPreluded those melodious bursts that fillThe spacious times of great ElizabethWith sounds that echo still.And, for a while, the knowledge of his artHeld me above the subject, as strong galesHold swollen clouds from raining, tho my heart,Brimful of those wild tales,Charged both mine eyes with tears. In every landI saw, wherever light illumineth,Beauty and anguish walking hand in handThe downward slope to death.Those far-renowned brides of ancient songPeopled the hollow dark, like burning stars,And I heard sounds of ins...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Via Dolorosa
The days of a man are threescore years and ten.The days of his life were half a man's, whom weLament, and would yet not bid him back, to bePartaker of all the woes and ways of men.Life sent him enough of sorrow: not againWould anguish of love, beholding him set free,Bring back the beloved to suffer life and seeNo light but the fire of grief that scathed him then.We know not at all: we hope, and do not fear.We shall not again behold him, late so near,Who now from afar above, with eyes alightAnd spirit enkindled, haply toward us hereLooks down unforgetful yet of days like nightAnd love that has yet his sightless face in sight.ITRANSFIGURATIONBut half a man's days, and his days were nights.What hearts were ours who loved him, sho...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Humiliation
I have been so innerly proud, and so long alone,Do not leave me, or I shall break.Do not leave me.What should I do if you were gone againSo soon?What should I look for?Where should I go?What should I be, I myself,"I"?What would it mean, thisI?Do not leave me.What should I think of death?If I died, it would not be you:It would be simply the sameLack of you.The same want, life or death,Unfulfilment,The same insanity of spaceYou not there for me.Think, I daren't dieFor fear of the lack in death.And I daren't live.Unless there were a morphine or a drug.I would bear the pain.But always, strong, unremittingIt would make me not me.The thing with my bo...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
In May
Grief was my master yesternight;To-morrow I may grieve again;But now along the windy plainThe clouds have taken flight.The sowers in the furrows go;The lusty river brimmeth on;The curtains from the hills are gone;The leaves are out; and lo,The silvery distance of the day,The light horizons, and betweenThe glory of the perfect green,The tumult of the May.The bobolinks at noonday singMore softly than the softest flute,And lightlier than the lightest luteTheir fairy tambours ring.The roads far off are towered with dust;The cherry-blooms are swept and thinned;In yonder swaying elms the windIs charging gust on gust.But here there is no stir at all;The ministers of sun and shadowHorde ...
Archibald Lampman
A Song.
Is any one sad in the world, I wonder? Does any one weep on a day like this,With the sun above, and the green earth under? Why, what is life but a dream of bliss?With the sun, and the skies, and the birds above me, Birds that sing as they wheel and fly -With the winds to follow and say they love me - Who could be lonely? O ho, not I!Somebody said, in the street this morning, As I opened my window to let in the light,That the darkest day of the world was dawning; But I looked, and the East was a gorgeous sight.One who claims that he knows about it Tells me the Earth is a vale of sin;But I and the bees and the birds - we doubt it, And think it a world worth living in.Some one says that hearts are fi...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Orphan Maid of Glencoe.
NOTE: - The tale is told a few years after the massacre of Glencoe, by a wandering bard, who had formerly been piper to MacDonald of Glencoe, but had escaped the fate of his kinsmen.I tell a tale of woful tragedy,Resulting from that fearful infamy;That unsurpassed, unrivalled treachery,That merciless, that beastlike butchery.Upon the evening calm and bright,That followed on the fatal night,Just as the sun was setting redBehind Benmore's sequestered head,And weeping tears of yellow light,That, streaming down, bedimmed his sight,As he prepared to make his graveBeneath the deep Atlantic wave;I stood and viewed with starting tearsThe silent scene of glorious years,And thought me on my former pride,As when I marched my chief beside,
W. M. MacKeracher
The Pauper's Funeral
What! and not one to heave the pious sigh!Not one whose sorrow-swoln and aching eyeFor social scenes, for life's endearments fled,Shall drop a tear and dwell upon the dead!Poor wretched Outcast! I will weep for thee,And sorrow for forlorn humanity.Yes I will weep, but not that thou art comeTo the stern Sabbath of the silent tomb:For squalid Want, and the black scorpion Care,Heart-withering fiends! shall never enter there.I sorrow for the ills thy life has knownAs thro' the world's long pilgrimage, alone,Haunted by Poverty and woe-begone,Unloved, unfriended, thou didst journey on:Thy youth in ignorance and labour past,And thine old age all barrenness and blast!Hard was thy Fate, which, while it doom'd to woe,Denied thee wisdom to support t...
Robert Southey
The World Of Dying Love
The long finger of blackness is holding its head for us.Dingy bue is its shade,comatose in movement, hazarding a slow swiftness,it inches toward us.Relief comes fitfully.The dragon alone, an upstartcrowned with drunken spending,has horse colours as ribbons with his eyes.It cradles a breast of trembling bone.Misercorde, Misercorde.I dreamt I saw skeletal slacknessdangling;the poverty of touch is a casketwith love in rumbling sockets.Craziness is the passion of the engulfed,dribbling pleasantly.Presentations extended beyond and into themselves.Slackness schemes with invalid awarenessin a brothel of hope.
Paul Cameron Brown
Before The End
How does the Autumn in her mind concludeThe tragic masque her frosty pencil writes,Broad on the pages of the days and nights,In burning lines of orchard, wold, and wood?What lonelier forms, that at the year's door stoodAt spectral wait, with wildly wasted lightsShall enter? and with melancholy ritesInaugurate their sadder sisterhood?Sorrow, who lifts a signal hand, and slowThe green leaf fevers, falling ere it dies;Regret, whose pale lips summon, and gaunt WoeWakes the wild-wind harps with sonorous sighs;And Sleep, who sits with poppied eyes and seesThe earth and sky grow dream-accessories.
Madison Julius Cawein
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
The Complaint
Ah! this wild desolated spot,Calls forth the plaintive tear;Remembrance paints my little cot,Which once did flourish here.No more the early lark and thrushShall hail the rising day,Nor warble on their native bush,Nor charm me with their lay.No more the foliage of the oakShall spread its wonted shade;Now fell'd beneath the hostile strokeOf red destruction's blade.Beneath its bloom when summer smil'd,How oft the rural trainThe lingering hours with tales beguil'd,Or danc'd to Colin's strain.And, when Aurora with the dawnDispell'd the midnight shade,Her flocks to the accustom'd lawnWould lovely Phillis lead.Delusive grandeur never wreath'dAround Contentment's head,'Till war its flami...
Thomas Gent
In Memoriam 16: I Envy Not In Any Moods
I envy not in any moodsThe captive void of noble rage,The linnet born within the cage,That never knew the summer woods:I envy not the beast that takesHis license in the field of time,Unfetter'd by the sense of crime,To whom a conscience never wakes;Nor, what may count itself as blest,The heart that never plighted trothBut stagnates in the weeds of sloth;Nor any want-begotten rest.I hold it true, whate'er befall;I feel it, when I sorrow most;'Tis better to have loved and lostThan never to have loved at all.
Leda.
Do you remember, Leda? There are those who love, to whom Love brings Great gladness: such thing have not I. Love looks and has no mercy, brings Long doom to others. Such was I. Heart breaking hand upon the lute, Touching one note only ... such were you. Who shall play now upon that lute Long last made musical by you? Sharp bird-beak in the swelling fruit, Blind frost upon the eyes of flowers. Who shall now praise the shrivelled fruit, Or raise the eyelids of those flowers? I dare not watch that hidden pool, Nor see the wild bird's sudden wing Lifting the wide, brown, shaken pool, But round me falls that secret wing, And in that sharp, perverse, sweet pain
Muriel Stuart