Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 63 of 206
Previous
Next
Epitaphs VIII. Not Without Heavy Grief Of Heart Did He
Not without heavy grief of heart did HeOn whom the duty fell (for at that timeThe father sojourned in a distant land)Deposit in the hollow of this tombA brother's Child, most tenderly beloved!FRANCESCO was the name the Youth had borne,POZZOBONNELLI his illustrious house;And, when beneath this stone the Corse was laid,The eyes of all Savona streamed with tears.Alas! the twentieth April of his lifeHad scarcely flowered: and at this early time,By genuine virtue he inspired a hopeThat greatly cheered his country: to his kinHe promised comfort; and the flattering thoughtsHis friends had in their fondness entertained,He suffered not to languish or decay.Now is there not good reason to break forthInto a passionate lament? O Soul!Short whil...
William Wordsworth
Unrest.
All day upon the garden brightThe sun shines strong,But in my heart there is no light,Or any song.Voices of merry life go by,Adown the street;But I am weary of the cryAnd drift of feet.With all dear things that ought to pleaseThe hours are blessed,And yet my soul is ill at ease,And cannot rest.Strange spirit, leave me not too long,Nor stint to give,For if my soul have no sweet song,It cannot live.
Archibald Lampman
Elegiac
Dark is the morning with mist; in the narrow mouth of the harbor Motionless lies the sea, under its curtain of cloud;Dreamily glimmer the sails of ships on the distant horizon, Like to the towers of a town, built on the verge of the sea.Slowly and stately and still, they sail forth into the ocean; With them sail my thoughts over the limitless deep,Farther and farther away, borne on by unsatisfied longings, Unto Hesperian isles, unto Ausonian shores.Now they have vanished away, have disappeared in the ocean; Sunk are the towers of the town into the depths of the sea!AU have vanished but those that, moored in the neighboring roadstead, Sailless at anchor ride, looming so large in the mist.Vanished, too, are the thoughts, the dim, unsa...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
A Dialogue.
DEATH:For my dagger is bathed in the blood of the brave,I come, care-worn tenant of life, from the grave,Where Innocence sleeps 'neath the peace-giving sod,And the good cease to tremble at Tyranny's nod;I offer a calm habitation to thee, -Say, victim of grief, wilt thou slumber with me?My mansion is damp, cold silence is there,But it lulls in oblivion the fiends of despair;Not a groan of regret, not a sigh, not a breath,Dares dispute with grim Silence the empire of Death.I offer a calm habitation to thee, -Say, victim of grief, wilt thou slumber with me?MORTAL:Mine eyelids are heavy; my soul seeks repose,It longs in thy cells to embosom its woes,It longs in thy cells to deposit its load,Where no longer the scorpions of Perfidy goad,...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Fall Of Jerusalem.
The sunset on Judah's high places grew pale,And purple tints shadowed the gorge and the vale,While Venus in beauty, with dilating eye,Out-riding the star-host, looked down from the skyOn the city that struggled with foemen below, -Jerusalem, peerless in grandeur and woe!O'er the fast crumbling walls thronged the cohorts of Rome,Their batteries thundered on palace and dome,And the children of Israel in voiceless despairAt the foot of the Temple had breathed a last prayer;For their armies were spent in the unequal strife,And Famine was maddening the pulses of life,The pestilence lurked in the zephyr's soft breath,And the gall-drops were poured from the drawn sword of Death.The Night with starred garments moved noiseless on high,When they felt a h...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
Sunset.
Last eve the sun went downLike a globe of glorious fire;Into a sea of goldI watched the orb expire.It seemed the fitting endFor the brightness it had shed,And the cloudlets he had kissedLong lingered over head.All vegetation drooped,As if with pleasure faint:The lily closed its cupTo guard 'gainst storm and taint.The cool refreshing dewFell softly to the earth,All lovely things to cheer,And call more beauties forth.And as I sat and thoughtOn Nature's wond'rous plan,I felt with some regret,How small a thing is man.However bright he be,His efforts are confined,Yet maybe, if he will,Leave some rich fruits behind.The sun that kissed the flowers,And made the earth look gay...
John Hartley
Through The Door.
The angel opened the doorA little way,And she vanished, as melts a star,Into the day,And, for just a second's space,Ere the bar he drew,The pitying angel paused,And we looked through.What did we see within?Ah! who can tell?What glory and glow of lightIneffable;What peace in the very air,What hush and calm,Soothing each tired soulLike healing balm!Was it a dream we dreamed,Or did we hearThe harping of silver harps,Divinely clear?A murmur of that "new song,"Which, soft and low,The happy angels sing,--Sing as they go?And, as in the legend old,The good monk heard,As he paced his cloister dim,A heavenly bird,And, rapt and lost in the joyOf the wondrous so...
Susan Coolidge
Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part II. - XXVII - Imaginative Regrets
Deep is the lamentation! Not aloneFrom Sages justly honoured by mankind;But from the ghostly tenants of the wind,Demons and Spirits, many a dolorous groanIssues for that dominion overthrown:Proud Tiber grieves, and far-off Ganges, blindAs his own worshipers: and Nile, reclinedUpon his monstrous urn, the farewell moanRenews. Through every forest, cave, and den,Where frauds were hatched of old, hath sorrow pastHangs o'er the Arabian Prophet's native Waste,Where once his airy helpers schemed and planned'Mid spectral lakes bemocking thirsty men,And stalking pillars built of fiery sand.
The Widower's Lament.
Age yellows my leaf with a daily decline,And nature turns sick with decay;Short is the thread on life's spool that is mine,And few are my wishes to stay:The bud, that has seen but the sun of an hour,When storms overtake it may sigh;But fruit, that has weather'd life's sunshine and shower,Drops easy and gladly to die.The prop of my age, and the balm of my pain,With the length of life's years has declin'd;And, like the last sheep of the flock on the plain,She leaves me uneasy behind:I think of the days when our hearts they were one,And she of my youth was the pride;I look for the prop of my age, but it's gone,And I long to drop down by her side.
John Clare
Consalvo.
Approaching now the end of his abode On earth, Consalvo lay; complaining once, Of his hard fate, but now quite reconciled, When, in the midst of his fifth lustre, o'er His head oblivion, so longed-for, hung. As for some time, so, on his dying day, He lay, abandoned by his dearest friends: For in the world, few friends to him will cling, Who shows that he is weary of the world. Yet she was at his side, by pity led, In his lone wretchedness to comfort him, Who was alone and ever in his thought; Elvira, for her loveliness renowned; And knowing well her power; that a look, A single sweet and gracious word from her, A thousand-fold repeated in the heart, Devoted, of her hapless...
Giacomo Leopardi
The Wail in the Native Oak
Where the lone creek, chafing nightly in the cold and sad moonshine,Beats beneath the twisted fern-roots and the drenched and dripping vine;Where the gum trees, ringed and ragged, from the mazy margins rise,Staring out against the heavens with their languid gaping eyes;There I listened there I heard it! Oh, that melancholy sound,Wandering like a ghostly whisper, through the dreaming darkness round!Wandering, like a fearful warning, where the withered twilight brokeThrough a mass of mournful tresses, drooping down the Native Oak.And I caught a glimpse of sunset fading from a far-off wild,As I sat me down to fancy, like a thoughtful, wistful childSat me down to fancy what might mean those hollow, hopeless tones,Sooming round the swooning silence, dying out in smothered ...
Henry Kendall
Sorrow For A Favourite Tabby Cat, Who Left This Scene Of Troubles, Friday Night, Nov. 26, 1819.
Let brutish hearts, as hard as stones,Mock The weak Muse's tender moans,As now she wails o'er Titty's bonesWith anguish deep;Doubtless o'er parent's dying groansThey'd little weep.Ah, Pity! thine's a tender heart,Thy sigh soon heaves, thy tears soon start;And thou hast given the muse her partSalt tears to shed,To mourn and sigh with sorrow's smart;For pussy's dead.Ah, mourning Memory! 'neath thy pallThou utterest many a piercing call,Pickling in vinegar's sour gallWays that are fled--The way, the feats, the tricks, and all,Of pussy dead.Thou tell'st of all the gamesome playsThat mark'd her happy kitten-days:-Ah, I did love her funny wayOn the sand floor;But now sad sorrow damps my lays:
The Harmony Of Evening
Now it is nearly time when, quivering on its stem,Each flower, like a censer, sprinkles out its scent;Sounds and perfumes are mingling in the evening air;Waltz of a mournfulness and languid vertigo!Each flower, like a censer, sprinkles out its scent,The violin is trembling like a grieving heart,Waltz of a mournfulness and languid vertigo!The sad and lovely sky spreads like an altar-cloth;The violin is trembling like a grieving heart,A tender heart, that hates non-being, vast and black!The sad and lovely sky spreads like an altar-cloth;The sun is drowning in its dark, congealing blood.A tender heart that hates non-being, vast and blackAssembles every glowing vestige of the past!The sun is drowning in its dark, congealing blood...In m...
Charles Baudelaire
To - .
Music, when soft voices die,Vibrates in the memory -Odours, when sweet violets sicken,Live within the sense they quicken.Rose leaves, when the rose is dead,Are heaped for the beloved's bed;And so thy thoughts, when thou art gone,Love itself shall slumber on.
Tear Stains
Tear-marks stain from page to page This book my fathers left to me,-- So dull that nothing but its age Were worth its freight across the sea. But tear stains! When, by whom, and why? Thus takes my fancy to its wings; For grief is old, and one may cry About so many things!
John Charles McNeill
Passing Away
Life's Vesper-bells are ringingIn the temple of my heart,And yon sunset, sure, is singing"Nunc dimittis -- Now depart!"Ah! the eve is golden-clouded,But to-morrow's sun shall shineOn this weary body shrouded;But my soul doth not repine."Let me see the sun descending,I will see his light no more,For my life, this eve, is ending;And to-morrow on the shoreThat is fair, and white, and golden,I will meet my God; and yeWill forget not all the olden,Happy hours ye spent with me."I am glad that I am going;What a strange and sweet delightIs thro' all my being flowingWhen I know that, sure, to-nightI will pass from earth and meet HimWhom I loved thro' all the years,Who will crown me when I greet Him,A...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Parting.
'Twas a fit hour for parting, For athwart the leaden skyThe heavy clouds came gathering And sailing gloomily:The earth was drunk with heaven's tears, And each moaning autumn breezeShook the burthen of its weeping Off the overladen trees.The waterfall rushed swollen down, In the gloaming, still and gray;With a foam-wreath on the angry brow Of each wave that flashed away.My tears were mingling with the rain, That fell so cold and fast,And my spirit felt thy low deep sigh Through the wild and roaring blast.The beauty of the summer woods Lay rustling round our feet,And all fair things had passed away - 'Twas an hour for parting meet.
Frances Anne Kemble
Francis Thompson
Thou hadst no home, and thou couldst seeIn every street the windows' light:Dragging thy limbs about all night,No window kept a light for thee.However much thou wert distressed,Or tired of moving, and felt sick,Thy life was on the open deck,Thou hadst no cabin for thy rest.Thy barque was helpless 'neath the sky,No pilot thought thee worth his painsTo guide for love or money gains,Like phantom ships the rich sailed by.Thy shadow mocked thee night and day,Thy life's companion, it alone;It did not sigh, it did not moan,But mocked thy moves in every way.In spite of all, the mind had force,And, like a stream whose surface flowsThe wrong way when a strong wind blows,It underneath maintained its course.
William Henry Davies