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Compensation
Why should I keep holidayWhen other men have none?Why but because, when these are gay,I sit and mourn alone?And why, when mirth unseals all tongues,Should mine alone be dumb?Ah! late I spoke to silent throngs,And now their hour is come.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
O Mors! Quam Amara Est Memoria Tua Homini Pacem Habenti In Substantiis Suis
Exceeding sorrowConsumeth my sad heart!Because to-morrowWe must depart,Now is exceeding sorrowAll my part!Give over playing,Cast thy viol away:Merely layingThine head my way:Prithee, give over playing,Grave or gay.Be no word spoken;Weep nothing: let a paleSilence, unbrokenSilence prevail!Prithee, be no word spoken,Lest I fail!Forget to-morrow!Weep nothing: only layIn silent sorrowThine head my way:Let us forget to-morrow,This one day!Ah, dans ces mornes séjoursLes jamais sont les toujours
Ernest Christopher Dowson
The Somnambulist
List, ye who pass by Lyulph's TowerAt eve; how softly thenDoth Aira-force, that torrent hoarse,Speak from the woody glen!Fit music for a solemn vale!And holier seems the groundTo him who catches on the galeThe spirit of a mournful tale,Embodied in the sound.Not far from that fair site whereonThe Pleasure-house is reared,As story says, in antique daysA stern-browed house appeared;Foil to a Jewel rich in lightThere set, and guarded well;Cage for a Bird of plumage bright,Sweet-voiced, nor wishing for a flightBeyond her native dell.To win this bright Bird from her cage,To make this Gem their own,Came Barons bold, with store of gold,And Knights of high renown;But one She prized, and only one;Sir ...
William Wordsworth
The Circus Animal Desertion
I sought a theme and sought for it in vain,I sought it daily for six weeks or so.Maybe at last, being but a broken man,I must be satisfied with my heart, althoughWinter and summer till old age beganMy circus animals were all on show,Those stilted boys, that burnished chariot,Lion and woman and the Lord knows what.IIWhat can I but enumerate old themes?First that sea-rider Oisin led by the noseThrough three enchanted islands, allegorical dreams,Vain gaiety, vain battle, vain repose,Themes of the embittered heart, or so it seems,That might adorn old songs or courtly shows;But what cared I that set him on to ride,I, starved for the bosom of his faery bride?And then a counter-truth filled out its play,i(The Countess Cathleen) was t...
William Butler Yeats
Sunset Clouds.
Low clouds, the lightning veins and cleaves,Torn from the forest of the storm,Sweep westward like enormous leavesO'er field and farm.And in the west, on burning skies,Their wrath is quenched, their hate is hushed,And deep their drifted thunder liesWith splendor flushed.The black turns gray, the gray turns gold;And, seaed in deeps of radiant rose,Summits of fire, manifoldThey now repose.What dreams they bring! what thoughts reveal!That have their source in loveliness,Through which the doubts I often feelGrow less and less.Through which I see that other night,That cloud called Death, transformed of LoveTo flame, and pointing with its lightTo life above.
Madison Julius Cawein
Let Joy Alone Be Remembered Now.
Let thy joys alone be remembered now, Let thy sorrows go sleep awhile;Or if thought's dark cloud come o'er thy brow, Let Love light it up with his smile,For thus to meet, and thus to find, That Time, whose touch can chillEach flower of form, each grace of mind, Hath left thee blooming still,Oh, joy alone should be thought of now, Let our sorrows go sleep awhile;Or, should thought's dark cloud come o'er thy brow, Let Love light it up with his smile.When the flowers of life's sweet garden fade, If but one bright leaf remain,Of the many that once its glory made, It is not for us to complain.But thus to meet and thus to wake In all Love's early bliss;Oh, Time all other gifts may take, So ...
Thomas Moore
Mooni
(Written in the shadow of 1872.)Ah, to be by Mooni now,Where the great dark hills of wonder,Scarred with storm and cleft asunderBy the strong sword of the thunder,Make a night on mornings brow!Just to stand where Natures face isFlushed with power in forest placesWhere of God authentic trace isAh, to be by Mooni now!Just to be by Moonis springs!There to stand, the shining sharerOf that larger life, and rarerBeauty caught from beauty fairerThan the human face of things!Soul of mine from sin abhorrentFain would hide by flashing current,Like a sister of the torrent,Far away by Moonis springs.He that is by Mooni nowSees the water-sapphires gleamingWhere the River Spirit, dreaming,Sleeps by fa...
Henry Kendall
The House Of Dust: Part 01: 07: Midnight; Bells Toll, And Along The Cloud-High Towers
Midnight; bells toll, and along the cloud-high towersThe golden lights go out . . .The yellow windows darken, the shades are drawn,In thousands of rooms we sleep, we await the dawn,We lie face down, we dream,We cry aloud with terror, half rise, or seemTo stare at the ceiling or walls . . .Midnight . . . the last of shattering bell-notes falls.A rush of silence whirls over the cloud-high towers,A vortex of soundless hours.The bells have just struck twelve: I should be sleeping.But I cannot delay any longer to write and tell you.The woman is dead.She died, you know the way. Just as we planned.Smiling, with open sunlit eyes.Smiling upon the outstretched fatal hand . . .He folds his letter, steps softly down the stairs.The doors...
Conrad Aiken
Mater Tenebrarum
In the endless nights, from my bed, where sleepless in anguish I lie,I startle the stillness and gloom with a bitter and strong cry:0 Love! 0 Beloved long lost! come down from thy Heaven above,For my heart is wasting and dying in uttermost famine for love!Come down for a moment! oh, come! Come serious and mildAnd pale, as thou wert on this earth, thou adorable Child!Or come as thou art, with thy sanctitude, triumph and bliss,For a garment of glory about thee; and give me one kiss,One tender and pitying look of thy tenderest eyes,One word of solemn assurance and truth thatthe soul with its love never dies!In the endless nights, from my bed, where sleepless in frenzy I lie,I cleave through the crushing gloom with a bitter and deadly cry:Oh! where have ...
James Thomson
A Farewell
Down the steep west unrolled, I watch the river of the sunset flow,With all its crimson lights, and gleaming gold, Into the dusk below.And even as I gaze, The soft lights fade,-the pageant gay is o'er,And all is grey and dark, like those lost days, The days that are no more.No more through whispering pines, I shall behold, in the else silent even,The first faint star-watch set along the lines Of the white tents of heaven.Before the earliest buds Have softly opened, heralding the MayWith tender light illuming the gray woods, I shall be gone away.Ah! wood-walks winding sweet Through all the valleys sloping to the west,Where glad brooks wander with melodious feet, In musical u...
Kate Seymour Maclean
At The Red Throat
In youth, Death was a puny boy possessing but wormy hands & fleshless fingers as in Witch Hazel or Scrooge's Future Ghost - that insipid Evil One Hansel so easily outwitted in a gingerbread house. Time brought increased notoriety. Saucy times with a soupçon of respect for the artful dodger. Givens change, an armful of orange lilies, limp & loathsome, on a tombstone door before trumpets of rain. Graven images. Lifeless stone. Death became stone. Stone empty. The maggot emptiness burrowing into chiselled easel and the stone-cutter's savage magic. Just a bitty stone to herald a passing. Night-jars. Old straw-...
Paul Cameron Brown
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 honour 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 sea...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The House Of Dust: Part 04: 06: Cinema
As evening falls,The walls grow luminous and warm, the wallsTremble and glow with the lives within them moving,Moving like music, secret and rich and warm.How shall we live to-night, where shall we turn?To what new light or darkness yearn?A thousand winding stairs lead down before us;And one by one in myriads we descendBy lamplit flowered walls, long balustrades,Through half-lit halls which reach no end. . . .Take my arm, then, you or you or you,And let us walk abroad on the solid air:Look how the organists head, in silhouette,Leans to the lamplit musics orange square! . . .The dim-globed lamps illumine rows of faces,Rows of hands and arms and hungry eyes,They have hurried down from a myriad secret places,From windy chambers next ...
Stanzas
The sunsets fall and the sunsets fade,But still I walk this shadowy land;And grapple the dark and only the darkIn my search for a loving hand.For its here a still, deep woodland lies,With spurs of pine and sheaves of fern;But I wander wild, and wail like a childFor a face that will never return!And its here a mighty water flows,With drifts of wind and wimpled waves;But the darling head of a dear one deadIs hidden beneath its caves.
A Minor Chord
I heard a strain of music in the street - A wandering waif of sound. And then straightway A nameless desolation filled the day.The great green earth that had been fair and sweet,Seemed but a tomb; the life I thought replete With joy, grew lonely for a vanished May. Forgotten sorrows resurrected layLike bleaching skeletons about my feet.Above me stretched the silent, suffering sky, Dumb with vast anguish for departed suns That brutal Time to nothingness has hurled.The daylight was as sad as smiles that lie Upon the wistful, unkissed mouths of nuns, And I stood prisoned in an awful world.
Fragments.
I. I round the threshold wandering here, Vainly the tempest and the rain invoke, That they may keep my lady prisoner. And yet the wind was howling in the woods, The roving thunder bellowing in the clouds, Before the dawn had risen in the sky. O ye dear clouds! O heaven! O earth! O trees! My lady goes! Have mercy, if on earth Unhappy lovers ever mercy find! Awake, ye whirlwinds! storm-charged clouds, awake, O'erwhelm me with your floods, until the sun To other lands brings back the light of day! Heaven opens; the wind falls; the grass, the leaves Are motionless, around; the dazzling sun In my tear-laden eyes remorseless shines.II. The light of d...
Giacomo Leopardi
Merope
Far in the ways of the hyaline wastes in the face of the splendidSix of the sisters the star-dowered sisters ineffably bright,Merope sitteth, the shadow-like wife of a monarch unfriendedOf Ades of Orcus, the fierce, the implacable god of the night.Merope fugitive Merope! lost to thyself and thy lover,Cast, like a dream, out of thought, with the moons which have passed into sleep,What shall avail thee? Alcyones tears, or the sight to discoverOf Sisyphus pallid for thee by the blue, bitter lights of the deepPallid, but patient for sorrow? Oh, thou of the fire and the water,Half with the flame of the sunset, and kin to the streams of the sea,Hast thou the songs of old times for desire of thy dark-featured daughter,Sweet with the lips of thy yearning, O Aethra! with tokens of ...
Faery Songs
I.Shed no tear! oh, shed no tear!The flower will bloom another year.Weep no more! oh, weep no more!Young buds sleep in the root's white core.Dry your eyes! oh, dry your eyes!For I was taught in ParadiseTo ease my breast of melodies,Shed no tear.Overhead! look overhead!'Mong the blossoms white and redLook up, look up! I flutter nowOn this fresh pomegranate bough.See me! 'tis this silvery billEver cures the good man's ill.Shed no tear! oh, shed no tear!The flower will bloom another year.Adieu, adieu, I fly adieu!I vanish in the heavens blue,Adieu, adieu!II.Ah! woe is me! poor silver-wing!That I must chant thy lady's dirge,And death to this fair haunt of spring,Of melody, and...
John Keats