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O Living Always - Always Dying
O living always - always dying!O the burials of me, past and present!O me, while I stride ahead, material, visible, imperious as ever!O me, what I was for years, now dead, (I lament not - I am content;)O to disengage myself from those corpses of me, which I turn and look at, where I cast them!To pass on, (O living! always living!) and leave the corpses behind!
Walt Whitman
Daniel
Down into the darkness at last, Daniel, down into the darkness at last;Laid in the lap of our Mother, Daniel, sleeping the dreamless sleep,Sleeping the sleep of the babe unborn the pure and the perfect rest:Aye, and is it not better than this fitful fever and pain?Aye, and is it not better, if only the dead soul knew?Joy was there in the spring-time and hope like a blossoming rose,When the wine-blood of youth ran tingling and throbbing in every vein;Chirrup of robin and blue-bird in the white-blossomed apple and pear;Carpets of green on the meadows spangled with dandelions;Lowing of kine in the valleys, bleating of lambs on the hills;Babble of brooks and the prattle of fountains that flashed in the sun;Glad, merry voices, ripples of laughter, snatches of music and son...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
From The Hymn Of Empedocles
Is it so small a thingTo have enjoy'd the sun,To have lived light in the spring,To have loved, to have thought, to have done;To have advanced true friends, and beat down baffling foes;That we must feign a blissOf doubtful future date,And while we dream on thisLose all our present state,And relegate to worlds yet distant our repose?Not much, I know, you prizeWhat pleasures may be had,Who look on life with eyesEstranged, like mine, and sad:And yet the village churl feels the truth more than you;Who 's loth to leave this lifeWhich to him little yields:His hard-task'd sunburnt wife,His often-labour'd fields;The boors with whom he talk'd, the country spots he knew.But thou, because thou hear'stMe...
Matthew Arnold
For Life I Had Never Cared Greatly
For Life I had never cared greatly,As worth a man's while;Peradventures unsought,Peradventures that finished in nought,Had kept me from youth and through manhood till latelyUnwon by its style.In earliest years - why I know not -I viewed it askance;Conditions of doubt,Conditions that leaked slowly out,May haply have bent me to stand and to show notMuch zest for its dance.With symphonies soft and sweet colourIt courted me then,Till evasions seemed wrong,Till evasions gave in to its song,And I warmed, until living aloofly loomed dullerThan life among men.Anew I found nought to set eyes on,When, lifting its hand,It uncloaked a star,Uncloaked it from fog-damps afar,And showed its beams burning fr...
Thomas Hardy
Human Life
What mortal, when he saw,Lifes voyage done, his heavenly Friend,Could ever yet dare tell him fearlessly:I have kept uninfringd my natures law;The inly-written chart thou gayest meTo guide me, I have steerd by to the end?Ah! let us make no claimOn lifes incognizable seaTo too exact a steering of our way!Let us not fret and fear to miss our aimIf some fair coast has lured us to make stay,Or some friend haild us to keep company !Aye, we would each fain driveAt random, and not steer by rule!Weakness! and worse, weakness bestowd in vain!Winds from our side the unsuiting consort rive,We rush by coasts where we had lief remain;Man cannot, though he would, live chances fool.No! as the foaming swatheOf torn-...
Resignation
To die be given us, or attain!Fierce work it were, to do again.So pilgrims, bound for Mecca, praydAt burning noon: so warriors said,Scarfd with the cross, who watchd the milesOf dust that wreathd their struggling filesDown Lydian mountains: so, when snowsRound Alpine summits eddying rose,The Goth, bound Rome-wards: so the Hun,Crouchd on his saddle, when the sunWent lurid down oer flooded plainsThrough which the groaning Danube strainsTo the drear Euxine: so pray all,Whom labours, self-ordaind, enthrall;Because they to themselves proposeOn this side the all-common closeA goal which, gaind, may give repose.So pray they: and to stand againWhere they stood once, to them were pain;Pain to thread back and to renewPast ...
Lines To My Mother, On Her Attaining Her 70Th Year.
Oh! with what genuine pleasure do I traceEach line of that long-lov'd, accustom'd, face,Where Time, as if enchanted, and imprestWith all the virtues of thy peaceful breast,Tho' sev'nty varied years have roll'd away,Still loves to linger, and, with soft decay,Permits thy cheek to wear a healthy bloom,In all the grace of age, without its gloom.So on some sacred temple's mossy walls,With feath'ry force, the snow of winter falls!Yes, venerable parent! may I longThus happy hail thee with an annual song.Till, having clos'd thine eyes in such soft restAs infants feel when to the bosom prest,Angels shall bear thy spotless soul awayTo realms of pure delight and endless day!
John Carr
The Misanthrope Reclaimed - ACT II.
The verge of Creation. Enter Werner and Spirit.Werner.We have outtravelled light and sound:The harmonies that pealed around us, asThrough yon array of dim and distant worldsWe winged our flight, have wholly died away,Or come to us so faintly echoed, thatOur ears must watch and wait to catch them.Those stars are now like watch-fires, which though seenBlazing afar, send not their light to makeThe path of the benighted wandererMore plain and cheerful.Before us stretches one vast field of gloom,So dense as to appear impenetrable: -Darkness, that has a body and a form,Both palpable to touch and sight, acrossOur path a barrier rears that seems to barOur farther progress. If there be, beyondThis wall of blackness, aught of myst...
George W. Sands
To An Unborn Pauper Child
IBreathe not, hid Heart: cease silently,And though thy birth-hour beckons thee,Sleep the long sleep:The Doomsters heapTravails and teens around us here,And Time-wraiths turn our songsingings to fear.IIHark, how the peoples surge and sigh,And laughters fail, and greetings die:Hopes dwindle; yea,Faiths waste away,Affections and enthusiasms numb;Thou canst not mend these things if thou dost come.IIIHad I the ear of wombed soulsEre their terrestrial chart unrolls,And thou wert freeTo cease, or be,Then would I tell thee all I know,And put it to thee: Wilt thou take Life so?IVVain vow! No hint of mine may henceTo theeward fly: to thy locked senseExplain none can...
Judgment Day
When through our bodies our two spirits burnEscaping, and no more our true eyes turnOutwards, and no more hands to fond hands yearn;Then over those poor grassy heaps we'll meetOne morning, tasting still the morning's sweet,Sensible still of light, dark, rain, cold, heat;And see 'neath the green dust that dust of grayWhich was our useless bodies laid away,Mocked still with menace of a Judgment Day.We then that waiting dust at last will call,Each to the other's,--"Rise up at last, O smallAshes that first-love held loveliest of all!"'Tis Judgment Day, arise!" And they will arise,The dust will lift, and spine, ribs, neck, head, kneesAt the sound remember their old unities,And stand there, yours with mine, as once they stood<...
John Frederick Freeman
Manhattan Streets I Saunter'd, Pondering
Manhattan's streets I saunter'd, pondering,On time, space, reality - on such as these, and abreast with them, prudence.After all, the last explanation remains to be made about prudence;Little and large alike drop quietly aside from the prudence that suits immortality.The Soul is of itself;All verges to it - all has reference to what ensues;All that a person does, says, thinks, is of consequence;Not a move can a man or woman make, that affects him or her in a day, month, any part of the direct life-time, or the hour of death, but the same affects him or her onward afterward through the indirect life-time.The indirect is just as much as the direct,The spirit receives from the body just as much as it gives to the body, if not more.Not one word or deed - not v...
Thoughts
By sound of name, and touch of hand,Thro' ears that hear, and eyes that see,We know each other in this land,How little must that knowledge be?How souls are all the time alone,No spirit can another reach;They hide away in realms unknown,Like waves that never touch a beach.We never know each other here,No soul can here another see --To know, we need a light as clearAs that which fills eternity.For here we walk by human light,But there the light of God is ours,Each day, on earth, is but a night;Heaven alone hath clear-faced hours.I call you thus -- you call me thus --Our mortal is the very barThat parts forever each of us,As skies, on high, part star from star.A name is nothing but a name...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Life's Car
'Hurry up!'No lingering by old doors of doubt - No loitering by the way,No waiting a To-morrow car, When you can board To-day.Success is somewhere down the track; Before the chance is goneAccelerate your laggard pace, Swing on, I say, swing on - Hurry up! 'Step lively!'Belated souls are following fast, They shout and signal, 'Wait.'Conductor Time brooks no delay, He rings the bell of Fate.But you can give the man behind, With one hand on the bar,A final chance to brook defeat, And board the moving car. Step lively! 'Move up!'Make way for others as you sit Or stand. This crowded earthHas room for every journeying soul En route to higher b...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Destiny
Why each is striving, from of old,To love more deeply than he can?Still would be true, yet still grows cold?Ask of the Powers that sport with man!They yokd in him, for endless strife,A heart of ice, a soul of fire;And hurld him on the Field of Life,An aimless unallayd Desire.
The Three Ages Of Nature.
Life she received from fable; the schools deprived her of being,Life creative again she has from reason received.
Friedrich Schiller
Long Life.
The longer thread of life we spin,The more occasion still to sin.
Robert Herrick
On the Death of Mrs. Lynn Linton
Kind, wise, and true as truth's own heart,A soul that hereChose and held fast the better partAnd cast out fear,Has left us ere we dreamed of deathFor life so strong,Clear as the sundawn's light and breath,And sweet as song.We see no more what here awhileShed light on men:Has Landor seen that brave bright smileAlive again?If death and life and love be oneAnd hope no lieAnd night no stronger than the sun,These cannot die.The father-spirit whence her soulTook strength, and gaveBack love, is perfect yet and whole,As hope might crave.His word is living light and fire:And hers shall liveBy grace of all good gifts the sireGave power to give.The sire and daughter, twain and oneIn quest and goal,
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Eternity
He who binds to himself a joyDoes the winged life destroy;But he who kisses the joy as it fliesLives in eternity's sun rise.
William Blake