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Helen At The Loom.
Helen, in her silent room,Weaves upon the upright loom,Weaves a mantle rich and dark,Purpled over-deep. But markHow she scatters o'er the woolWoven shapes, till it is fullOf men that struggle close, complex;Short-clipp'd steeds with wrinkled necksArching high; spear, shield, and allThe panoply that doth recallMighty war, such war as e'enFor Helen's sake is waged, I ween.Purple is the groundwork: good!All the field is stained with blood.Blood poured out for Helen's sake;(Thread, run on; and, shuttle, shake!)But the shapes of men that passAre as ghosts within a glass,Woven with whiteness of the swan,Pale, sad memories, gleaming wanFrom the garment's purple foldWhere Troy's tale is twined and told.Well may Helen...
George Parsons Lathrop
War.
Dark spirit! who through every age Hast cast a baleful gloom;Stern lord of strife and civil rage, The dungeon and the tomb!What homage should men pay to thee,Spirit of woe and anarchy?Yet there are those who in thy train Can feel a fierce delight;Who rush, exulting, to the plain, And triumph in the fight,Where the red banner floats afarAlong the crimson tide of war.Who is the knight on sable steed, That comes with thundering tread?Dark warrior, slack thy furious speed, Nor trample on the dead:A youthful chief before thee lies,Struggling in life's last agonies.Oh pause one moment in thy course, Those lineaments to trace;Dost thou not feel a strange remorse, Whilst gazing on ...
Susanna Moodie
Heart-Pictures
Two pictures, strangely beautiful, I holdIn Mem'ry's chambers, stored with loving careAmong the precious things I prized of old,And hid away with tender tear and prayerThe first, an aged woman's placid faceFull of the saintly calm of well spent years,Yet bearing in its pensive lines the traceOf weariness, and care, and many tears.We sat together in our Sabbath-place,Through the hushed hours of many a holy day,And sweet it was to watch the gentle graceOf that bowed form with those who knelt to pray,And lifted face, when swelled the sacred psalm,And the rich promise of God's word was shedUpon her waiting heart like heavenly balm,And all our souls with angels' meat were fed.There came a day when missing was that face, -The form s...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
As Imperceptibly As Grief
As imperceptibly as griefThe summer lapsed away, --Too imperceptible, at last,To seem like perfidy.A quietness distilled,As twilight long begun,Or Nature, spending with herselfSequestered afternoon.The dusk drew earlier in,The morning foreign shone, --A courteous, yet harrowing grace,As guest who would be gone.And thus, without a wing,Or service of a keel,Our summer made her light escapeInto the beautiful.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Sonnet XXXII. Subject Of The Preceding Sonnet Continued.
Behold him now his genuine colours wear, That specious False-One, by whose cruel wiles I lost thy amity; saw thy dear smiles Eclips'd; those smiles, that us'd my heart to cheer,Wak'd by thy grateful sense of many a year When rose thy youth, by Friendship's pleasing toils Cultur'd; - but DYING! - O! for ever fade The angry fires. - Each thought, that might upbraidThy broken faith, which yet my soul deplores, Now as eternally is past and gone As are the interesting, the happy hours,Days, years, we shar'd together. They are flown! Yet long must I lament thy hapless doom, Thy lavish'd life and early-hasten'd tomb.
Anna Seward
Lilith. The Legend Of The First Woman. Book II.
Soft stealing through the shade, and skirting swiftThe walls of Paradise, through night's dark riftLilith fled far; nor stopped lest deadly snareOr peril by the wayside lurked.The airGrew chill. Loud beat her heart, as through the windEchoed, unseen, pursuing feet, behind.Adown the pathway of the mist she passed,And reached a weird, strange land at last.When morning flecked the dappled sky with red,And odors sweet from waking flowers were shed,Lilith beheld a plain, outstretching wide,With distant mountains seamed.Afar, a silvery tideThe blue shore kissed. And in that tropic glowDim islands shone, palm-fringed, and low.In nearer space, like scarlet arrows flewStrange birds, or 'mong the reedy fens, or throughTall trees, of ...
Ada Langworthy Collier
The Old Garden
I.I stood in an ancient gardenWith high red walls around;Over them grey and green lichensIn shadowy arabesque wound.The topmost climbing blossomsOn fields kine-haunted looked out;But within were shelter and shadow,With daintiest odours about.There were alleys and lurking arbours,Deep glooms into which to dive.The lawns were as soft as fleeces,Of daisies I counted but five.The sun-dial was so agedIt had gathered a thoughtful grace;'Twas the round-about of the shadowThat so had furrowed its face.The flowers were all of the oldestThat ever in garden sprung;Red, and blood-red, and dark purpleThe rose-lamps flaming hung.Along the borders fringedWith broad thick edges of box
George MacDonald
The Cry
There's a voice in my heart that cries and cries for tears. It is not a voice, but a pain of many fears. It is not a pain, but the rune of far-off spheres. It may be a dæmon of pent and high emprise, That looks on my soul till my soul hides and cries, Loath to rebuke my soul and bid it arise. It may be myself as I was in another life, Fashioned to lead where strife gives way to strife, Pinioned here in failure by knife thrown after knife. The child turns o'er in the womb; and perhaps the soul Nurtures a dream too strong for the soul's control, When the dream hath eyes, and senses its destined goal. Deep in darkness the bulb under mould and clod Feels the sun in the sky and pushes above the sod;
Edgar Lee Masters
Happiness.
That happiness does still the longest thrive,Where joys and griefs have turns alternative.
Robert Herrick
The Orphan's Good-Bye.
When my heart was sad and lonely, And had closed its inmost cellOver the impulsive feelings That rule my nation's hearts too well.When the tie was cut asunder, That had bound me to a home,And I felt the desolation Of being in the world alone;When I first, the veil assuming, Masked before a treacherous world,And the hopes romance expanded Reality had sternly furled;And the touch of disappointment, Blighted what was green and fair,And the spirit's bright revealings Are not so hopeful as they were.Precious are the words of kindness, Falling on the heart like dew,Freshening though, alas for weakness, They cannot make things new.Thoughts come warm from that deep foun...
Nora Pembroke
The Last Eve Of Summer
Summer's last sun nigh unto setting shinesThrough yon columnar pines,And on the deepening shadows of the lawnIts golden lines are drawn.Dreaming of long gone summer days like this,Feeling the wind's soft kiss,Grateful and glad that failing ear and sightHave still their old delight,I sit alone, and watch the warm, sweet dayLapse tenderly away;And, wistful, with a feeling of forecast,I ask, "Is this the last?"Will nevermore for me the seasons runTheir round, and will the sunOf ardent summers yet to come forgetFor me to rise and set?"Thou shouldst be here, or I should be with theeWherever thou mayst be,Lips mute, hands clasped, in silences of speechEach answering unto each.For this still hour, ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Girl's Day Dream And Its Fulfilment.
"Child of my love, why wearest thouThat pensive look and thoughtful brow?Can'st gaze abroad on this world so fairAnd yet thy glance be fraught with care?Roses still bloom in glowing dyes,Sunshine still fills our summer skies,Earth is still lovely, nature glad -Why dost thou look so lone and sad?""Ah! mother it once sufficed thy childTo cherish a bird or flow'ret wild;To see the moonbeams the waters kiss,Was enough to fill her heart with bliss;Or o'er the bright woodland stream to bow,But these things may not suffice her now.""Perhaps 'tis music thou seekest, child?Then list the notes of the song birds wild,The gentle voice of the mountain breeze,Whispering among the dark pine trees,The surge sublime of the sounding main,...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
The Young Greek Odalisque.
'Mid silken cushions, richly wrought, a young Greek girl reclined,And fairer form the harem's walls had ne'er before enshrined;'Mid all the young and lovely ones who round her clustered there,With glowing cheeks and sparkling eyes, she shone supremely fair.'Tis true that orbs as dark as hers in melting softness shone,And lips whose coral hue might vie in brightness with her own;And forms as light as ever might in Moslem's heaven be found,So full of beauty's witching grace, were lightly hovering round.Yet, oh, how paled their brilliant charms before that beauteous oneWho, 'mid their gay mirth, silent sat, from all apart - alone,Outshining all, not by the spells of lovely face or form,But by the soul that shone through all, her peerless, priceless charm.
Fragment.
Pity me, love! I'll pity thee,If thou indeed hast felt like me.All, all my bosom's peace is o'er!At night, which was my hour of calm,When from the page of classic lore,From the pure fount of ancient layMy soul has drawn the placid balm,Which charmed its every grief away,Ah! there I find that balm no more.Those spells, which make us oft forgetThe fleeting troubles of the day,In deeper sorrows only whetThe stings they cannot tear away.When to my pillow racked I fly,With weary sense and wakeful eye.While my brain maddens, where, oh, whereIs that serene consoling prayer,Which once has harbingered my rest,When the still soothing voice of HeavenHath seemed to whisper in my breast,"Sleep on, thy errors are forgiven!"
Thomas Moore
Elegiacs
Wearily stretches the sand to the surge, and the surge to the cloudland;Wearily onward I ride, watching the water alone.Not as of old, like Homeric Achilles, ??de? ya???,Joyous knight-errant of God, thirsting for labour and strife;No more on magical steed borne free through the regions of ether,But, like the hack which I ride, selling my sinew for gold.Fruit-bearing autumn is gone; let the sad quiet winter hang o'er me -What were the spring to a soul laden with sorrow and shame?Blossoms would fret me with beauty; my heart has no time to bepraise them;Gray rock, bough, surge, cloud, waken no yearning within.Sing not, thou sky-lark above! even angels pass hushed by the weeper.Scream on, ye sea-fowl! my heart echoes your desolate cry.Sweep the dry sand on, thou wild wind...
Charles Kingsley
Don Rafael.
"I would not have," he said,"Tears, nor the black pall, nor the wormy grave,Grief's hideous panoply I would not have Round me when I am dead. "Music and flowers and light,And choric dances to guitar and flute,Be these around me when my lips are mute, Mine eyes are sealed from sight. "So let me lie one day,One long, eternal day, in sunshine bathed,In cerements of silken tissue swathed, Smothered 'neath flowers of May. "One perfect day of peace,Or ere clean flame consume my fleshly veil,My life - a gilded vapor - shall exhale, Brief as a sigh - and cease. "But ere the torch be laidTo my unshrinking limbs by some true hand,Athwart the orange-fragrant laughing land,
Emma Lazarus
Red Breast
I saw one hanging on a tree,And O his face was sad to see,-- Misery, misery me!There were berries red upon his head,And in his hands, and on his feet,But when I tried to pick and eat,They were his blood, and he was dead;-- Misery, misery me!It broke my heart to see him there,So lone and sad in his despair;The nails of woe were through his hands,And through his feet,--ah, misery me!With beak and claws I did my bestTo loose the nails and set him free,But they were all too strong for me;-- Misery, misery me!I picked and pulled, and did my best,And his red blood stained all my breast;I bit the nails, I pecked the thorn,O, never saw I thorn so worn;But yet I could not g...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Song: A Spirit Haunts The Years Last Hours
I.A spirit haunts the years last hoursDwelling amid these yellowing bowers:To himself he talks;For at eventide, listening earnestly,At his work you may hear him sob and sighIn the walks;Earthward he boweth the heavy stalksOf the mouldering flowers:Heavily hangs the broad sunflowerOver its grave i the earth so chilly;Heavily hangs the hollyhock,Heavily hangs the tiger-lily.II.The air is damp, and hushd, and close,As a sick mans room when he taketh reposeAn hour before death;My very heart faints and my whole soul grievesAt the moist rich smell of the rotting leaves,And the breathOf the fading edges of box beneath,And the years last rose.Heavily hangs the broad sunflower<...
Alfred Lord Tennyson