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Love Fulfilled.
Hast thou longed through weary daysFor the sight of one loved face?Mast thou cried aloud for rest,Mid the pain of sundering hours;Cried aloud for sleep and death,Since the sweet unhoped for bestWas a shadow and a breath?O, long now, for no fear lowersO'er these faint feet-kissing flowers.O, rest now; and yet in sleepAll thy longing shalt thou keep.Thou shalt rest and have no fearOf a dull awaking near,Of a life for ever blind,Uncontent and waste and wide.Thou shalt wake and think it sweetThat thy love is near and kind.Sweeter still for lips to meet;Sweetest that thine heart doth hideLonging all unsatisfiedWith all longing's answeringHowsoever close ye cling.Thou rememberest how of oldE'en th...
William Morris
Canzone XVII.
Di pensier in pensier, di monte in monte.DISTANCE AND SOLITUDE. From hill to hill I roam, from thought to thought,With Love my guide; the beaten path I fly,For there in vain the tranquil life is sought:If 'mid the waste well forth a lonely rill,Or deep embosom'd a low valley lie,In its calm shade my trembling heart's still;And there, if Love so will,I smile, or weep, or fondly hope, or fear.While on my varying brow, that speaks the soul,The wild emotions roll,Now dark, now bright, as shifting skies appear;That whosoe'er has proved the lover's stateWould say, He feels the flame, nor knows his future fate.On mountains high, in forests drear and wide,I find repose, and from the throng'd resortOf man turn fea...
Francesco Petrarca
The Nun's Aspiration
The yesterday doth never smile,The day goes drudging through the while,Yet, in the name of Godhead, IThe morrow front, and can defy;Though I am weak, yet God, when prayed,Cannot withhold his conquering aid.Ah me! it was my childhood's thought,If He should make my web a blotOn life's fair picture of delight,My heart's content would find it right.But O, these waves and leaves,--When happy stoic Nature grieves,No human speech so beautifulAs their murmurs mine to lull.On this altar God hath builtI lay my vanity and guilt;Nor me can Hope or Passion urgeHearing as now the lofty dirgeWhich blasts of Northern mountains hymn,Nature's funeral high and dim,--Sable pageantry of clouds,Mourning summer laid in shrouds.Many...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Fragment: Home.
Dear home, thou scene of earliest hopes and joys,The least of which wronged Memory ever makesBitterer than all thine unremembered tears.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Confiteor Of The Artist
How penetrating is the end of an autumn day! Ah, yes, penetrating enough to be painful even; for there are certain delicious sensations whose vagueness does not prevent them from being intense; and none more keen than the perception of the Infinite. He has a great delight who drowns his gaze in the immensity of sky and sea. Solitude, silence, the incomparable chastity of the azure a little sail trembling upon the horizon, by its very littleness and isolation imitating my irremediable existence the melodious monotone of the surge all these things thinking through me and I through them (for in the grandeur of the reverie the Ego is swiftly lost); they think, I say, but musically and picturesquely, without quibbles, without syllogisms, without deductions.These thoughts, as they arise in me or spring forth from external objects, soon be...
Charles Baudelaire
Retrospect
This is the mockery of the moving years;Youth's colour dies, the fervid morning glowIs gone from off the foreland; slow, slow,Even slower than the fount of human tearsTo empty, the consuming shadow nearsThat Time is casting on the worldly showOf pomp and glory. But falter not; - belowThat thought is based a deeper thought that cheers.Glean thou thy past; that will alone inureTo catch thy heart up from a dark distress;It were enough to find one deed mature,Deep-rooted, mighty 'mid the toil and press;To save one memory of the sweet and pure,From out life's failure and its bitterness.
Duncan Campbell Scott
Love Now.
The sanctity that is about the deadTo make us love them more than late, when here,Is not it well to find the living dearWith sanctity like this, ere they have fled?The tender thoughts we nurture for a lossOf mother, friend, or child, oh! it were wiseTo spend this glory on the earnest eyes,The longing heart, that feel life's present cross.Give also mercy to the living hereWhose keen-strung souls will quiver at your touch;The utmost reverence is not too muchFor eyes that weep, although the lips may sneer.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
The Voice Of The Void
I warn, like the one drop of rainOn your face, ere the storm;Or tremble in whispered refrainWith your blood, beating warm.I am the presence that everBaffles your touch's endeavor, -Gone like the glimmer of dustDispersed by a gust.I am the absence that taunts you,The fancy that haunts you;The ever unsatisfied guessThat, questioning emptiness,Wins a sigh for reply.Nay; nothing am I,But the flight of a breath -For I am Death!
George Parsons Lathrop
Sonnet LXXVII.
O! hast thou seen a vernal Morning bright Gem every bank and trembling leaf with dews, Tinging the green fields with her amber hues, Changing the leaden streams to lines of light?Then seen dull Clouds, that shed untimely night, Roll envious on, and every ray suffuse, Till the chill'd Scenes their early beauty lose, And faint, and colourless, no more inviteThe glistening gaze of Joy? - 'Twas emblem just Of my youth's sun, on which deep shadows fell, Spread from the PALL OF FRIENDS; and Grief's loud gustResistless, oft wou'd wasted tears compel: Yet let me hope, that on my darken'd days Science, and pious Trust, may shed pervading rays.
Anna Seward
Death
Through some strange sense of sight or touchI find what all have found before,The presence I have feared so much,The unknown's immaterial door.I seek not and it comes to me:I do not know the thing I find:The fillet of fatalityDrops from my brows that made me blind.Point forward now or backward, light!The way I take I may not choose:Out of the night into the night,And in the night no certain clews.But on the future, dim and vast,And dark with dust and sacrifice,Death's towering ruin from the pastMakes black the land that round me lies.
Madison Julius Cawein
Sonnet V. To A Friend, Who Thinks Sensibility A Misfortune.
Ah, thankless! canst thou envy him who gains The Stoic's cold and indurate repose? Thou! with thy lively sense of bliss and woes! - From a false balance of life's joys and painsThou deem'st him happy. - Plac'd 'mid fair domains, Where full the river down the valley flows, As wisely might'st thou wish thy home had rose On the parch'd surface of unwater'd plains,For that, when long the heavy rain descends, Bursts over guardian banks their whelming tide! - Seldom the wild and wasteful Flood extends,But, spreading plenty, verdure, beauty wide, The cool translucent Stream perpetual bends, And laughs the Vale as the bright waters glide.
Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust.
Is there a Death? The light of dayAt eventide shall fade away;From out the sod's eternal gloomThe flowers, in their season, bloom;Bud, bloom and fade, and soon the spotWhereon they flourished knows them not;Blighted by chill, autumnal frost;"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust!"Is there a Death? Pale forms of menTo formless clay resolve again;Sarcophagus of graven stone,Nor solitary grave, unknown,Mausoleum, or funeral urn,No answer to our cries return;Nor silent lips disclose their trust;"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust!"Is there a Death? All forms of claySuccessively shall pass away;But, as the joyous days of springWitness the glad awakeningOf nature's forces, may not men,In some due season, rise again?Th...
Alfred Castner King
Endurance
He bent above: so still her breathWhat air she breathed he could not say,Whether in worlds of life or death:So softly ebbed away, awayThe life that had been light to him,So fled her beauty leaving dimThe emptying chambers of his heartThrilled only by the pang and smart,The dull and throbbing agonyThat suffers still, yet knows not why.Love's immortality so blindDreams that all things with it conjoinedMust share with it immortal day:But not of this--but not of this--The touch, the eyes, the laugh, the kiss,Fall from it and it goes its way.So blind he wept above her clay,'I did not think that you could die.Only some veil would cover youOur loving eyes could still pierce through;And see through dusky shadows stillMove ...
George William Russell
Ebb
I know what my heart is like Since your love died: It is like a hollow ledge Holding a little pool Left there by the tide, A little tepid pool, Drying inward from the edge.
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Sonnet CXXIII.
I' vidi in terra angelici costumi.THE EFFECTS OF HER GRIEF. On earth reveal'd the beauties of the skies,Angelic features, it was mine to hail;Features, which wake my mingled joy and wail,While all besides like dreams or shadows flies.And fill'd with tears I saw those two bright eyes,Which oft have turn'd the sun with envy pale;And from those lips I heard--oh! such a tale,As might awake brute Nature's sympathies!Wit, pity, excellence, and grief, and loveWith blended plaint so sweet a concert made,As ne'er was given to mortal ear to prove:And heaven itself such mute attention paid,That not a breath disturb'd the listening grove--Even æther's wildest gales the tuneful charm obey'd.WRANGHAM. Ye...
Sonnet IV.
I could not think of thee as piecèd rot,Yet such thou wert, for thou hadst been long dead;Yet thou liv'dst entire in my seeing thoughtAnd what thou wert in me had never fled.Nay, I had fixed the moments of thy beauty--Thy ebbing smile, thy kiss's readiness,And memory had taught my heart the dutyTo know thee ever at that deathlessness.But when I came where thou wert laid, and sawThe natural flowers ignoring thee sans blame,And the encroaching grass, with casual flaw,Framing the stone to age where was thy name, I knew not how to feel, nor what to be Towards thy fate's material secrecy.
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
The Lost Pleiad.
A void is in the sky!A light has ceased the seaman's path to cheer,A star has left its ruby throne on high,A world forsook its sphere.Thy sisters bright pursue their circling way,But thou, lone wanderer! thou hast left our vault for aye.Did Sin invade thy bowers,And Death with sable pinion sweep thine air,Blasting the beauty of thy fairest flowers,And God admit no prayer?Didst thou, as fable saith, wax faint and dimWith the first mortal breath between thy zone and Him?Did human love, with allIts passionate might and meek endurance strong,--The love that mocks at Time and scorns the pall,Through conflict fierce and long,--Live in thy soul, yet know no future's ray?Then, mystic world! 't was well that thou shouldst pass away.
Mary Gardiner Horsford
The Rainy Day
The day is cold, and dark, and drearyIt rains, and the wind is never weary;The vine still clings to the mouldering wall,But at every gust the dead leaves fall, And the day is dark and dreary.My life is cold, and dark, and dreary;It rains, and the wind is never weary;My thoughts still cling to the mouldering Past,But the hopes of youth fall thick in the blast, And the days are dark and dreary.Be still, sad heart! and cease repining;Behind the clouds is the sun still shining;Thy fate is the common fate of all,Into each life some rain must fall, Some days must be dark and dreary.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow