Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 8 of 10
Previous
Next
Luck
Luck is the tuning of our inmost thought To chord with God's great plan. That done, ah! know,Thy silent wishes to results shall grow,And day by day shall miracles be wrought.Once let thy being selflessly be brought To chime with universal good, and lo! What music from the spheres shall through thee flow!What benefits shall come to thee unsought!Shut out the noise of traffic! Rise above The body's clamour! With the soul's fine ear Attune thyself to harmonies divine -All, all are written in the key of Love. Keep to the score, and thou hast naught to fear; Achievements yet undreamed of shall be thine.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Endless Resource.
New days are dear, and cannot be unloved,Though in deep grief we mourn, and cling to death;Who has not known, in living on, a breathOf infinite joy that has life's rapture proved?If I have thought that in this rainbow worldThe best we see was but a preface givenOf infinite greater tints in heaven,And life or no, heaven yet would be unfurl'd, -I did belie the soul-wide joys of earth,And feelings deep as lights that dwell in seas.Can heaven itself outlove such depths as these?Live on! Life holds more than we dream of worth!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
The Kitten And Falling Leaves
That way look, my Infant, lo!What a pretty baby-show!See the kitten on the wall,Sporting with the leaves that fall,Withered leaves, one, two, and threeFrom the lofty elder-tree!Through the calm and frosty airOf this morning bright and fair,Eddying round and round they sinkSoftly, slowly: one might think,From the motions that are made,Every little leaf conveyedSylph or Faery hither tending,To this lower world descending,Each invisible and mute,In his wavering parachute.But the Kitten, how she starts,Crouches, stretches, paws, and darts!First at one, and then its fellowJust as light and just as yellow;There are many now, now oneNow they stop and there are noneWhat intenseness of desireIn her upward eye of...
William Wordsworth
My Desire
Fate has given me many a giftTo which men most aspire,Lovely, precious and costly things,But not my heart's desire.Many a man has a secret dreamOf where his soul would be,Mine is a low verandah'd houseIn a tope beside the sea.Over the roof tall palms should wave,Swaying from side to side,Every night we should fall asleepTo the rhythm of the tide.The dawn should be gay with song of birds,And the stir of fluttering wings.Surely the joy of life is hidIn simple and tender things!At eve the waves would shimmer with goldIn the rosy sunset rays,Emerald velvet flats of riceWould rest the landward gaze.A boat must rock at the laterite stepsIn a reef-protected pool,For we should sail throu...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Charade.
Two words there 'are, both short, of beauty rare,Whose sounds our lips so often love to frame,But which with clearness never can proclaimThe things whose own peculiar stamp they bear.'Tis well in days of age and youth so fair,One on the other boldly to inflame;And if those words together link'd we name,A blissful rapture we discover there.But now to give them pleasure do I seek,And in myself my happiness would find;I hope in silence, but I hope for this:Gently, as loved one's names, those words to speakTo see them both within one image shrin'd,Both in one being to embrace with bliss.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Blessed are they that have not seen!
O happy they whose hearts receiveThe implanted word with faith; believeBecause their fathers did before,Because they learnt, and ask no moreHigh triumphs of convictions wrought,And won by individual thought.The joy, delusive oft, but keen,Of having with our own eyes seen,What if they have not felt nor known?An amplitude instead they own,By no self-binding ordinance prestTo toil in labour they detest:By no deceiving reasoning tiedOr this or that way to decide.O happy they! above their headThe glory of the unseen is spread;Their happy heart is free to rangeThro largest tracts of pleasant change;Their intellects encradled lieIn boundless possibility.For impulses of varying kindsThe Ancient Home a lodging finds<...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Joy And Peace In Believing.
Sometimes a light surprisesThe Christian while he sings;It is the Lord who risesWith healing in his wings:When comforts are declining,He grants the soul againA season of clear shining,To cheer it after rain.In holy contemplation,We sweetly then pursueThe theme of Gods salvation,And find it ever new.Set free from present sorrow,We cheerfully can say,Een let the unknown to-morrow[1]Bring with it what it may.It can bring with it nothing,But he will bear us through;Who gives the lilies clothing,Will clothe his people too;Beneath the spreading heavensNo creature but is fed;And he who feeds the ravens,Will give his children bread.The vine nor fig-tree nei...
William Cowper
Commissioned.
"Do their errands; enter into the sacrifice with them; be a link yourself in the divine chain, and feel the joy and life of it."- ADELINE D. T. WHITNEYWhat can I do for thee, Beloved,Whose feet so little while agoTrod the same way-side dust with mine,And now up paths I do not knowSpeed, without sound or sign?What can I do? The perfect lifeAll fresh and fair and beautifulHas opened its wide arms to thee;Thy cup is over-brimmed and full;Nothing remains for me.I used to do so many things,--Love thee and chide thee and caress;Brush little straws from off thy way,Tempering with my poor tendernessThe heat of thy short day.Not much, but very sweet to give;And it is grief of griefs to bearThat all these m...
Susan Coolidge
Wishes
A BIRTHDAY WISH. I'm wishing a happy birthday, To you my dear sweet friend; And may every day be a happy day Is the wish I will always send.A CHRISTMAS WISH. A Merry Christmas Wish to you, And may your heart be gay; May Santa bring you many things, This Merry Christmas day.A NEW YEAR WISH A happy happy, New Year, We all are wishing you; We hope no sorrow you shall know This whole year through.
Alan L. Strang
Pleasure! why thus desert the heart
Pleasure! why thus desert the heartIn its spring-tide?I could have seen her, I could part,And but have sigh'd!O'er every youthful charm to stray,To gaze, to touch....Pleasure! why take so much away,Or give so much?
Walter Savage Landor
Sonnet LXX. To A Young Lady In Affliction, Who Fancied She Should Never More Be Happy.
Yes, thou shalt smile again! - Time always heals In youth, the wounds of Sorrow. - O! survey Yon now subsided Deep, thro' Night a prey To warring Winds, and to their furious pealsSurging tumultuous! - yet, as in dismay, The settling Billows tremble. - Morning steals Grey on the rocks; - and soon, to pour the day From the streak'd east, the radiant Orb unveilsIn all his pride of light. - Thus shall the glow Of beauty, health, and hope, by soft degrees Spread o'er thy breast; disperse these storms of woe;Wake, with sweet pleasure's sense, the wish to please, Till from those eyes the wonted lustres flow, Bright as the Sun on calm'd and crystal Seas.
Anna Seward
Stanzas
Thought is an unseen net wherein our mindIs taken and vainly struggles to be free:Words, that should loose our spirit, do but bindNew fetters on our hoped-for liberty:And action bears us onward like a streamPast fabulous shores, scarce seen in our swift course;Glorious - and yet its headlong currents seemBackwaters of some nobler purer force.There are slow curves, more subtle far than thought,That stoop to carry the grace of a girl's breast;And hanging flowers, so exquisitely wroughtIn airy metal, that they seem possessedOf souls; and there are distant hills that liftThe shoulder of a goddess towards the light;And arrowy trees, sudden and sharp and swift,Piercing the spirit deeply with delight.Would I might make these miracles my ow...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
Revulsion.
I see the starting buds, I catch the gleam In the near distance of a sun-kissed pool, The blessed April air blows soft and cool,Small wonder if all sorrow grows a dream, And we forget that close around us lie A city's poor, a city's misery.Of every outward vision there is some Internal counterpart. To-day I know The blessedness of living, and the glowOf life's dear spring-tide. I can bid thee come In thought and wander where the fields are fair With bursting life, and I, rejoicing, there.Yet have I passed, Beloved, through the vale Of dark dismay, and felt the dews of death Upon my brow, have measured out my breathCounting my hours of joy, as misers quail At every footfall in the quiet night ...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
When Lydia Smiles
When Lydia smiles, I seem to seeThe walls around me fade and flee;And, lo, in haunts of hart and hindI seem with lovely Rosalind,In Arden 'neath the greenwood tree:The day is drowsy with the bee,And one wild bird flutes dreamily,And all the mellow air is kind,When Lydia smiles.Ah, me! what were this world to meWithout her smile!--What poetry,What glad hesperian paths I findOf love, that lead my soul and mindTo happy hills of Arcady,When Lydia smiles!
Madison Julius Cawein
Little Messages Of Joy And Hope
I.Take HeartTake heart again. Joy may be lost awhile.It is not always Spring.And even now from some far Summer IsleHither the birds may wing.II.TouchstonesHearts, that have cheered us ever, night and day,With words that helped us on the rugged way,The hard, long road of life to whom is dueMore than the heart can ever hope to payAre they not touchstones, soul-transmuting trueAll thoughts to gold, refining thus the clay?III.FortuneFortune may pass us by:Follow her flying feet.Love, all we ask, deny:Never admit defeat.Take heart again and try.Never say die.IVBe GladBe glad, just for to-day!O heart, be glad!Cast all your car...
A Song Of Cheer
Be of good cheer, and have no fearOf Fortune or Tomorrow:To Hope's low whisper lend an earAnd turn away from Sorrow.Time out of mind the soul is blindTo things God sends as blessings:And Fortune often proves unkindMerely in foolish guessings.Within the soul we bear the wholeOf Hell and also Heaven;And 'twixt the two is set the goalOf dreams our lives have driven.What counts above all deeds is Love,And Friendship, that, remember,In heart-beats keeps Life's record ofIts April and December.To every one come rain and sun,And calm and stormy weather:What helps is not what Life has done,But Life and Love together.Of sun and rain and joy and painThe web of Life is woven;And ever through...
The Hut
Dear little Hut by the rice-fields circled,That cocoa-nuts shade above.I hear the voices of children singing,And that means love.When shall the traveller's march be over,When shall his wandering cease?This little homestead is bare and simple,And that means peace.Nay! to the road I am not unfaithful;In tents let my dwelling be!I am not longing for Peace or PassionFrom any one else but thee,My Krishna,Any one else but thee!
Saturday Afternoon.
From all the jails the boys and girlsEcstatically leap, --Beloved, only afternoonThat prison doesn't keep.They storm the earth and stun the air,A mob of solid bliss.Alas! that frowns could lie in waitFor such a foe as this!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson