Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 8 of 90
Previous
Next
Mariana
With blackest moss the flower-plotsWere thickly crusted, one and all:The rusted nails fell from the knotsThat held the pear to the gable-wall.The broken sheds look'd sad and strange:Unlifted was the clinking latch;Weeded and worn the ancient thatchUpon the lonely moated grange.She only said, "My life is dreary,He cometh not," she said;She said, "I am aweary, aweary,I would that I were dead!"Her tears fell with the dews at even;Her tears fell ere the dews were dried;She could not look on the sweet heaven,Either at morn or eventide.After the flitting of the bats,When thickest dark did trance the sky,She drew her casement-curtain by,And glanced athwart the glooming flats.She only said, "My life is dreary,He come...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Separation
There is a mountain and a wood between us,Where the lone shepherd and late bird have seen usMorning and noon and eventide repass.Between us now the mountain and the woodSeem standing darker than last year they stood,And say we must not cross, alas! alas!
Walter Savage Landor
The Lonely Land
A river binds the lonely land,A river like a silver band,To crags and shores of yellow sand.It is a place where kildees cry,And endless marshes eastward lie,Whereon looks down a ghostly sky.A house stands gray and all aloneUpon a hill, as dim of tone,And lonely, as a lonely stone.There are no signs of life about;No barnyard bustle, cry and shoutOf children who run laughing out.No crow of cocks, no low of cows,No sheep-bell tinkling under boughsOf beech, or song in garth or house.Only the curlew's mournful call,Circling the sky at evenfall,And loon lamenting over all.A garden, where the sunflower diesAnd lily on the pathway lies,Looks blindly at the blinder skies.And round t...
Madison Julius Cawein
Ex Anima.
The gloomy hours of silence wake Remembrance and her train, And phantoms through the fancies chase The mem'ries that remain; And hidden in the dark embrace Of days that now are gone, I see a form, a fairy form, And fancy hurries on! I see the old familiar smile, I hear the tender tone, I greet the softness of the glance That cheered me when alone; The ruby chains of rich romance That bound our bosoms o'er, I still can know, I still can feel, As they were felt before. I name the vows, the fresh young vows, That we together said; What matters it? She can not know; She slumbers with the dead! Again the fields ...
Freeman Edwin Miller
The Captive Dove
Poor restless dove, I pity thee;And when I hear thy plaintive moan,I mourn for thy captivity,And in thy woes forget mine own.To see thee stand prepared to fly,And flap those useless wings of thine,And gaze into the distant sky,Would melt a harder heart than mine.In vain in vain! Thou canst not rise:Thy prison roof confines thee there;Its slender wires delude thine eyes,And quench thy longings with despair.Oh, thou wert made to wander freeIn sunny mead and shady grove,And, far beyond the rolling sea,In distant climes, at will to rove!Yet, hadst thou but one gentle mateThy little drooping heart to cheer,And share with thee thy captive state,Thou couldst be happy even there.Yes, even there, i...
Anne Bronte
Alone And Repentant (To A Friend Since Deceased)
(See Note 9)A friend I possess, whose whispers just said,"God's peace!" to my night-watching mind.When daylight is gone and darkness brings dread,He ever the way can find.He utters no word to smite and to score;He, too, has known sin and its grief.He heals with his look the place that is sore,And stays till I have relief.He takes for his own the deed that is suchThat sorrows of heart increase.He cleanses the wound with so gentle a touch,The pain must give way to peace.He followed each hope the heights that would scaleReproached not a hapless descent.He stands here just now, so mild, but so pale; -In time he shall know what it meant.
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
I Am The Only Being Whose Doom
I am the only being whose doomNo tongue would ask no eye would mournI never caused a thought of gloomA smile of joy since I was bornIn secret pleasure, secret tearsThis changeful life has slipped awayAs friendless after eighteen yearsAs lone as on my natal dayThere have been times I cannot hideThere have been times when this was drearWhen my sad soul forgot its prideAnd longed for one to love me hereBut those were in the early glowOf feelings since subdued by careAnd they have died so long agoI hardly now believe they wereFirst melted off the hope of youthThen Fancy's rainbow fast withdrewAnd then experience told me truthIn mortal bosoms never grew'Twas grief enough to think mankindAll...
Emily Bronte
Hard Times
I am weary, and very lonely, And can but think--think. If there were some water only That a spirit might drink--drink, And arise, With light in the eyes And a crown of hope on the brow, To walk abroad in the strength of gladness, Not sit in the house, benumbed with sadness-- As now! But, Lord, thy child will be sad-- As sad as it pleases thee; Will sit, not seeking to be glad, Till thou bid sadness flee, And, drawing near, With thy good cheer Awake thy life in me.
George MacDonald
A Meeting With Despair
As evening shaped I found me on a moorWhich sight could scarce sustain:The black lean land, of featureless contour,Was like a tract in pain."This scene, like my own life," I said, "is oneWhere many glooms abide;Toned by its fortune to a deadly dun -Lightless on every side.I glanced aloft and halted, pleasure-caughtTo see the contrast there:The ray-lit clouds gleamed glory; and I thought,"There's solace everywhere!"Then bitter self-reproaches as I stoodI dealt me silentlyAs one perverse misrepresenting GoodIn graceless mutiny.Against the horizon's dim-discerned wheelA form rose, strange of mould:That he was hideous, hopeless, I could feelRather than could behold."'Tis a dead spot, where even ...
Thomas Hardy
Despondency.
Slow figures in some live remorseless frieze,The approaching days escapeless and unguessed,With mask and shroud impenetrably dressed;Time, whose inexorable destiniesBear down upon us like impending seas;And the huge presence of this world, at bestA sightless giant wandering without rest,Agèd and mad with many miseries.The weight and measure of these things who knows?Resting at times beside life's thought-swept stream,Sobered and stunned with unexpected blows,We scarcely hear the uproar; life doth seem,Save for the certain nearness of its woes,Vain and phantasmal as a sick man's dream.
Archibald Lampman
Silence
There are some qualities some incorporate things,That have a double life, which thus is madeA type of that twin entity which springsFrom matter and light, evinced in solid and shade.There is a twofold Silence sea and shoreBody and soul. One dwells in lonely places,Newly with grass o'ergrown; some solemn graces,Some human memories and tearful lore,Render him terrorless: his name's "No More."He is the corporate Silence: dread him not!No power hath he of evil in himself;But should some urgent fate (untimely lot!)Bring thee to meet his shadow (nameless elf,That haunteth the lone regions where hath trodNo foot of man), commend thyself to God!
Edgar Allan Poe
Despondency
The thoughts that rain their steady glowLike stars on lifes cold sea,Which others know, or say they knowThey never shone for me.Thoughts light, like gleams, my spirits sky,But they will not remain.They light me once, they hurry by,And never come again.
Matthew Arnold
On A Friend Recently Dead
I The stream goes fast. When this that is the present is the past, 'Twill be as all the other pasts have been, A failing hill, a daily dimming scene, A far strange port with foreign life astir The ship has left behind, the voyager Will never return to; no, nor see again, Though with a heart full of longing he may strain Back to project himself, and once more count The boats, the whitened walls that climbed the mount, Mark the cathedral's roof, the gathered spires, The vanes, the windows red with sunset's fires, The gap of the market-place, and watch again The coloured groups of women, and the men Lounging at ease along the low stone wall That fringed the harbour; and there beyond it all<...
John Collings Squire, Sir
Verses, Supposed To Be Written By Alexander Selkirk, During His Solitary Abode In The Island Of Juan Fernandez.
I am monarch of all I survey,My right there is none to dispute;From the centre all round to the seaI am lord of the fowl and the brute.O Solitude! where are the charmsThat sages have seen in thy face?Better dwell in the midst of alarmsThan reign in this horrible place.I am out of humanitys reach,I must finish my journey alone,Never hear the sweet music of speech,I start at the sound of my own.The beasts, that roam over the plain,My form with indifference see;They are so unacquainted with man,Their tameness is shocking to me.Society, friendship, and love,Divinely bestowd upon man,O, had I the wings of a dove,How soon would I taste you again!My sorrows I then might assuageIn the ways of reli...
William Cowper
The Sea.
Sad is the lonely sea -So vast, and smooth, and greyIt stretches far from me.Sad is the lonely sea!Its cheerful colours fleeBefore the fading day.Sad is the lonely seaSo vast, and smooth, and grey!
Paul Bewsher
Estranged
No one was with me there -Happy I was - alone;Yet from the sunshine suddenlyA joy was gone.A bird in an empty houseSad echoes makes to ring,Flitting from room to roomOn restless wing:Till from its shades he flies,And leaves forlorn and dimThe narrow solitudesSo strange to him.So, when with fickle heartI joyed in the passing day,A presence my mood estrangedWent grieved away.
Walter De La Mare
Hymn on Solitude
Hail, mildly pleasing Solitude,Companion of the wise and good,But from whose holy piercing eyeThe herd of fools and villains fly.Oh! how I love with thee to walk,And listen to thy whispered talk,Which innocence and truth imparts,And melts the most obdurate hearts.A thousand shapes you wear with ease,And still in every shape you please.Now wrapt in some mysterious dream,A lone philosopher you seem;Now quick from hill to vale you fly,And now you sweep the vaulted sky;A shepherd next, you haunt the plain,And warble forth your oaten strain;A lover now, with all the graceOf that sweet passion in your face;Then, calmed to friendship, you assumeThe gentle looking Hertford's bloom,As, with her Musidora, she(Her Musidora fo...
James Thomson
Melancholy. A Quatrain.
With shadowy immortelles of memoryAbout her brow, she sits with eyes that lookUpon the stream of Lethe wearily,In hesitant hands Death's partly-opened book.