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Sonnet XCVIII.
Since my griev'd mind some energy regains, Industrious habits can, at times, repress The weight of filial woe, the deep distress Of life-long separation; yet its pains,Oft do they throb along these fever'd veins. - My rest has lost its balm, the fond caress Wont the dear aged forehead to impress At midnight, as he slept; - nor now obtainsMy uprising the blest news, that cou'd impart Joy to the morning, when its dawn had brought Some health to that weak Frame, o'er which my heartWith fearful fondness yearn'd, and anxious thought. - Time, and the HOPE that robs the mortal Dart Of its fell sting, shall cheer me - as they ought.
Anna Seward
Crows.
They stream across the fading western skyA sable cloud, far o'er the lonely leas;Now parting into scattered companies,Now closing up the broken ranks, still highAnd higher yet they mount, while, carelessly,Trail slow behind, athwart the moving treesA lingering few, 'round whom the evening breezePlays with sad whispered murmurs as they fly.A lonely figure, ghostly in the dimAnd darkening twilight, lingers in the shadeOf bending willows: "Surely God has laidHis curse on me," he moans, "my strength of limbAnd old heart-courage fail me, and I fleeBowed with fell terror at this augury."
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Song From The Wandering Jew.
See yon opening flowerSpreads its fragrance to the blast;It fades within an hour,Its decay is pale - is fast.Paler is yon maiden;Faster is her heart's decay;Deep with sorrow laden,She sinks in death away.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Yesterdays
Gone! and they return no more,But they leave a light in the heart;The murmur of waves that kiss a shoreWill never, I know, depart.Gone! yet with us still they stay,And their memories throb through life;The music that hushes or stirs to-day,Is toned by their calm or strife.Gone! and yet they never go!We kneel at the shrine of time:'Tis a mystery no man may know,Nor tell in a poet's rhyme.
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Girl's Lamentation
With grief and mourning I sit to spin;My Love passed by, and he didn't come in;He passes by me, both day and night,And carries off my poor heart's delight.There is a tavern in yonder town,My Love goes there and he spends a crown;He takes a strange girl upon his knee,And never more gives a thought to me.Says he, 'We'll wed without loss of time,And sure our love's but a little crime;'My apron-string now it's wearing short,And my Love he seeks other girls to court.O with him I'd go if I had my will,I'd follow him barefoot o'er rock and hill;I'd never once speak of all my griefIf he'd give me a smile for my heart's relief.In our wee garden the rose unfolds,With bachelor's-buttons and marigolds;I'll tie no posies ...
William Allingham
Dreamland
By a route obscure and lonely,Haunted by ill angels only,Where an Eidolon, named night,On a black throne reigns upright,I have reached these lands but newlyFrom an ultimate dim Thule,From a wild clime that lieth, sublime,Out of space, out of time.Bottomless vales and boundless floods,And chasms, and caves, and Titan woods,With forms that no man can discoverFor the tears that drip all over;Mountains toppling evermoreInto seas without a shore;Seas that restlessly aspire,Surging, unto skies of fire;Lakes that endlessly outspreadTheir lone waters, lone and dead,Their still waters, still and chillyWith the snows of the lolling lily.By the lakes that thus outspreadTheir lone waters, lone and dead,Their ...
Edgar Allan Poe
Ode To A Nightingale
My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness painsMy sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk,Or emptied some dull opiate to the drainsOne minute past, and Lethe-wards had sunk:Tis not through envy of thy happy lot,But being too happy in thine happiness,That thou, light-winged Dryad of the trees,In some melodious plotOf beechen green and shadows numberless,Singest of summer in full-throated ease.O, for a draught of vintage! that hath beenCoold a long age in the deep-delved earth,Tasting of Flora and the country green,Dance, and Provenial song, and sunburnt mirth!O for a beaker full of the warm South,Full of the true, the blushful Hippocrene,With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,And purple-stained mouth;That I might drink, and leav...
John Keats
The Intruder
There is a smell of roses in the roomTea-roses, dead of bloom;An invalid, she sits there in the gloom,And contemplates her doom.The pattern of the paper, and the grainOf carpet, with its stain,Have stamped themselves, like fever, on her brain,And grown a part of pain.It has been long, so long, since that one died,Or sat there by her side;She felt so lonely, lost, she would have cried,But all her tears were dried.A knock came on the door: she hardly heard;And then a whispered word,And someone entered; at which, like a bird,Her caged heart cried and stirred.And then she heard a voice; she was not wrong:His voice, alive and strong:She listened, while the silence filled with songOh, she had waited long!
Madison Julius Cawein
By A Child's Bed
She breathèd deep,And stepped from out life's streamUpon the shore of sleep;And parted from the earthly noise,Leaving her world of toys,To dwell a little in a dell of dream.Then brooding on the love I hold so free,My fond possessions come to beClouded with grief;These fairy kisses,This archness innocent,Sting me with sorrow and disturbed content:I think of what my portion might have been;A dearth of blisses,A famine of delights,If I had never had what now I value most;Till all I have seems something I have lost;A desert underneath the garden shows,And in a mound of cinders roots the rose.Here then I linger by the little bed,Till all my spirit's sphere,Grows one half brightness and the other dead,O...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Boys Bathing.
Round them a fierce, wide, crazy noon Heaves with crushed lips and glowing sides Against the huge and drowsy sun. Beneath them turn the glittering tides Where dizzy waters reel with gold, And strange, rich trophies sink and rise From decks of sunken argosies. With shining arms they cleave the cold Far reaches of the sea, and beat The hissing foam with flash of feet Into bright fangs, while breathlessly Curls over them the amorous sea. Naked they laugh and revel there. One shakes the sea-drops from his hair, Then, singing, takes the bubbles: one Lies couched among the shells, the sands Telling gold hours between his hands: One floats like sea-wrack in the sun. The gods o...
Muriel Stuart
Anemones.
If I should wish hereafter that your heartShould beat with one fair memory of me,May Time's hard hand our footsteps guide apart,But lead yours back one spring-time to the Lea.Nodding Anemones,Wind-flowers pale,Bloom with the budding trees,Dancing to every breeze,Mock hopes more fair than these,Love's vows more frail.For then the grass we loved grows green again,And April showers make April woods more fair;But no sun dries the sad salt tears of pain,Or brings back summer lights on faded hair,Nodding Anemones,Wind-flowers pale,Bloom with the budding trees,Dancing to every breeze,Mock hopes more frail than these,Love's vows more frail.
Juliana Horatia Ewing
The Old Oak.
Friend of my early days, we meet once more!Once more I stand thine aged boughs beneath,And hear again the rustling music pour,Along thy leaves, as whispering spirits breathe.Full many a day of sunshine and of storm,Since last we parted, both have surely known;Thy leaves are thinned, decrepit is thy form,And all my cherished visions, they are flown!How beautiful, how brief, those sunny hoursDeparted now, when life was in its springWhen Fancy knew no scene undecked with flowers,And Expectation flew on Fancy's wing!Here, on the bank, beside this whispering stream,Which still runs by as gayly as of yore,Marking its eddies, I was wont to dreamOf things away, on some far fairy shore.Then every whirling leaf and bubbling ball,<...
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
Sonnet XXXIX. Winter Evening.
When mourn the dark Winds o'er the lonely plain, And from pale noon sinks, ere the fifth cold hour, The transient light, Imagination's power, With Knowledge, and with Science in her train,Not unpropitious Hyems' icy reign Perceives; since in the deep and silent lour High themes the rapt concent'ring Thoughts explore, Freed from external Pleasure's glittering chain.Then most the understanding's culture pays Luxuriant harvest, nor shall Folly bring Her aids obtrusive. - Then, with ardent gaze,The INGENIOUS to their rich resources spring, While sullen Winter's dull imprisoning days Hang on the vacant mind with flagging wing.Dec. 7th, 1782.
Comfort To A Youth That Had Lost His Love
What needs complaints,When she a placeHas with the raceOf saints?In endless mirth,She thinks not onWhat's said or doneIn earth:She sees no tears,Or any toneOf thy deep groanShe hears;Nor does she mind,Or think on't now,That ever thouWast kind:But changed above,She likes not there,As she did here,Thy love.Forbear, therefore,And lull asleepThy woes, and weepNo more.
Robert Herrick
Helpstone Green.
Ye injur'd fields, ye once were gay,When nature's hand display'dLong waving rows of willows grey,And clumps of hawthorn shade;But now, alas! your hawthorn bowersAll desolate we see,The spoilers' axe their shade devours,And cuts down every tree.Not trees alone have own'd their force,Whole woods beneath them bow'd;They turn'd the winding rivulet's course,And all thy pastures plough'd;To shrub or tree throughout thy fieldsThey no compassion show;The uplifted axe no mercy yields,But strikes a fatal blow.Whene'er I muse along the plain,And mark where once they grew,Remembrance wakes her busy trainAnd brings past scenes to view:The well-known brook, the favourite tree,In fancy's eye appear,And next, tha...
John Clare
The Shock
Thinking of these, of beautiful brief things,Of things that are of sense and spirit made,Of meadow flowers, dense hedges and dark bushesWith roses trailing over nests of thrushes;Of dews so pure and bright and flush'd and cool,And like the flowers as brief as beautiful;Thinking of the tall grass and daisies tallAnd whispered music of the waving bents;Of these that like a simple child I loveSince they are life and life is flowers and grass;Thinking of trees, and water at their feetAnswering the trees with murmur childlike sweet;Thinking of those high thoughts that passed like the windYet left their brightness lying on the mind,As the white blossoms the raw airs shake downThat lie awhile yet lovely on the chill grass;Think...
John Frederick Freeman
Night Song Of A Wandering Shepherd In Asia.
What doest thou in heaven, O moon? Say, silent moon, what doest thou? Thou risest in the evening; thoughtfully Thou wanderest o'er the plain, Then sinkest to thy rest again. And art thou never satisfied With going o'er and o'er the selfsame ways? Art never wearied? Dost thou still Upon these valleys love to gaze? How much thy life is like The shepherd's life, forlorn! He rises in the early dawn, He moves his flock along the plain; The selfsame flocks, and streams, and herbs He sees again; Then drops to rest, the day's work o'er; And hopes for nothing more. Tell me, O moon, what signifies his life To him, thy life to thee? Say, whither tend My weary, short-lived pilgr...
Giacomo Leopardi
Sunset on the Mississippi.
O beautiful hills in the purple light, That shadow the western sky,I dream of you oft in the silent night, As the golden days go by.The river that flows at my longing feet Is tinged with a deeper glow;But the song that it sings is as sad to-day As it was in the long ago.The far-off clouds in the far-off sky Are tinted with gold and red;But the lesson they tell to the hearts of men Is a lesson that never is said.The star-crowned night in her sable plumes Is veiling the eastern sky,And she trails her robes in the dying fires That far in the west do lie.A single gem from her circlet old Is lost as she wanders by,And the beautiful star with its golden light Shines out in the lo...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick