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Sullen Moods
Love, do not count your labour lost Though I turn sullen, grim, retiredEven at your side; my thought is crossed With fancies by old longings fired.And when I answer you, some days Vaguely and wildly, do not fearThat my love walks forbidden ways, Breaking the ties that hold it here.If I speak gruffly, this mood is Mere indignation at my ownShortcomings, plagues, uncertainties; I forget the gentler tone.'You,' now that you have come to be My one beginning, prime and end,I count at last as wholly 'me,' Lover no longer nor yet friend.Friendship is flattery, though close hid; Must I then flatter my own mind?And must (which laws of shame forbid) Blind love of you make self-love b...
Robert von Ranke Graves
Autumn
The sad nights are here and the sad mornings,The air is filled with portents and with warnings,Clouds that vastly loom and winds that cry,A mournful prescienceOf bright things going hence;Red leaves are blown about the widowed sky,And late disconsolate bloomsDankly bestrewThe garden walks, as in deserted roomsThe parted guest, in haste to bid adieu,Trinklets and shreds forgotten left behind,Torn letters and a ribbon once so brave -Wreckage none cares to save,And hearts grow sad to find;And phantom echoes, as of old foot-falls,Wander and weary out in the thin air,And the last cricket calls -A tiny sorrow, shrilling "Where? ah! where?"
Richard Le Gallienne
Husbands
There is gladness in his gladness, when he's glad,There is sadness in his sadness, when he's sad;But the gladness in his gladness,Nor the sadness in his sadness,Isn't a marker to his madness when he's mad.
Unknown
Melancholia
Silently without my window,Tapping gently at the pane,Falls the rain.Through the trees sighs the breezeLike a soul in pain.Here alone I sit and weep;Thought hath banished sleep.Wearily I sit and listenTo the water's ceaseless drip.To my lipFate turns up the bitter cup,Forcing me to sip;'T is a bitter, bitter drink,Thus I sit and think,--Thinking things unknown and awful,Thoughts on wild, uncanny themes,Waking dreams.Spectres dark, corpses stark,Show the gaping seamsWhence the cold and cruel knifeStole away their life.Bloodshot eyes all strained and staring,Gazing ghastly into mine;Blood like wineOn the brow--clotted now--Shows death's dreadful sign.Lonely vigil still ...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Earth's Moments Of Gloom.
"The heart knoweth its own bitterness"The heart hath its moments of hopeless gloom,As rayless as is the dark night of the tomb;When the past has no spell, the future no ray,To chase the sad cloud from the spirit away;When earth, though in all her rich beauty arrayed,Hath a gloom o'er her flowers - o'er her skies a dark shade,And we turn from all pleasure with loathing away,Too downcast, too spirit sick, even to pray!Oh! where may the heart seek, in moments like this,A whisper of hope, or a faint gleam of bliss?When friendship seems naught but a cold, cheerless flame,And love a still falser and emptier name;When honors and wealth are a wearisome chain,Each link interwoven with grief and with pain,And each solace or joy that the spiri...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Lament I
Come, Heraclitus and Simonides,Come with your weeping and sad elegies:Ye griefs and sorrows, come from all the landsWherein ye sigh and wail and wring your hands:Gather ye here within my house todayAnd help me mourn my sweet, whom in her MayUngodly Death hath ta'en to his estate,Leaving me on a sudden desolate.'Tis so a serpent glides on some shy nestAnd, of the tiny nightingales possessed,Doth glut its throat, though, frenzied with her fear,The mother bird doth beat and twitter nearAnd strike the monster, till it turns and gapesTo swallow her, and she but just escapes."'Tis vain to weep," my friends perchance will say.Dear God, is aught in life not vain, then? Nay,Seek to lie soft, yet thorns will prickly be:The life of man is naught but...
Jan Kochanowski
Childish Griefs.
Softened by Time's consummate plush,How sleek the woe appearsThat threatened childhood's citadelAnd undermined the years!Bisected now by bleaker griefs,We envy the despairThat devastated childhood's realm,So easy to repair.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
To One Departed
Seraph! thy memory is to meLike some enchanted far-off isleIn some tumultuous sea,Some ocean vexed as it may beWith storms; but where, meanwhile,Serenest skies continuallyJust o'er that one bright island smile.For 'mid the earnest cares and woesThat crowd around my earthly path,(Sad path, alas, where growsNot even one lonely rose!)My soul at least a solace hathIn dreams of thee; and therein knowsAn Eden of bland repose.
Edgar Allan Poe
Regret.
("Oui, le bonheur bien vite a passé.")[Bk. V. ii., February, 1821.]Yes, Happiness hath left me soon behind!Alas! we all pursue its steps! and whenWe've sunk to rest within its arms entwined,Like the Phoenician virgin, wake, and findOurselves alone again.Then, through the distant future's boundless space,We seek the lost companion of our days:"Return, return!" we cry, and lo, apacePleasure appears! but not to fill the placeOf that we mourn always.I, should unhallowed Pleasure woo me now,Will to the wanton sorc'ress say, "Begone!Respect the cypress on my mournful brow,Lost Happiness hath left regret - but thouLeavest remorse, alone."Yet, haply lest I check the mounting fire,O friends, ...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Darkness
But that from slow dissolving pomps of dawnNo verity of slowly strengthening lightEarly or late hath issued; that the dayScarce-shown, relapses rather, self-withdrawn,Back to the glooms of ante-natal night,For this, O human beings, mourn we may.
Arthur Hugh Clough
Translations. - Psyches Mourning. (From Von Salis-Seewis.)
Psyche moans, in deep-sunk, darksome prison,For redemption; ah! for light she aches;Fears, hopes, after every noise doth listen--Whether Fate her bars of iron breaks.Bound are Psyche's pinions--airy, soaring;Yet high-hearted is she, groaning low;Knows that under clouds whence rain is pouringSprouts the palm that crowns the victor's brow;Knows among the thorns the rose yet reigneth;Golden flowers spring from the desert graveShe her garland through denial gaineth,And her strength is steeled by winds that rave.'Tis through lack that she her blisses buyeth;Sorrow's dream comes true by longing long;Lest light break the sleep wherein she lieth,Round her tree of life the shadows throng.Psyche's wail is but a fluted sadness
George MacDonald
Loneliness.
Dear, I am lonely, for the bay is still As any hill-girt lake; the long brown beach Lies bare and wet. As far as eye can reachThere is no motion. Even on the hill Where the breeze loves to wander I can see No stir of leaves, nor any waving tree.There is a great red cliff that fronts my view A bare, unsightly thing; it angers me With its unswerving-grim monotony.The mackerel weir, with branching boughs askew Stands like a fire-swept forest, while the sea Laps it, with soothing sighs, continually.There are no tempests in this sheltered bay, The stillness frets me, and I long to be Where winds sweep strong and blow tempestuously,To stand upon some hill-top far away And face a gathering gale, and let the...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
The Clouds That Promise A Glorious Morrow.
The clouds that promise a glorious morrow Are fading slowly, one by one;The earth no more bright rays may borrow From her loved Lord, the golden sun;Gray evening shadows are softly creeping, With noiseless steps, o'er vale and hill;The birds and flowers are calmly sleeping; And all around is fair and still.Once loved I dearly, at this sweet hour, With loitering steps to careless stray,To idly gather an opening flower, And often pause upon my way, -Gazing around me with joyous feeling, From sunny earth to azure sky,Or bending over the streamlet, stealing 'Mid banks of flowers and verdure by.You wond'ring ask me why sit I lonely Within my quiet, curtain'd room,So idly seeking and clinging only
Sunless Days
They come to ev'ry life -- sad, sunless days,With not a light all o'er their clouded skies;And thro' the dark we grope along our waysWith hearts fear-filled, and lips low-breathing sighs.What is the dark? Why cometh it? and whence?Why does it banish all the bright away?How does it weave a spell o'er soul and sense?Why falls the shadow where'er gleams the ray?Hast felt it? I have felt it, and I knowHow oft and suddenly the shadows rollFrom out the depths of some dim realm of woe,To wrap their darkness round the human soul.Those days are darker than the very night;For nights have stars, and sleep, and happy dreams;But these days bring unto the spirit-sightThe mysteries of gloom, until it seemsThe light is gone forever, and...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Open Windows
Out of the window a sea of green treesLift their soft boughs like the arms of a dancer,They beckon and call me, "Come out in the sun!"But I cannot answer.I am alone with Weakness and Pain,Sick abed and June is going,I cannot keep her, she hurries byWith the silver-green of her garments blowing.Men and women pass in the streetGlad of the shining sapphire weather,But we know more of it than they,Pain and I together.They are the runners in the sun,Breathless and blinded by the race,But we are watchers in the shadeWho speak with Wonder face to face.
Sara Teasdale
Ilicet
There is an end of joy and sorrow;Peace all day long, all night, all morrow,But never a time to laugh or weep.The end is come of pleasant places,The end of tender words and faces,The end of all, the poppied sleep.No place for sound within their hearing,No room to hope, no time for fearing,No lips to laugh, no lids for tears.The old years have run out all their measure;No chance of pain, no chance of pleasure,No fragment of the broken years.Outside of all the worlds and ages,There where the fool is as the sage is,There where the slayer is clean of blood,No end, no passage, no beginning,There where the sinner leaves off sinning,There where the good man is not good.There is not one thing with another,But Evil sa...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Tower Of Famine.
Amid the desolation of a city,Which was the cradle, and is now the graveOf an extinguished people, - so that PityWeeps o'er the shipwrecks of Oblivion's wave,There stands the Tower of Famine. It is builtUpon some prison-homes, whose dwellers raveFor bread, and gold, and blood: Pain, linked to Guilt,Agitates the light flame of their hours,Until its vital oil is spent or spilt.There stands the pile, a tower amid the towersAnd sacred domes; each marble-ribbed roof,The brazen-gated temples, and the bowersOf solitary wealth, - the tempest-proofPavilions of the dark Italian air, -Are by its presence dimmed - they stand aloof,And are withdrawn - so that the world is bare;As if a spectre wrapped in shapeless terrorAm...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Death Of The Pauper Child.
Hush, mourning mother, wan and pale! No sobs - no grieving now:No burning tears must thou let fall Upon that cold still brow;No look of anguish cast above, Nor smite thine aching breast,But clasp thy hands and thank thy God - Thy darling is at rest.Close down those dark-fringed, snowy lids Over the violet eyes,Whose liquid light was once as clear As that of summer skies.Is it not bliss to know what e'er Thy future griefs and fears,They will be never dimmed like thine By sorrow's scalding tears?Enfold the tiny fingers fair, From which life's warmth has fled,For ever freed from wearing toil - The toil for daily bread:Compose the softly moulded limbs, The little waxen feet,...