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The Heap Of Rags
One night when I went downThames' side, in London Town,A heap of rags saw I,And sat me down close by.That thing could shout and bawl,But showed no face at all;When any steamer passedAnd blew a loud shrill blast,That heap of rags would sitAnd make a sound like it;When struck the clock's deep bell,It made those peals as well.When winds did moan around,It mocked them with that sound;When all was quiet, itFell into a strange fit;Would sigh, and moan and roar,It laughed, and blessed, and swore.Yet that poor thing, I know,Had neither friend nor foe;Its blessing or its curseMade no one better or worse.I left it in that place,The thing that showed no face,Was it a man that hadSuffered till he went m...
William Henry Davies
Going Back
The night turns slowly round,Swift trains go by in a rush of light;Slow trains steal past.This train beats anxiously, outward bound.But I am not here.I am away, beyond the scope of this turning;There, where the pivot is, the axisOf all this gear.I, who sit in tears,I, whose heart is torn with parting;Who cannot bear to think back to the departure platform;My spirit hearsVoices of menSound of artillery, aeroplanes, presences,And more than all, the dead-sure silence,The pivot again.There, at the axisPain, or love, or griefSleep on speed; in dead certainty;Pure relief.There, at the pivotTime sleeps again.No has-been, no here-after; only the perfectedSilence of men.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
A Calendar Of Sonnets - August
Silence again. The glorious symphonyHath need of pause and interval of peace.Some subtle signal bids all sweet sounds cease,Save hum of insects' aimless industry.Pathetic summer seeks by blazonryOf color to conceal her swift decrease.Weak subterfuge! Each mocking day doth fleeceA blossom, and lay bare her poverty.Poor middle-agèd summer! Vain this show!Whole fields of golden-rod cannot offsetOne meadow with a single violet;And well the singing thrush and lily know,Spite of all artifice which her regretCan deck in splendid guise, their time to go!
Helen Hunt Jackson
Sonnet. On Seeing A Young Lady, I Had Previously Known, Confined In A Madhouse.
Sweet wreck of loveliness! alas, how soonThe sad brief summer of thy joys hath fled:How sorrows Friendship for thy hapless doom,Thy beauty faded, and thy hopes all dead.Oh! 'twas that beauty's power which first destroy'dThy mind's serenity; its charms but ledThe faithless friend, that thy pure love enjoy'd,To tear the beauteous blossom from its bed.How reason shudders at thy frenzied air!To see thee smile, with fancy's dreams possess'd;Or shrink, the frozen image of despair.Or, love-enraptured, chant thy griefs to rest:Oh! cease that mournful voice, affliction's child,My heart but bleeds to hear thy musings wild.
Thomas Gent
Terminus
Terminus shows the ways and says, "All things must have an end." Oh, bitter thought we hid away When first you were my friend. We hid it in the darkest place Our hearts had place to hide, And took the sweet as from a spring Whose waters would abide. For neither life nor the wide world Has greater store than this: - The thought that runs through hands and eyes And fills the silences. There is a void the agéd world Throws over the spent heart; When Life has given all she has, And Terminus says depart. When we must sit with folded hands, And see with inward eye A void rise like an arctic breath To hollow the morrow's sky. To-morrow...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Flirt's Tragedy
Here alone by the logs in my chamber,Deserted, decrepit -Spent flames limning ghosts on the wainscotOf friends I once knew -My drama and hers begins weirdlyIts dumb re-enactment,Each scene, sigh, and circumstance passingIn spectral review.- Wealth was mine beyond wish when I met her -The pride of the lowland -Embowered in Tintinhull ValleyBy laurel and yew;And love lit my soul, notwithstandingMy features' ill favour,Too obvious beside her perfectionsOf line and of hue.But it pleased her to play on my passion,And whet me to pleadingsThat won from her mirthful negationsAnd scornings undue.Then I fled her disdains and derisionsTo cities of pleasure,And made me the crony of idlers
Thomas Hardy
Nightpiece
Gaunt in gloom,The pale stars their torches,Enshrouded, wave.Ghostfires from heaven's far verges faint illume,Arches on soaring arches,Night's sindark nave.Seraphim,The lost hosts awakenTo service tillIn moonless gloom each lapses muted, dim,Raised when she has and shakenHer thurible.And long and loud,To night's nave upsoaring,A starknell tollsAs the bleak incense surges, cloud on cloud,Voidward from the adoringWaste of souls.
James Joyce
The Parting
1The chestnut steed stood by the gateHis noble master's will to wait,The woody park so green and brightWas glowing in the morning light,The young leaves of the aspen treesWere dancing in the morning breeze.The palace door was open wide,Its lord was standing there,And his sweet lady by his sideWith soft dark eyes and raven hair.He smiling took her wary handAnd said, 'No longer here I stand;My charger shakes his flowing maneAnd calls me with impatient neigh.Adieu then till we meet again,Sweet love, I must no longer stay.'2'You must not go so soon,' she said,'I will not say farewell.The sun has not dispelled the shadeIn yonder dewy dell;Dark shadows of gigantic lengthAre sleeping on the l...
Anne Bronte
A Fragment
'Maiden, thou wert thoughtless onceOf beauty or of grace,Simple and homely in attireCareless of form and face.Then whence this change, and why so oftDost smooth thy hazel hair?And wherefore deck thy youthful formWith such unwearied care?'Tell us, and cease to tire our earsWith yonder hackneyed strainWhy wilt thou play those simple tunesSo often o'er again?''Nay, gentle friends, I can but sayThat childhood's thoughts are gone.Each year its own new feelings bringsAnd years move swiftly on,And for these little simple airs,I love to play them o'erSo much I dare not promise nowTo play them never more.'I answered and it was enough;They turned them to depart;They could not read my secret thoughtsNor see ...
The Riddle Of The Sphinx.
From age to age the haggard human train Creeps wearily across Time's burning sands To look into her face, and lift weak handsIn supplication to the calm disdainThat crowns her stony brow.... But all in vain The riddle of mortality they try: Doom speaks still from her unrelenting eye--Doom deep as passion, infinite as pain.From age to age the voice of Love is heard Pleading above the tumult of the throng,But evermore the inexorable word Comes like the tragic burden of a song."The answer is the same," the stern voice saith:"Death yesterday, today and still tomorrow--Death!"
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
Fiordispina.
The season was the childhood of sweet June,Whose sunny hours from morning until noonWent creeping through the day with silent feet,Each with its load of pleasure; slow yet sweet;Like the long years of blest EternityNever to be developed. Joy to thee,Fiordispina and thy Cosimo,For thou the wonders of the depth canst knowOf this unfathomable flood of hours,Sparkling beneath the heaven which embowers -...They were two cousins, almost like to twins,Except that from the catalogue of sinsNature had rased their love - which could not beBut by dissevering their nativity.And so they grew together like two flowersUpon one stem, which the same beams and showersLull or awaken in their purple prime,Which the same hand will gather - t...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Too Late.
I looked upon a dead girl's face and heardWhat seemed the voice of Love call unto meOut of her heart; whereon the characteryOf her lost dreams I read there word for word:How on her soul no soul had touched, or stirredHer Life's sad depths to rippling melody,Or made the imaged longing, there, to beThe realization of a hope deferred.So in her life had Love behaved to her.Between the lonely chapters of her yearsAnd her young eyes making no golden blurWith god-bright face and hair; who led me toHer side at last, and bade me, through my tears,With Death's dumb face, too late, to see and know.
Madison Julius Cawein
Il Penseroso
Hence vain deluding joyes,The brood of folly without father bred,How little you bested,Or fill the fixèd mind with all your toyes;Dwell in some idle brain,And fancies fond with gaudy shapes possess,As thick and numberlessAs the gay motes that poeple the Sun Beams,Or likest hovering dreamsThe fickle Pensioners of Morpheus train.But hail thou Goddess, sage and holy,Hail divinest Melancholy,Whose Saintly visage is too brightTo hit the Sense of human sight;And therefore to our weaker view,Ore laid with black staid Wisdoms hue.Black, but such as in esteem,Prince Memnons sister might beseem,Or that starrd Ethiope Queen that stroveTo set her beauties praise aboveThe Sea Nymphs, and their powers offended,Yet thou art high...
John Milton
Occasioned By Sir William Temple'S Late Illness And Recovery
WRITTEN IN DECEMBER, 1693Strange to conceive, how the same objects strikeAt distant hours the mind with forms so like!Whether in time, Deduction's broken chainMeets, and salutes her sister link again;Or haunted Fancy, by a circling flight,Comes back with joy to its own seat at night;Or whether dead Imagination's ghostOft hovers where alive it haunted most;Or if Thought's rolling globe, her circle run,Turns up old objects to the soul her sun;Or loves the Muse to walk with conscious prideO'er the glad scene whence first she rose a bride: Be what it will; late near yon whispering stream,Where her own Temple was her darling theme;There first the visionary sound was heard,When to poetic view the Muse appear'd.Such seem'd her eye...
Jonathan Swift
My Spectre Around Me
My spectre around me night and dayLike a wild beast guards my way.My emanation far withinWeeps incessantly for my sin.A fathomless and boundless deep,There we wander, there we weep;On the hungry craving windMy spectre follows thee behind.He scents thy footsteps in the snow,Wheresoever thou dost goThrough the wintry hail and rain.When wilt thou return again?Dost thou not in pride and scornFill with tempests all my morn,And with jealousies and fearsFill my pleasant nights with tears?Seven of my sweet loves thy knifeHas bereaved of their life.Their marble tombs I built with tearsAnd with cold and shuddering fears.Seven more loves weep night and dayRound the tombs where my loves lay,...
William Blake
Pignus Amoris. [1]
1As by the fix'd decrees of Heaven,'Tis vain to hope that Joy can last;The dearest boon that Life has given,To me is - visions of the past.2.For these this toy of blushing hueI prize with zeal before unknown,It tells me of a Friend I knew,Who loved me for myself alone.3.It tells me what how few can sayThough all the social tie commend;Recorded in my heart 'twill lay, [2]It tells me mine was once a Friend.4.Through many a weary day gone by,With time the gift is dearer grown;And still I view in Memory's eyeThat teardrop sparkle through my own.5.And heartless Age perhaps will smile,Or wonder whence those feelings sprung;
George Gordon Byron
Deniehys Dream
Just when the western lightFlickered out dim,Flushing the mountain-side,Summit and rim,A last, low, lingering gleamFell on a yellow stream,And then there came a dreamShining to him.Splendours miraculousMixed with his painAll like a vision ofRadiance and rain!He faced the sea, the skies,Old star-like thoughts did rise;But tears were in his eyes,Stifled in vain.Infinite tokens ofSorrows set freeCame in the dreaming windFar from the sea!Past years about him trooped,Fair phantoms round him stooped,Sweet faces oer him droopedSad as could be!This is our brother now:Sisters, deploreMan without purpose, likeShip without shore!He tracks false fire, one said,
Henry Kendall
To F--
Beloved! amid the earnest woesThat crowd around my earthly path,(Drear 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.And thus thy memory is to meLike some enchanted far-off isleIn some tumultuous sea,Some ocean throbbing far and freeWith storm,but where meanwhileSerenest skies continuallyJust oer that one bright inland smile.
Edgar Allan Poe