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To A Star.
Thou little star, that in the purple clouds Hang'st, like a dew-drop, in a violet bed;First gem of evening, glittering on the shrouds, 'Mid whose dark folds the day lies pale and dead:As through my tears my soul looks up to thee, Loathing the heavy chains that bind it here,There comes a fearful thought that misery Perhaps is found, even in thy distant sphere.Art thou a world of sorrow and of sin, The heritage of death, disease, decay,A wilderness, like that we wander in, Where all things fairest, soonest pass away?And are there graves in thee, thou radiant world, Round which life's sweetest buds fall withered,Where hope's bright wings in the dark earth lie furled, And living hearts are mouldering with the dead?Perchance ...
Frances Anne Kemble
The Ancient Sage
A thousand summers ere the time of ChristFrom out his ancient city came a SeerWhom one that loved, and honourd him, and yetWas no disciple, richly garbd, but wornFrom wasteful living, followdin his handA scroll of versetill that old man beforeA cavern whence an affluent fountain pourdFrom darkness into daylight, turnd and spoke.This wealth of waters might but seem to drawFrom yon dark cave, but, son, the source is higher,Yon summit half-a-league in airand higher,The cloud that hides ithigher still, the heavensWhereby the cloud was moulded, and whereoutThe cloud descended. Force is from the heights.I am wearied of our city, son, and goTo spend my one last year among the hills.What hast thou there? Some deathsong for the Ghouls
Alfred Lord Tennyson
May Wind
I said, "I have shut my heartAs one shuts an open door,That Love may starve thereinAnd trouble me no more."But over the roofs there cameThe wet new wind of May,And a tune blew up from the curbWhere the street-pianos play.My room was white with the sunAnd Love cried out in me,"I am strong, I will break your heartUnless you set me free."
Sara Teasdale
Youth And Age.
I love the joyous thoughtless heart,The revels of the youthful mind,'Ere sad experience points the dart,Which wounds so surely all mankind.It glads me when the buoyant soul,Unconscious ranges, fancy free,Draining the sweets of pleasure's bowl,And thinking all as blest as he.Ah! me, yet sad it is to know,The many griefs the future brings,That time must change that note to woe,Which now its merry carrol sings.This "summer of the mind," alas!Must have its autumn--leafless, bare,When all these pleasing phantoms pass,And end in winter, age, and care!Such, such is life, the moral tells--The tempest, and its sunny smiles,A warning voice the cheerful bells,The knell of death, our youth beguiles!
Thomas Gent
In Memoriam. - Madam Pond,
Widow of the late CALEB POND, Esq., died at Hartford, February 19th 1861, aged 73.Would any think who marked the smile On yon untroubled face,That threescore years and ten had fled Without a wrinkling trace?Yet age doth sometimes skill to guard The beauty of its prime,And hold a quenchless lamp above The water-floods of time.And she, for whom we mourn, maintained Through every change and care,Those hallowed virtues of the soul That keep the features fair.They raised a little child to look Into the coffin deep,Who dream'd the lovely lady lay But in a transient sleep,And gazed upon the face of death With eye of tranquil ray,Well pleased, as with the snowy flowers,
Lydia Howard Sigourney
The Book Of Urizen: Chapter IV
I1.Los smitten with astonishmentFrightend at the hurtling bones2.And at the surging sulphureousPerturbed Immortal mad raging3.In whirlwinds & pitch & nitreRound the furious limbs of Los4.And Los formed nets & ginsAnd threw the nets round about5.He watch'd in shuddring fearThe dark changes & bound every changeWith rivets of iron & brass;6.And these were the changes of Urizen.II1.Ages on ages roll'd over him!In stony sleep ages roll'd over him!Like a dark waste stretching chang'ableBy earthquakes riv'n, belching sullen firesOn ages roll'd ages in ghastlySick torment; around...
William Blake
The Candle Seller
In Hester Street, hard by a telegraph post,There sits a poor woman as wan as a ghost.Her pale face is shrunk, like the face of the dead,And yet you can tell that her cheeks once were red.But love, ease and friendship and glory, I ween,May hardly the cause of their fading have been.Poor soul, she has wept so, she scarcely can see.A skeleton infant she holds on her knee.It tugs at her breast, and it whimpers and sleeps,But soon at her cry it awakens and weeps--"Two cents, my good woman, three candles will buy,As bright as their flame be my star in the sky!"Tho' few are her wares, and her basket is small,She earns her own living by these, when at all.She's there with her baby in wind and in rain,In frost and in snow-fall, in weakness and pain.
Morris Rosenfeld
Incomplete
The summer is just in its grandest prime, The earth is green and the skies are blue;But where is the lilt of the olden time,When life was a melody set to rhyme, And dreams were so real they all seemed true?There is sun on the meadow, and blooms on the bushes, And never a bird but is mad with glee;But the pulse that bounds, and the blood that rushes,And the hope that soars, and the joy that gushes, Are lost for ever to you and me.There are dawns of amber and amethyst; There are purple mountains, and pale pink seasThat flush to crimson where skies have kist;But out of life there is something missed - Something better than all of these.We miss the faces we used to know, The smiling lips and the eyes of truth....
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Elegy To The Memory Of An Unfortunate Lady
What beckning ghost, along the moon-light shadeInvites my steps, and points to yonder glade?Tis she!but why that bleeding bosom gord,Why dimly gleams the visionary sword?Oh ever beauteous, ever friendly! tell,Is it, in heavn, a crime to love too well?To bear too tender, or too firm a heart,To act a lovers or a Romans part?Is there no bright reversion in the sky,For those who greatly think, or bravely die?Why bade ye else, ye powrs! her soul aspireAbove the vulgar flight of low desire?Ambition first sprung from your blest abodes;The glorious fault of angels and of gods;Thence to their images on earth it flows,And in the breasts of kings and heroes glows.Most souls, tis true, but peep out once an age,Dull sullen prisners in ...
Alexander Pope
He Remembers Forgotten Beauty
When my arms wrap you round I pressMy heart upon the lovelinessThat has long faded from the world;The jewelled crowns that kings have hurledIn shadowy pools, when armies fled;The love-tales wrought with silken threadBy dreaming ladies upon clothThat has made fat the murderous moth;The roses that of old time wereWoven by ladies in their hair,The dew-cold lilies ladies boreThrough many a sacred corridorWhere such grey clouds of incense roseThat only God's eyes did not close:For that pale breast and lingering handCome from a more dream-heavy land,A more dream-heavy hour than this;And when you sigh from kiss to kissI hear white Beauty sighing, too,For hours when all must fade like dew.But flame on flame, and deep on deep,
William Butler Yeats
For All The Grief
For all the grief I have given with wordsMay now a few clear flowers blow,In the dust, and the heat, and the silence of birds, Where the lonely go.For the thing unsaid that heart asked of meBe a dark, cool water calling - callingTo the footsore, benighted, solitary, When the shadows are falling.O, be beauty for all my blindness,A moon in the air where the weary wend,And dews burdened with loving-kindness In the dark of the end.
Walter De La Mare
Sunset.
A sloop of amber slips awayUpon an ether sea,And wrecks in peace a purple tar,The son of ecstasy.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Sappho I
Midnight, and in the darkness not a sound,So, with hushed breathing, sleeps the autumn night;Only the white immortal stars shall know,Here in the house with the low-lintelled door,How, for the last time, I have lit the lamp.I think you are not wholly careless now,Walls that have sheltered me so many an hour,Bed that has brought me ecstasy and sleep,Floors that have borne me when a gale of joyLifted my soul and made me half a god.Farewell! Across the threshold many feetShall pass, but never Sappho's feet again.Girls shall come in whom love has made awareOf all their swaying beauty they shall sing,But never Sappho's voice, like golden fire,Shall seek for heaven thru your echoing rafters.There shall be swallows bringing back the springOver t...
A Summer Evening Churchyard.
The wind has swept from the wide atmosphereEach vapour that obscured the sunset's ray;And pallid Evening twines its beaming hairIn duskier braids around the languid eyes of Day:Silence and Twilight, unbeloved of men,Creep hand in hand from yon obscurest glen.They breathe their spells towards the departing day,Encompassing the earth, air, stars, and sea;Light, sound, and motion own the potent sway,Responding to the charm with its own mystery.The winds are still, or the dry church-tower grassKnows not their gentle motions as they pass.Thou too, aereal Pile! whose pinnaclesPoint from one shrine like pyramids of fire,Obeyest in silence their sweet solemn spells,Clothing in hues of heaven thy dim and distant spire,Around whose lessening ...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
One Tear
Last night, when at parting Awhile we did stand,Suddenly starting, There fell on my handSomething that burned it, Something that shoneIn the moon as I turned it, And then it was gone.One bright stray jewel-- What made it stray?Was I cold or cruel, At the close of day?Oh, do not cry, lass! What is crying worth?There is no lass like my lass In the whole wide earth.
Robert Fuller Murray
Neap-Tide
Far off is the sea, and the land is afar:The low banks reach at the sky,Seen hence, and are heavenward high;Though light for the leap of a boy they are,And the far sea late was nigh.The fair wild fields and the circling downs,The bright sweet marshes and meadsAll glorious with flowerlike weeds,The great grey churches, the sea-washed towns,Recede as a dream recedes.The world draws back, and the world's light wanes,As a dream dies down and is dead;And the clouds and the gleams overheadChange, and change; and the sea remains,A shadow of dreamlike dread.Wild, and woful, and pale, and grey,A shadow of sleepless fear,A corpse with the night for bier,The fairest thing that beholds the dayLies haggard and hopeless here.And the w...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Egeria's Silence
Her thought that, like a brook beside the way, Sang to my steps through all the wandering year, Has ceased from melody--O Love, allay My sudden fear! She cannot fail--the beauty of that brow Could never flower above a desert heart-- Somewhere beneath, the well-spring even now Lives, though apart. Some day, when winter has renewed her fount With cold, white-folded snows and quiet rain, O Love, O Love, her stream again will mount And sing again!
Henry John Newbolt
Sonnet XLI.
Perch' io t' abbia guardato di menzogna.IN HER PRESENCE HE CAN NEITHER SPEAK, WEEP, NOR SIGH. Although from falsehood I did thee restrainWith all my power, and paid thee honour due,Ungrateful tongue; yet never did accrueHonour from thee, but shame, and fierce disdain:Most art thou cold, when most I want the strainThy aid should lend while I for pity sue;And all thy utterance is imperfect too,When thou dost speak, and as the dreamer's vain.Ye too, sad tears, throughout each lingering nightUpon me wait, when I alone would stay;But, needed by my peace, you take your flight:And, all so prompt anguish and grief t' impart,Ye sighs, then slow, and broken breathe your way:My looks alone truly reveal my heart.NOTT.
Francesco Petrarca