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The Dying Adrian To His Soul
Poor, little, pretty, fluttering thing,Must we no longer live together?And dost thou prune thy trembling wing,To take thy flight thou know'st not whither?Thy humorous vein, thy pleasing folly,Lies all neglected, all forgot:And pensive, wavering, melancholy,Thou dread'st and hop'st thou know'st not what.
Matthew Prior
Fame.
Oh ye! who all life's energies combineThe fadeless laurel round your brows to twine,Pause but one moment in your brief career,Nor seek for glory in a mortal sphere.Can figures traced upon the shifting sandWashed by the mighty tide, its force withstand?Time's stern resistless torrent onward flows,The restless waves above your labours close,And He who bids the bounding billows rollSweeps out the feeble record from the soul. The glorious hues that flush the evening skyMelt into night, and on her bosom die;Through the wide fields of heaven's immensityThe gold-tipped billows of that crimson seaFlash on the awe-struck gazer's dazzled sight,The rich out-gushings from the fount of light;Yet oft, concealed beneath that splendid form,We ha...
Susanna Moodie
The Lifelong War
Still goes the strife; the anguish does not die.Stronger the flesh is grown from earthy years,In siege about my soul that upward peersTo see and hold its Good. The spirit's eyeApproves the better things; but senses spyThe passing sweets, spurning the present fears,And take their moment's prize. Ah, then hot tearsDeluge my soul, and contrite moans my cry!Courage, my heart: bright patience to the end!Few years remain; then goes the warring wallOf sensely flesh, that men will throw to earth.So be it; so the contrite soul shall wendA homeward way unto the Captain's call,Eternally to know contrition's worth.
Michael Earls
Life And I
Life and I are lovers, straying Arm in arm along:Often like two children Maying, Full of mirth and song,Life plucks all the blooming hours Growing by the way;Binds them on my brow like flowers, Calls me Queen of May.Then again, in rainy weather, We sit vis-a-vis,Planning work we'll do together In the years to be.Sometimes Life denies me blisses, And I frown or pout;But we make it up with kisses Ere the day is out.Woman-like, I sometimes grieve him, Try his trust and faith,Saying I shall one day leave him For his rival, Death.Then he always grows more zealous, Tender, and more true;Loves the more for being jealous, As all lovers do.<...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
New Heaven And Earth
IAnd so I cross into another worldshyly and in homage linger for an invitationfrom this unknown that I would trespass on.I am very glad, and all alone in the world,all alone, and very glad, in a new worldwhere I am disembarked at last.I could cry with joy, because I am in the new world, just ventured in.I could cry with joy, and quite freely, there is nobody to know.And whosoever the unknown people of this un- known world may bethey will never understand my weeping for joy to be adventuring among thembecause it will still be a gesture of the old world I am makingwhich they will not understand, because it is quite, quite foreign to them. III WAS so weary of the worldI was so sick of it...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
This Lawn, A Carpet All Alive
This Lawn, a carpet all aliveWith shadows flung from leaves, to striveIn dance, amid a pressOf sunshine, an apt emblem yieldsOf Worldlings reveling in the fieldsOf strenuous idleness;Less quick the stir when tide and breezeEncounter, and to narrow seasForbid a moment's rest;The medley less when boreal LightsGlance to and fro, like aery SpritesTo feats of arms addrest!Yet, spite of all this eager strife,This ceaseless play, the genuine lifeThat serves the stedfast hours,Is in the grass beneath, that growsUnheeded, and the mute reposeOf sweetly-breathing flowers.
William Wordsworth
Lines Written In A Young Lady's Album
'Tis not in youth, when life is new, when but to live is sweet,When Pleasure strews her starlike flow'rs beneath our careless feet,When Hope, that has not been deferred, first waves its golden wings,And crowds the distant future with a thousand lovely things; -When if a transient grief o'ershades the spirit for a while,The momentary tear that falls is followed by a smile;Or if a pensive mood, at times, across the bosom steals,It scarcely sighs, so gentle is the pensiveness it feelsIt is not then the, restless soul will seek for one with whomTo share whatever lot it bears, its gladness or its gloom, -Some trusting, tried, and gentle heart, some true and faithful breast,Whereon its pinions it may fold, and claim a place of rest.But oh! when comes the i...
George W. Sands
Prelude to Songs Before Sunrise
Between the green bud and the redYouth sat and sang by Time, and shedFrom eyes and tresses flowers and tears,From heart and spirit hopes and fears,Upon the hollow stream whose bedIs channelled by the foamless years;And with the white the gold-haired headMixed running locks, and in Times earsYouths dreams hung singing, and Times truthWas half not harsh in the ears of Youth.Between the bud and the blown flowerYouth talked with joy and grief an hour,With footless joy and wingless griefAnd twin-born faith and disbeliefWho share the seasons to devour;And long ere these made up their sheafFelt the winds round him shake and showerThe rose-red and the blood-red leaf,Delight whose germ grew never grain,And passion dyed in its ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Through The Long Days.
Through the long days and years What will my loved one be, Parted from me?Through the long days and years.Always as then she was, Loveliest, brightest, best, Blessing and blest, -Always as then she was.Never on earth again Shall I before her stand, Touch lip or hand, -Never on earth again.But while my darling lives Peaceful I journey on, Not quite alone,Not while my darling lives.
John Hay
Nothing Will Die
When will the stream be aweary of flowingUnder my eye?When will the wind be aweary of blowingOver the sky?When will the clouds be aweary of fleeting?When will the heart be aweary of beating?And nature die?Never, O, never, nothing will die;The stream flows,The wind blows,The cloud fleets,The heart beats,Nothing will die.Nothing will die;All things will changeThro eternity.Tis the worlds winter;Autumn and summerAre gone long ago;Earth is dry to the centre,But spring, a new comer,A spring rich and strange,Shall make the winds blowRound and round,Thro and thro,Here and there,Till the airAnd the groundShall be filld with life anew.The world wa...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Clock Of The Years
"A spirit passed before my face; the hair of my flesh stood up."And the Spirit said,"I can make the clock of the years go backward,But am loth to stop it where you will."And I cried, "AgreedTo that. Proceed:It's better than dead!"He answered, "Peace";And called her up - as last before me;Then younger, younger she freshed, to the yearI first had knownHer woman-grown,And I cried, "Cease! -"Thus far is good -It is enough - let her stay thus always!"But alas for me. He shook his head:No stop was there;And she waned child-fair,And to babyhood.Still less in mienTo my great sorrow became she slowly,And smalled till she was nought at allIn his checkless griff;And it was as ifShe ha...
Thomas Hardy
Story of Lilavanti
They lay the slender body down With all its wealth of wetted hair,Only a daughter of the town, But very young and slight and fair.The eyes, whose light one cannot see, Are sombre doubtless, like the tresses,The mouth's soft curvings seem to be A roseate series of caresses.And where the skin has all but dried (The air is sultry in the room)Upon her breast and either side, It shows a soft and amber bloom.By women here, who knew her life, A leper husband, I am told,Took all this loveliness to wife When it was barely ten years old.And when the child in shocked dismay Fled from the hated husband's careHe caught and tied her, so they say, Down to his bedside by her hair.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
The Shunamite.[A]
It was a sultry day of summer time.The sun pour'd down upon the ripen'd grainWith quivering heat, and the suspended leavesHung motionless. The cattle on the hillsStood still, and the divided flock were allLaying their nostrils to the cooling roots,And the sky look'd like silver, and it seem'dAs if the air had fainted, and the pulseOf nature had run down, and ceas'd to beat.'Haste thee, my child!' the Syrian mother said,'Thy father is athirst' - and from the depthsOf the cool well under the leaning tree,She drew refreshing water, and with thoughtsOf God's sweet goodness stirring at her heart,She bless'd her beautiful boy, and to his wayCommitted him. And he went lightly on,With his soft hands press'd closely to the coolStone vessel, ...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Rebirth
If any God should say,"I will restoreThe world her yesterdayWhole as beforeMy Judgment blasted it" who would not liftHeart, eye, and hand in passion o'er the gift?If any God should willTo wipe from mindThe memory of this illWhich is MankindIn soul and substance now, who would not blessEven to tears His loving-tenderness?If any God should giveUs leave to flyThese present deaths we live,And safely dieIn those lost lives we lived ere we were born,What man but would not laugh the excuse to scorn?For we are what we are,So broke to bloodAnd the strict works of war,So long subduedTo sacrifice, that threadbare Death commandsHardly observance at our busier hands.Yet we were what we ...
Rudyard
In Mortem Meditare.
DYING THOUGHTS.As Life's receding sunset fades And night descends,I calmly watch the gathering shades,As darkness stealthily invades And daylight ends.Earth's span is drawing to its close, With every breath;My pain-racked brain no respite knows,Yet shrinks it, from the grim repose It feels in death.The curtain falls on Life's last scene, The end is neared;At last I face death's somber screen,The fleeting joys which intervene Have disappeared.And as a panoramic scroll The past unreels;The mocking past, beyond control,Though buried, as a parchment roll, Its tale reveals.I stand before the dread, unknown, Yet solemn fact;I see the seeds of foll...
Alfred Castner King
Act Square.
"Another day will follow this,"Ah, - that shall sewerly be,But th' day 'at dawns to-morn, my lad,May nivver dawn for thee,This day is thine, soa use it weel,For fear when it has passed,Some duty has been left undoneOn th' day at proved thy last.What's passed an gooan's beyond recall,An th' futer's all unknown;Dooant specilate on what's to be,Neglect in what's thi own.When morn in comes thank God tha'rt sparedTo see another day;An when tha goas to bed at neet,Life's burdens on Him lay.Although thy station may be low,Thy life's conditions hard,Mak th' best o' what falls to thi lot,An tha shall win reward.Man's days ov toil on earth are fewCompared to that long rest'At stretches throo Eternity,...
John Hartley
Adrian's Address To His Soul When Dying.
Animula! vagula, Blandula,Hospes, comesque corporis,Quæ nunc abibis in Loca -Pallidula, rigida, nudula,Nec, ut soles, dabis Jocos?Translation. -Ah! gentle, fleeting, wav'ring Sprite,Friend and associate of this clay!To what unknown region borne,Wilt thou, now, wing thy distant flight?No more with wonted humour gay,But pallid, cheerless, and forlorn.
George Gordon Byron
James Lionel Michael
Be his rest the rest he sought:Calm and deep.Let no wayward word or thoughtVex his sleep.Peace the peace that no man knowsNow remainsWhere the wasted woodwind blows,Wakes and wanes.Latter leaves, in Autumns breath,White and sere,Sanctify the scholars death,Lying here.Soft surprises of the sunSwift, sereneOer the mute grave-grasses run,Cold and green.Wet and cold the hillwinds moan;Let them rave!Love that takes a tender toneLights his grave.He who knew the friendless faceSorrows shew,Often sought this quiet placeYears ago.One, too apt to faint and fail,Loved to strayHere where water-shallows wailDay by day.Care that lays her heavy...
Henry Kendall