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Eternal Rest
When the impatient spirit leaves behindThe clogging hours and makes no dear delayTo drop this Nessus-shirt of night and day,To cast the flesh that bound and could not bindThe heart untamable, the tireless mind,In equal dissolution shall the clayThat once was seer or singer flee away,It shall be fire and blown upon the wind.Not us befits such change in radiance dressed,Not us, O Earth, for whom thou biddest ceaseOur grey endurance of the dark and cold.These eyes have watched with grief, and now would rest;Rest we desire, and on thy bosom's peaceThe long slow change to unremembering mould.
Enid Derham
The New Year (Prose)
What a charm ther is abaat owt new; whether it's a new year or a new waist-coit. Aw sometimes try to fancy what sooart ov a world ther'd be if ther wor nowt new.Solomon sed ther wor nowt new under th' sun; an' he owt to know if onybody did. Maybe he wor reight if we luk at it i' some ways, but aw think it's possible to see it in another leet. If ther wor nowt new, ther'd be nowt to hooap for - nowt to live for but to dee; an' we should lang for that time to come just for th' sake ov a change. Ha anxiously a little child looks forrard to th' time when he's to have a new toy, an' ha he prizes it at furst when he's getten it: but in a while he throws it o' one side an' cries fur summat new. Ha he langs to be as big as his brother, soa's he can have a new bat an' ball; an' his brother langs for th' time when he can leeave schooil ...
John Hartley
Living By
Walking, snow falling, it is possibleto focus at various distancesin turn on separate flakes, sharply engagethe attention at several spatial points:the nearer cold and more uncomfortable,the farther distanced and almost pleasing.Living, time passing, it is preferableto focus the memory in turn uponthe more distant retrospects in orderthat the present mind may retain its peace.Yet knowing that seeing and rememberingare both of course personal illusions.
Ben Jonson
Life's Grandest Things.
What is the greatest work of all? The work that comes every day; The work that waits us on ev'ry hand Is work that, for us, is truly grand, And the love of work is our pay. What is the highest life of all? It is living, day by day, True to ourselves and true to the right, Living the truth from dawn till the night, And the love of truth for our pay. What is the grandest thing of all - Is it winning Heaven some day? No, and a thousand times say no; 'Tis making this old world thrill and glow With the sun of love till each shall know Something of Heaven here below, And God's well done for our pay.
Jean Blewett
Reflecting upon a Human Lung in Alcohol
Without horror you devour dead flesh every day.And dead blood is a sweet syrup for you.Aren't you afraid? -Indeed your earliest fathers also had,And before you awoke,Crammed thousands of the dead into your body.However, how deeply frightened must the first person who killedAn animal have been -Because, when he saw that what roamed about,What could jump and cry out and in the moment of deathStill could watch the beseeching world,In a momentWas not there.
Alfred Lichtenstein
The Tenant-For-Life
The sun said, watching my watering-pot"Some morn you'll pass away;These flowers and plants I parch up hot -Who'll water them that day?"Those banks and beds whose shape your eyeHas planned in line so true,New hands will change, unreasoning whySuch shape seemed best to you."Within your house will strangers sit,And wonder how first it came;They'll talk of their schemes for improving it,And will not mention your name."They'll care not how, or when, or at whatYou sighed, laughed, suffered here,Though you feel more in an hour of the spotThan they will feel in a year"As I look on at you here, now,Shall I look on at these;But as to our old times, avowNo knowledge - hold my peace! . . ."O friend, it ...
Thomas Hardy
Ode: Intimations Of Immortality From Recollections Of Early Childhood
The child is father of the man;And I could wish my days to beBound each to each by natural piety.(Wordsworth, My Heart Leaps Up)There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream,The earth, and every common sight,To me did seemApparelled in celestial light,The glory and the freshness of a dream.It is not now as it hath been of yore;Turn wheresoeer I may,By night or day.The things which I have seen I now can see no more.The Rainbow comes and goes,And lovely is the Rose,The Moon doth with delightLook round her when the heavens are bare,Waters on a starry nightAre beautiful and fair;The sunshine is a glorious birth;But yet I know, whereer I go,That there hath past away a glory from the earth.N...
William Wordsworth
The Window Overlooking the Harbour
Sad is the Evening: all the level sand Lies left and lonely, while the restless sea,Tired of the green caresses of the land, Withdraws into its own infinity.But still more sad this white and chilly Dawn Filling the vacant spaces of the sky,While little winds blow here and there forlorn And all the stars, weary of shining, die.And more than desolate, to wake, to rise, Leaving the couch, where softly sleeping still,What through the past night made my heaven, lies; And looking out across the window sillSee, from the upper window's vantage ground, Mankind slip into harness once again,And wearily resume his daily round Of love and labour, toil and strife and pain.How the sad thoughts slip back across t...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Of Memory. From Proverbial Philosophy
Where art thou, storehouse of the mind, gamer of facts and fancies, In what strange firmament are laid the beams of thine airy chambers?Or art thou that small cavern, the centre of the rolling brain,Where still one sandy morsel testifieth man's original?Or hast thou some grand globe, some common hall of intellect,Some spacious market-place for thought, where all do bring their wares.And gladly rescued from the littleness, the narrow closet of a self,The privileged soul hath large access, coming in the livery of learning?Live we as isolated worlds, perfect in substance and spirit,Each a sphere, with a special mind, prisoned in its shell of matter?Or rather, as converging radiations, parts of one majestic whole.Beams of the Sun, streams from the River, branches of the mighty...
Martin Farquhar Tupper
Time Flies
On drives the road - another mile! and stillTime's horses gallop down the lessening hillO why such haste, with nothing at the end!Fain are we all, grim driver, to descendAnd stretch with lingering feet the little wayThat yet is ours - O stop thy horses, pray!Yet, sister dear, if we indeed had graceTo win from Time one lasting halting-place,Which out of all life's valleys would we choose,And, choosing - which with willingness would lose?Would we as children be content to stay,Because the children are as birds all day;Or would we still as youngling lovers kiss,Fearing the ardours of the greater bliss?The maid be still a maid and never knowWhy mothers love their little blossoms soOr can the mother be content her budShall never op...
Richard Le Gallienne
One Flesh
Lying apart now, each in a separate bed,He with a book, keeping the light on late,She like a girl dreaming of childhood,All men elsewhere, it is as if they waitSome new event: the book he holds unread,Her eyes fixed on the shadows overhead.Tossed up like flotsam from a former passion,How cool they lie. They hardly ever touch,Or if they do it is like a confessionOf having little feeling, or too much.Chastity faces them, a destinationFor which their whole lives were a preparation.Strangely apart, yet strangely close together,Silence between them like a thread to holdAnd not wind in. And time itself's a featherTouching them gently. Do they know they're old,These two who are my father and my motherWhose fire from which I came, has...
Elizabeth Jennings
An "Immurata" Sister.
Life flows down to death; we cannot bindThat current that it should not flee:Life flows down to death, as rivers findThe inevitable sea.Men work and think, but women feel;And so (for I'm a woman, I)And so I should be glad to dieAnd cease from impotence of zeal,And cease from hope, and cease from dread,And cease from yearnings without gain,And cease from all this world of pain,And be at peace among the dead.Hearts that die, by death renew their youth,Lightened of this life that doubts and dies;Silent and contented, while the TruthUnveiled makes them wise.Why should I seek and never findThat something which I have not had?Fair and unutterably sadThe world hath sought time out of mind;The world hath sought...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Second Best
Moderate tasks and moderate leisure,Quiet living, strict-kept measureBoth in suffering and in pleasureTis for this thy nature yearns.But so many books thou readest,But so many schemes thou breedest,But so many wishes feedest,That thy poor head almost turns.And (the worlds so madly jangled,Human things so fast entangled)Natures wish must now be strangledFor that best which she discerns.So it must be! yet, while leadingA straind life, while overfeeding,Like the rest, his wit with reading,No small profit that man earns,Who through all he meets can steer him,Can reject what cannot clear him,Cling to what can truly cheer him!Who each day more surely learnsThat an impulse, from the distance
Matthew Arnold
Soon, O Lanthe! Life Is O'er
Soon, O Ianthe! life is o'er,And sooner beauty's heavenly smile:Grant only (and I ask no more),Let love remain that little while.
Walter Savage Landor
Departure From Life.
Two are the roads that before thee lie open from life to conduct thee;To the ideal one leads thee, the other to death.See that while yet thou art free, on the first thou commencest thy journey,Ere by the merciless fates on to the other thou'rt led!
Friedrich Schiller
Art.
Artist, fashion! talk not long!Be a breath thine only song!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Love Lives Beyond the Tomb
Love lives beyondThe tomb, the earth, which fades like dew!I love the fond,The faithful, and the true.Love lives in sleep,The happiness of healthy dreams:Eve's dews may weep,But love delightful seems.Tis seen in flowers,And in the morning's pearly dew;In earth's green hours,And in the heaven's eternal blue.Tis heard in SpringWhen light and sunbeams, warm and kind,On angel's wingBring love and music to the mind.And where is voice,So young, so beautiful, and sweetAs Nature's choice,Where Spring and lovers meet?Love lives beyondThe tomb, the earth, the flowers, and dew.I love the fond,The faithful, young and true.
John Clare
Fulfilment
Happy are they whom men and women love,And you were happy as a river that flowsDown between lonely hills, and knowsThe pang and virtue of that loneliness,And moves unresting on until it moveUnder the trees that stoop at the low brinkAnd deepen their cool shade, and drinkAnd sing and hush and sing again,Breathing their music's many-toned caress;While the river with his high clear music speaksSometimes of loneliness, of hills obscure,Sometimes of sunlight dancing on the plain,Or of the night of stars unbared and deepMultiplied in his depths unbared and pure;Sometimes of winds that from the unknown sea creep,Sometimes of morning when most clear it breaksSpilling its brightness on his breast like rain:--And then flows on in loneliness again
John Frederick Freeman