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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
The Singer
The singer only sang the Joy of Life, For all too well, alas! the singer knewHow hard the daily toil, how keen the strife, How salt the falling tear; the joys how few.He who thinks hard soon finds it hard to live, Learning the Secret Bitterness of Things:So, leaving thought, the singer strove to give A level lightness to his lyric strings.He only sang of Love; its joy and pain, But each man in his early season loves;Each finds the old, lost Paradise again, Unfolding leaves, and roses, nesting doves.And though that sunlit time flies all too fleetly, Delightful Days that dance away too soon!Its early morning freshness lingers sweetly Throughout life's grey and tedious afternoon.And he, whose dreams ...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
An Acrostic.
Ah! what is this life? It's a dream, is the reply;Like a dream that's soon ended, so life passes by.Pursue the thought further, still there's likeness in each,How constant our aim is at what we can't reach.E'en so in a dream, we've some object in viewUnceasingly aimed at, but the thing we pursueStill eludes our fond grasp, and yet lures us on too.How analagous this to our waking day hours,Unwearied our efforts, we tax all our powers;Betimes in the morning the prize we pursue,By the pale lamp of midnight we're seeking it too;At all times and seasons, this same fancied goodRepels our advances, yet still is pursued,Depriving us oft, of rest needful, and food.But there's a pearl of great price, whose worth is untold,It can never he purchased...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
Lines, Written In London.
Struggle not with thy life! - the heavy doom Resist not, it will bow thee like a slave:Strive not! thou shalt not conquer; to thy tomb Thou shalt go crushed, and ground, though ne'er so brave.Complain not of thy life! - for what art thou More than thy fellows, that thou should'st not weep?Brave thoughts still lodge beneath a furrowed brow, And the way-wearied have the sweetest sleep.Marvel not at thy life! - patience shall see The perfect work of wisdom to her given;Hold fast thy soul through this high mystery, And it shall lead thee to the gates of heaven.
Frances Anne Kemble
O Me! O Life!
O me! O life!... of the questions of these recurring;Of the endless trains of the faithless - of cities fill'd with the foolish;Of myself forever reproaching myself, (for who more foolish than I, and who more faithless?)Of eyes that vainly crave the light - of the objects mean - of the struggle ever renew'd;Of the poor results of all - of the plodding and sordid crowds I see around me;Of the empty and useless years of the rest - with the rest me intertwined;The question, O me! so sad, recurring - What good amid these, O me, O life?Answer.That you are here - that life exists, and identity;That the powerful play goes on, and you will contribute a verse.
Walt Whitman
Taedium Vitae
To stab my youth with desperate knives, to wearThis paltry age's gaudy livery,To let each base hand filch my treasury,To mesh my soul within a woman's hair,And be mere Fortune's lackeyed groom, I swearI love it not! these things are less to meThan the thin foam that frets upon the sea,Less than the thistledown of summer airWhich hath no seed: better to stand aloofFar from these slanderous fools who mock my lifeKnowing me not, better the lowliest roofFit for the meanest hind to sojourn in,Than to go back to that hoarse cave of strifeWhere my white soul first kissed the mouth of sin.
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
Despair
I have experienc'dThe worst, the World can wreak on me, the worstThat can make Life indifferent, yet disturbWith whisper'd Discontents the dying prayer,I have beheld the whole of all, whereinMy Heart had any interest in this Life,To be disrent and torn from off my HopesThat nothing now is left. Why then live on?That Hostage, which the world had in it's keepingGiven by me as a Pledge that I would live,That Hope of Her, say rather, that pure FaithIn her fix'd Love, which held me to keep truceWith the Tyranny of Life, is gone ah! whither?What boots it to reply? 'tis gone! and nowWell may I break this Pact, this League of BloodThat ties me to myself, and break I shall!
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Art And Life
When Art goes bounding, lean,Up hill-tops fired greenTo pluck a rose for life.Life like a broody henCluck-clucks him back again.But when Art, imbecile,Sits old and chillOn sidings shaven clean,And counts his clusteringDead daisies on a stringWith witless laughter....Then like a new JillToiling up a hillLife scrambles after.
Lola Ridge
Elizabeth Childers
Dust of my dust, And dust with my dust, O, child who died as you entered the world, Dead with my death! Not knowing Breath, though you tried so hard, With a heart that beat when you lived with me, And stopped when you left me for Life. It is well, my child. For you never traveled The long, long way that begins with school days, When little fingers blur under the tears That fall on the crooked letters. And the earliest wound, when a little mate Leaves you alone for another; And sickness, and the face of Fear by the bed; The death of a father or mother; Or shame for them, or poverty; The maiden sorrow of school days ended; And eyeless Nature that makes you dri...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Long Road
Long the road,Till Love came down it!Dark the life,Till Love did crown it!Dark the life,And long the road,Till Love cameTo share the load!For the touchOf Love transfiguresAll the roadAnd all its rigours.Life and Death,Love's touch transfigures.Life and DeathAnd all that liesIn between,Love sanctifies.Once the heavenly spark is lighted,Once in love two hearts united,NevermoreShall aught that was beAs before.
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Passing Events.
Passing events, - tell, what are they I pray?Are they some novelty? - Nay, nay, nay!Ever since the world its course began,Since the breath of life was breathed into man,Still rolling on with the wane of time,Through every nation, in every clime;In every spot where man has his home,Ever they long for events to come.Hours or days or years it may be,Before hopes realization they see;And no sooner it comes than it hastes away,And others rush after no longer to stay.And there scarcely is time to know its in sight,E'er its found to be leaving with marvellous flight,And what had been longed for with eager intent,Is chronicled but as a passing event.Hope's joys are uncertain; - anxiety rules,Expectancy's paradise, peopled by fools;
John Hartley
A Fragment.[73]
Could I remount the river of my yearsTo the first fountain of our smiles and tears,I would not trace again the stream of hoursBetween their outworn banks of withered flowers,But bid it flow as now - until it glidesInto the number of the nameless tides.* * * * *What is this Death? - a quiet of the heart?The whole of that of which we are a part?For Life is but a vision - what I seeOf all which lives alone is Life to me,And being so - the absent are the dead,Who haunt us from tranquillity, and spreadA dreary shroud around us, and investWith sad remembrancers our hours of rest.The absent are the dead - for they are cold,And ne'er can be what once we did behold;And they are changed, and cheerless, - or if yetThe unforgotten d...
George Gordon Byron
A Life's Parallels.
Never on this side of the grave again,On this side of the river,On this side of the garner of the grain,Never, -Ever while time flows on and on and on,That narrow noiseless river,Ever while corn bows heavy-headed, wan,Ever, -Never despairing, often fainting, ruing,But looking back, ah never!Faint yet pursuing, faint yet still pursuingEver.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Loving And Liking - Irregular Verses - Addressed To A Child (By My Sister)
There's more in words than I can teach:Yet listen, Child! I would not preach;But only give some plain directionsTo guide your speech and your affections.Say not you 'love' a roasted fowl,But you may love a screaming owl.And, if you can, the unwieldy toadThat crawls from his secure abodeWithin the mossy garden wallWhen evening dews begin to fall.Oh mark the beauty of his eye:What wonders in that circle lie!So clear, so bright, our fathers saidHe wears a jewel in his head!And when, upon some showery day,Into a path or public wayA frog leaps out from bordering grass,Startling the timid as they pass,Do you observe him, and endeavourTo take the intruder into favour;Learning from him to find a reasonFor a light heart in ...
William Wordsworth
For Ever
Out of the body for ever,Wearily sobbing, Oh, whither?A Soul that hath wasted its chancesFloats on the limitless ether.Lost in dim, horrible blankness;Drifting like wind on a sea,Untraversed and vacant and moaning,Nor shallow nor shore on the lee!Helpless, unfriended, forsaken;Haunted and tracked by the Past,With fragments of pitiless voices,And desolate faces aghast!One saith It is well that he goethNaked and fainting with cold,Who worshipped his sweet-smelling garments,Arrayed with the cunning of old!Hark! how he crieth, my brothers,With pain for the glittering thingsHe saw on the shoulders of Rulers,And the might in the mouths of the Kings!This Soul hath been one of the idlersW...
Henry Kendall
Lines On Seeing My Wife And Two Children Sleeping In The Same Chamber.[1]
And has the earth lost its so spacious round,The sky its blue circumference above,That in this little chamber there is foundBoth earth and heaven - my universe of love!All that my God can give me, or remove,Here sleeping, save myself, in mimic death.Sweet that in this small compass I behoveTo live their living and to breathe their breath!Almost I wish that, with one common sigh,We might resign all mundane care and strife,And seek together that transcendent sky,Where Father, Mother, Children, Husband, Wife,Together pant in everlasting life!
Thomas Hood
Epitaph
I never cared for Life: Life cared for me,And hence I owed it some fidelity.It now says, "Cease; at length thou hast learnt to grindSufficient toll for an unwilling mind,And I dismiss thee not without regardThat thou didst ask no ill-advised reward,Nor sought in me much more than thou couldst find."
Thomas Hardy
The Living Beauty
Ill say and maybe dream I have drawn contentSeeing that time has frozen up the blood,The wick of youth being burned and the oil spentFrom beauty that is cast out of a mouldIn bronze, or that in dazzling marble appears,Appears, and when we have gone is gone again,Being more indifferent to our solitudeThan twere an apparition. O heart, we are old,The living beauty is for younger men,We cannot pay its tribute of wild tears.
William Butler Yeats