Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 15 of 90
Previous
Next
Crotalus
No life in earth, or air, or sky;The sunbeams, broken silently,On the bared rocks around me lie,Cold rocks with half-warmed lichens scarred,And scales of moss; and scarce a yardAway, one long strip, yellow-barred.Lost in a cleft! Tis but a strideTo reach it, thrust its roots aside,And lift it on thy stick astride!Yet stay! That moment is thy grace!For round thee, thrilling air and space,A chattering terror fills the place!A sound as of dry bones that stirIn the dead Valley! By yon firThe locust stops its noonday whir!The wild bird hears; smote with the sound,As if by bullet brought to ground,On broken wing, dips, wheeling round!The hare, transfixed, with trembling lip,Halts, breathless, on ...
Bret Harte
Written After The Death Of Charles Lamb
To a good Man of most dear memoryThis Stone is sacred. Here he lies apartFrom the great city where he first drew breath,Was reared and taught; and humbly earned his bread,To the strict labours of the merchant's deskBy duty chained. Not seldom did those tasksTease, and the thought of time so spent depress,His spirit, but the recompense was high;Firm Independence, Bounty's rightful sire;Affections, warm as sunshine, free as air;And when the precious hours of leisure came,Knowledge and wisdom, gained from converse sweetWith books, or while he ranged the crowded streetsWith a keen eye, and overflowing heart:So genius triumphed over seeming wrong,And poured out truth in works by thoughtful loveInspired works potent over smiles and tears.And as...
William Wordsworth
The Old Cumberland Beggar
I saw an aged Beggar in my walk;And he was seated, by the highway side,On a low structure of rude masonryBuilt at the foot of a huge hill, that theyWho lead their horses down the steep rough roadMay thence remount at ease. The aged ManHad placed his staff across the broad smooth stoneThat overlays the pile; and, from a bagAll white with flour, the dole of village dames,He drew his scraps and fragments, one by one;And scanned them with a fixed and serious lookOf idle computation. In the sun,Upon the second step of that small pile,Surrounded by those wild unpeopled hills,He sat, and ate his food in solitude:And ever, scattered from his palsied hand,That, still attempting to prevent the waste,Was baffled still, the crumbs in little showers
Song.
You who know what easeful armsSilence winds about the dead,Or what far-swept music charmsHearts that were earth-wearied;You who know - if aught be knownIn that everlasting HushWhere the life-born years are strewn,Where the eyeless ages rush, -Tell me, is it conscious restHeals the whilom hurt of life?Or is Nirvana undistressedE'en by memory of strife?
Thomas Runciman
Open Windows
Out of the window a sea of green treesLift their soft boughs like the arms of a dancer,They beckon and call me, "Come out in the sun!"But I cannot answer.I am alone with Weakness and Pain,Sick abed and June is going,I cannot keep her, she hurries byWith the silver-green of her garments blowing.Men and women pass in the streetGlad of the shining sapphire weather,But we know more of it than they,Pain and I together.They are the runners in the sun,Breathless and blinded by the race,But we are watchers in the shadeWho speak with Wonder face to face.
Sara Teasdale
Lyrics Of Love And Sorrow
ILove is the light of the world, my dear,Heigho, but the world is gloomy;The light has failed and the lamp down hurled,Leaves only darkness to me.Love is the light of the world, my dear,Ah me, but the world is dreary;The night is down, and my curtain furledBut I cannot sleep, though weary.Love is the light of the world, my dear,Alas for a hopeless hoping,When the flame went out in the breeze that swirled,And a soul went blindly groping.IIThe light was on the golden sands,A glimmer on the sea;My soul spoke clearly to thy soul,Thy spirit answered me.Since then the light that gilds the sands,And glimmers on the sea,But vainly struggles to reflectThe radiant soul of thee....
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Pain And Time Strive Not.
What part of the dread eternityAre those strange minutes that I gain,Mazed with the doubt of love and pain,When I thy delicate face may see,A little while before farewell?What share of the world's yearning-tideThat flash, when new day bare and whiteBlots out my half-dream's faint delight,And there is nothing by my side,And well remembered is farewell?What drop in the grey flood of tearsThat time, when the long day toiled through,Worn out, shows nought for me to do,And nothing worth my labour bearsThe longing of that last farewell?What pity from the heavens above,What heed from out eternity,What word from the swift world for me?Speak, heed, and pity, O tender love,Who knew'st the days before farewell!
William Morris
Why Be At Pains? - Wooer's Song
Why be at pains that I should knowYou sought not me?Do breezes, then, make features glowSo rosily?Come, the lit port is at our back,And the tumbling sea;Elsewhere the lampless uphill trackTo uncertainty!O should not we two waifs join hands?I am alone,You would enrich me more than landsBy being my own.Yet, though this facile moment flies,Close is your tone,And ere to-morrow's dewfall driesI plough the unknown.
Thomas Hardy
Silence
Since I lost you I am silence-haunted,Sounds wave their little wingsA moment, then in weariness settleOn the flood that soundless swings.Whether the people in the streetLike pattering ripples go by,Or whether the theatre sighs and sighsWith a loud, hoarse sigh:Or the wind shakes a ravel of lightOver the dead-black river,Or night's last echoingMakes the daybreak shiver:I feel the silence waitingTo take them all up againIn its vast completeness, enfoldingThe sound of men.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Monody
To have known him, to have loved himAfter loneness long;And then to be estranged in life,And neither in the wrong;And now for death to set his seal--Ease me, a little ease, my song!By wintry hills his hermit-moundThe sheeted snow-drifts drape,And houseless there the snow-bird flitsBeneath the fir-trees' crape:Glazed now with ice the cloistral vineThat hid the shyest grape.
Herman Melville
Our Mountain Cemetery.
Lonely and silent and calm it lies'Neath rosy dawn or midnight skies;So densely peopled, yet so still,The murmuring voice of mountain rill,The plaint the wind 'mid branches wakes,Alone the solemn silence breaks.Whatever changes the seasons bring, -The birds, the buds of joyous spring,The glories that come with the falling yearThe snows and storms of winter drear, -Are all unmarked in this lone spot,Its shrouded inmates feel them not.Thoughts full of import, earnest and deep,Must the feeling heart in their spirit steep,Here, where Death's footprints meet the sight:The long chill rows of tombstones white,The graves so thickly, widely spread,Within this city of the Dead.Say, who could tell what aching sighs,What...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Senlin, A Biography: Part 02: His Futile Preoccupations - 09
It is evening, Senlin says, and in the eveningThe throbbing of drums has languidly died away.Forest and sea are still. We breathe in silenceAnd strive to say the things flesh cannot say.The soulless wind falls slowly about the earthAnd finds no rest.The lover stares at the setting star, the wakeful loverWho finds no peace on his lovers breast.The snare of desire that bound us in is broken;Softly, in sorrow, we draw apart, and see,Far off, the beauty we thought our flesh had captured,The star we longed to be but could not be.Come back! We will laugh once more at the words we said!We say them slowly again, but the words are dead.Come back beloved! . . . The blue void falls between,We cry to each other: alone; unknown; unseen.We are the grains of...
Conrad Aiken
Unanswered
Something compels me, somewhere. Yet I seeNo clear command in Life's long mystery.Oft have I flung myself beside my horse,To drink the water from the roadside mire,And felt the liquid through my being course,Stilling the anguish of my thirst's desire.A simple want; so easily allayed;After the burning march; water and shade.Also I lay against the loved one's heartFinding fulfilment in that resting-place,Feeling my longing, quenched, was but a partOf nature's ceaseless striving for the race.But now, I know not what they would with me;Matter or Force or God, if Gods there be.I wait; I question; Nature heeds me not.She does but urge in answer to my prayer,"Arise and do!" Alas, she adds not what;"Arise and g...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Verses By Lady Geralda
Why, when I hear the stormy breathOf the wild winter windRushing o'er the mountain heath,Does sadness fill my mind?For long ago I loved to lieUpon the pathless moor,To hear the wild wind rushing byWith never ceasing roar;Its sound was music then to me;Its wild and lofty voiceMade by heart beat exultinglyAnd my whole soul rejoice.But now, how different is the sound?It takes another tone,And howls along the barren groundWith melancholy moan.Why does the warm light of the sunNo longer cheer my eyes?And why is all the beauty goneFrom rosy morning skies?Beneath this lone and dreary hillThere is a lovely vale;The purling of a crystal rill,The sighing of the gale,The s...
Anne Bronte
The Telegraph Operator
I will not wash my face;I will not brush my hair;I "pig" around the place -There's nobody to care.Nothing but rock and tree;Nothing but wood and stone,Oh, God, it's hell to beAlone, alone, alone!Snow-peaks and deep-gashed drawsCorral me in a ring.I feel as if I wasThe only living thingOn all this blighted earth;And so I frowst and shrink,And crouching by my hearthI hear the thoughts I think.I think of all I miss -The boys I used to know;The girls I used to kiss;The coin I used to blow:The bars I used to haunt;The racket and the row;The beers I didn't want(I wish I had 'em now).Day after day the same,Only a little worse;No one to grouch or blame -Oh, for a loving...
Robert William Service
Stanzas To A Hindoo Air.[605]
1.Oh! my lonely - lonely - lonely - Pillow!Where is my lover? where is my lover?Is it his bark which my dreary dreams discover?Far - far away! and alone along the billow?2.Oh! my lonely - lonely - lonely - Pillow!Why must my head ache where his gentle brow lay?How the long night flags lovelessly and slowly,And my head droops over thee like the willow!3.Oh! thou, my sad and solitary Pillow!Send me kind dreams to keep my heart from breaking,In return for the tears I shed upon thee waking;Let me not die till he comes back o'er the billow.4.Then if thou wilt - no more my lonely Pillow,In one embrace let these arms again enfold him,And then expire of the joy - but to behold him!Oh! m...
George Gordon Byron
Of The Terrible Doubt Of Apperarances
Of the terrible doubt of appearances,Of the uncertainty after all - that we may be deluded,That may-be reliance and hope are but speculations after all,That may-be identity beyond the grave is a beautiful fable only,May-be the things I perceive - the animals, plants, men, hills, shining and flowing waters,The skies of day and night - colors, densities, forms - May-be these are, (as doubtless they are,) only apparitions, and the real something has yet to be known;(How often they dart out of themselves, as if to confound me and mock me!How often I think neither I know, nor any man knows, aught of them;)May-be seeming to me what they are, (as doubtless they indeed but seem,) as from my present point of view - And might prove, (as of course they would,) naught of what they appear, or naught any ...
Walt Whitman
Sonnet. Silence.
There is a silence where hath been no sound,There is a silence where no sound may be,In the cold grave - under the deep deep sea,Or in wide desert where no life is found,Which hath been mute, and still must sleep profound;No voice is hush'd - no life treads silently,But clouds and cloudy shadows wander free.That never spoke, over the idle ground:But in green ruins, in the desolate wallsOf antique palaces, where Man hath been,Though the dun fox, or wild hyæna, calls,And owls, that flit continually between,Shriek to the echo, and the low winds moan, -There the true Silence is, self-conscious and alone.
Thomas Hood