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Climacteric
I am not wiser for my age,Nor skilful by my grief;Life loiters at the book's first page,--Ah! could we turn the leaf.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Paraphrases From Scripture. ISAIAH xlix. 15.
Heaven speaks! Oh Nature listen and rejoice!Oh spread from pole to pole this gracious voice!"Say every breast of human frame, that proves"The boundless force with which a parent loves;"Say, can a mother from her yearning heart"Bid the soft image of her child depart?"She! whom strong instinct arms with strength to bear"All forms of ill, to shield that dearest care;"She! who with anguish stung, with madness wild,"Will rush on death to save her threaten'd child;"All selfish feelings banish'd from her breast,"Her life one aim to make another's blest."When her vex'd infant to her bosom clings,"When round her neck his eager arms he flings;"Breathes to her list'ning soul his melting sigh,"And lifts suffus'd with tears his asking eye!"Will she for all ...
Helen Maria Williams
Epitaphs
Maria Brown,Wife of Timothy Brown, aged 80 years.She lived with her husband fifty years, and diedin the confident hope of a better life.
Unknown
Debtor
So long as my spirit stillIs glad of breathAnd lifts its plumes of prideIn the dark face of death;While I am curious stillOf love and fame,Keeping my heart too highFor the years to tame,How can I quarrel with fateSince I can seeI am a debtor to life,Not life to me?
Sara Teasdale
One Life
Oh, I am hurt to death, my Love;The shafts of Fate have pierced my striving heart,And I am sick and weary ofThe endless pain and smart.My soul is weary of the strife,And chafes at life, and chafes at life.Time mocks me with fair promises;A blooming future grows a barren past,Like rain my fair full-blossomed treesUnburden in the blast.The harvest fails on grain and tree,Nor comes to me, nor comes to me.The stream that bears my hopes abreastTurns ever from my way its pregnant tide.My laden boat, torn from its rest,Drifts to the other side.So all my hopes are set astray,And drift away, and drift away.The lark sings to me at the morn,And near me wings her skyward-soaring flight;But pleasure dies as soon as ...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Voice of the Soul
In Youth, when through our veins runs fastThe bright red stream of life,The Souls Voice is a trumpet-blastThat calls us to the strife.The Spirit spurns its prison-bars,And feels with force enduedTo scale the ramparts of the starsAnd storm Infinitude.Youth passes; like a dungeon growsThe Spirits house of clay:The voice that once in music roseIn murmurs dies away.But in the day when sickness soreSmites on the bodys walls,The Souls Voice through the breach once moreLike to a trumpet calls.Well shall it be with him who heedsThe mystic summons then!His after-life with loving deedsShall blossom amongst men.He shall have gifts, the gift that feelsThe germ within the clod,And hears t...
Victor James Daley
Dreaming
Paul said:Ah, but who wouldn't want to drive a car forever -We burrow our way through high-stemmed woods,We pass by spaces that seem endless.We pass through the wind and attack the towns, which speed up.But the odors of the sluggish cities are hateful to us -Ah, we are flying! Always alongside death...How we despise and scorn him who sits on our lives!Who lays out graves for us and makes all streets crooked - ha, welaugh at him,and the roads, overcome, die with us -Thus we shall auto our way through the whole world...Until, on some clear eveningWe find a violent ending against a sturdy tree.
Alfred Lichtenstein
To A Moralist.
Are the sports of our youth so displeasing?Is love but the folly you say?Benumbed with the winter, and freezing,You scold at the revels of May.For you once a nymph had her charms,And Oh! when the waltz you were wreathing,All Olympus embraced in your armsAll its nectar in Julia's breathing.If Jove at that moment had hurledThe earth in some other rotation,Along with your Julia whirled,You had felt not the shock of creation.Learn this that philosophy beatsSure time with the pulse, quick or slowAs the blood from the heyday retreats,But it cannot make gods of us No!It is well icy reason should thawIn the warm blood of mirth now and then,The gods for themselves have a lawWhich they never intended for men.
Friedrich Schiller
To Hannah
Spirit girl to whom 'twas givenTo revisit scenes of pain,From the hell I thought was HeavenYou have lifted me again;Through the world that I inherit,Where I loved her ere she died,I am walking with the spiritOf a dead girl by my side.Through my old possessions onlyFor a very little while,And they say that I am lonely,And they pity, but I smile:For the brighter side has won meBy the calmness that it brings,And the peace that is upon meDoes not come of earthly things.Spirit girl, the good is in me,But the flesh you know is weak,And with no pure soul to win meI might miss the path I seek;Lead me by the love you bore meWhen you trod the earth with me,Till the light is clear before meAnd my spiri...
Henry Lawson
After Fifty Years
A MOTHER'S ADDRESS TO HER FAMILY ON HER GOLDEN-WEDDING DAY.Just fifty years, my daughters, Just fifty years, my son,Since your sire and I together The march of life begun.It does not seem so long ago As half a hundred years,Since hand in hand we started out, To face life's toils and tears.And toils, and tears, too, we have met; Yet sunbeams oft have come -Many and beautiful, and bright - To cheer our happy home;Sweet infant faces, thro' the years, Are smiling back to me;And, God be praised, each precious one Still at my side I see!Yet ye are changed, my children three, Your baby-bloom is gone;And you are growing old, I see, Grey hairs are coming on;Yet wh...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Nature, For Nature's Sake.
White as white butterflies that each one dons Her face their wide white wings to shade withal,Many moon-daisies throng the water-spring. While couched in rising barley titlarks call,And bees alit upon their martagons Do hang a-murmuring, a-murmuring.They chide, it may be, alien tribes that flew And rifled their best blossom, counted onAnd dreamed on in the hive ere dangerous dew That clogs bee-wings had dried; but when outshoneLong shafts of gold (made all for them) of powerTo charm it away, those thieves had sucked the flower.Now must they go; a-murmuring they go, And little thrushes twitter in the nest;The world is made for them, and even so The clouds are; they have seen no stars, the breastOf their soft moth...
Jean Ingelow
A College Career
IWhen one is young and eager, A bejant and a boy,Though his moustache be meagre, That cannot mar his joyWhen at the CompetitionHe takes a fair position,And feels he has a mission, A talent to employ.With pride he goes each morning Clad in a scarlet gown,A cap his head adorning (Both bought of Mr. Brown);He hears the harsh bell jangle,And enters the quadrangle,The classic tongues to mangle And make the ancients frown.He goes not forth at even, He burns the midnight oil,He feels that all his heaven Depends on ceaseless toil;Across his exercisesA dream of many prizesBefore his spirit rises, And makes his raw blood boil.IIThough he b...
Robert Fuller Murray
Pennies
A few long-hoarded pennies in his handBehold him stand;A kilted Hedonist, perplexed and sad.The joy that once he had,The first delight of ownership is fled.He bows his little head.Ah, cruel Time, to killThat splendid thrill!Then in his tear-dimmed eyesNew lights arise.He drops his treasured pennies on the ground,They roll and boundAnd scattered, rest.Now with what zestHe runs to find his errant wealth again!So unto menDoth God, depriving that He may bestow.Fame, health and money go,But that they may, new found, be newly sweet.Yea, at His feetSit, waiting us, to their concealment bid,All they, our lovers, whom His Love hath hid.Lo, comfort blooms on pain, and peace on strife, And gai...
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
Before Dawn
Sweet life, if life were stronger,Earth clear of years that wrong her,Then two things might live longer,Two sweeter things than they;Delight, the rootless flower,And love, the bloomless bower;Delight that lives an hour,And love that lives a day.From evensong to daytime,When April melts in Maytime,Love lengthens out his playtime,Love lessens breath by breath,And kiss by kiss grows olderOn listless throat or shoulderTurned sideways now, turned colderThan life that dreams of death.This one thing once worth givingLife gave, and seemed worth living;Sin sweet beyond forgivingAnd brief beyond regret:To laugh and love togetherAnd weave with foam and featherAnd wind and words the tetherOur memories p...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Morn And Eve Of Life.
So soft Time's plumage in life's budding spring,We rarely note the flutter of his wing.The untutored heart, from pain and sadness free,Beats high with hope and joy and ecstasy;And the fond bosoms of confiding youthBelieve their fairy world a world of truth.The thorn is young upon the rose's stem;They heed it not, it has no wound for them.While yet the heart is new to misery,There is a gloss on everything we see;There is a freshness, which returns no moreWhen fades the morn of life that soon is o'er;A warmth of feeling, ardency of joy,Delight almost exempt from an alloy,A zest for pleasure, fearlessness of pain,That we are destined ne'er to know again.And what succeeds this era joyous, bright?Is it a cloudless eve or starless n...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
On Time
Fly envious Time, till thou run out thy race,Call on the lazy leaden-stepping hours,Whose speed is but the heavy Plummets pace;And glut thy self with what thy womb devours,Which is no more then what is false and vain,And meerly mortal dross;So little is our loss,So little is thy gain.For when as each thing bad thou hast entomb'd,And last of all, thy greedy self consum'd,Then long Eternity shall greet our blissWith an individual kiss;And Joy shall overtake us as a flood,When every thing that is sincerely goodAnd perfectly divine,With Truth, and Peace, and Love shall ever shineAbout the supreme ThroneOf him, t'whose happy-making sight alone,When once our heav'nly-guided soul shall clime,Then all this Earthy grosnes quit,At...
John Milton
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry
Flood-tide below me! I watch you face to face;Clouds of the west! sun there half an hour high! I see you also face to face.Crowds of men and women attired in the usual costumes! how curious you are to me!On the ferry-boats, the hundreds and hundreds that cross, returning home, are more curious to me than you suppose;And you that shall cross from shore to shore years hence, are more to me, and more in my meditations, than you might suppose.The impalpable sustenance of me from all things, at all hours of the day;The simple, compact, well-join'd scheme--myself disintegrated, every one disintegrated, yet part of the scheme:The similitudes of the past, and those of the future;The glories strung like beads on my smallest sights and hearings--on the walk in the street, and the pas...
Walt Whitman
Lines Written On A Window[1] In The Episcopal Palace At Kilmore
Resolve me this, ye happy dead,Who've lain some hundred years in bed,From every persecution freeThat in this wretched life we see;Would ye resume a second birth,And choose once more to live on earth?
Jonathan Swift