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The Sum
A little dreaming by the way,A little toiling day by day;A little pain, a little strife,A little joy,--and that is life.A little short-lived summer's morn,When joy seems all so newly born,When one day's sky is blue above,And one bird sings,--and that is love.A little sickening of the years,The tribute of a few hot tearsTwo folded hands, the failing breath,And peace at last,--and that is death.Just dreaming, loving, dying so,The actors in the drama go--A flitting picture on a wall,Love, Death, the themes; but is that all?
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Life in Death
He should have followed who goes forth before us,Last born of us in life, in death first-born:The last to lift up eyes against the morn,The first to see the sunset. Life, that bore usPerchance for death to comfort and restore us,Of him hath left us here awhile forlorn,For him is as a garment overworn,And time and change, with suns and stars in chorus,Silent. But if, beyond all change or time,A law more just, more equal, more sublimeThan sways the surge of life's loud sterile seaSways that still world whose peace environs him,Where death lies dead as night when stars wax dim,Above all thought or hope of ours is he.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Song of the Parao (Camping-ground)
Heart, my heart, thou hast found thy home!From gloom and sorrow thou hast come forth,Thou who wast foolish, and sought to roam'Neath the cruel stars of the frozen North.Thou hast returned to thy dear delights;The golden glow of the quivering days,The silver silence of tropical nights,No more to wander in alien ways.Here, each star is a well-loved friend;To me and my heart at the journey's end.These are my people, and this my land,I hear the pulse of her secret soul.This is the life that I understand,Savage and simple and sane and whole.Washed in the light of a clear fierce sun, -Heart, my heart, the journey is done.See! the painted piece of the skies,Where the rose-hued opal of sunset lies.Hear the pass...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Contentment.
Glad hours have been when I have seen Life's scope and each dry day's intent United; so that I could stand In silence, covering with my hand The circle of the universe, Balance the blessing and the curse, And trust in deeds without chagrin,Free from to-morrow and yesterday - content.
George Parsons Lathrop
To Age
Welcome, old friend! These many yearsHave we lived door by door;The fates have laid aside their shearsPerhaps for some few more.I was indocile at an ageWhen better boys were taught,But thou at length hast made me sage,If I am sage in aught.Little I know from other men,Too little they know from me,But thou hast pointed well the penThat writes these lines to thee.Thanks for expelling Fear and Hope,One vile, the other vain;One's scourge, the other's telescope,I shall not see again.Rather what lies before my feetMy notice shall engage,He who hath braved Youth's dizzy heatDreads not the frost of Age.
Walter Savage Landor
Nature
As a fond mother, when the day is o'er, Leads by the hand her little child to bed, Half willing, half reluctant to be led, And leave his broken playthings on the floor,Still gazing at them through the open door, Nor wholly reassured and comforted By promises of others in their stead, Which, though more splendid, may not please him more;So Nature deals with us, and takes away Our playthings one by one, and by the hand Leads us to rest so gently, that we goScarce knowing if we wish to go or stay, Being too full of sleep to understand How far the unknown transcends the what we know.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Love Thou Thy Land, With Love Far-Brought
Love thou thy land, with love far-broughtFrom out the storied past, and usedWithin the present, but transfusedThro future time by power of thought;True love turnd round on fixed poles,Love, that endures not sordid ends,For English natures, freemen, friends,Thy brothers and immortal souls.But pamper not a hasty time,Nor feed with crude imaginingsThe herd, wild hearts and feeble wingsThat every sophister can lime.Deliver not the tasks of mightTo weakness, neither hide the rayFrom those, not blind, who wait for day,Tho sitting girt with doubtful light.Make knowledge circle with the winds;But let her herald, Reverence, flyBefore her to whatever skyBear seed of men and growth of minds.Watch wh...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Well-Born
So many people - people - in the world;So few great souls, love ordered, well begun,In answer to the fertile mother need!So few who seemThe image of the Maker's mortal dream;So many born of mere propinquity -Of lustful habit, or of accident.Their mothers feltNo mighty, all-compelling wish to seeTheir bosoms garden-placesAbloom with flower faces;No tidal wave swept o'er them with its flood;No thrill of flesh or heart; no leap of blood;No glowing fire, flaming to white desireFor mating and for motherhood:Yet they bore children.God! how mankind misuses Thy command,To populate the earth!How low is brought high birth!How low the woman; when, inert as spawnLeft on the sands to fertilise,She is the means through which the...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - October.
1. REMEMBER, Lord, thou hast not made me good. Or if thou didst, it was so long ago I have forgotten--and never understood, I humbly think. At best it was a crude, A rough-hewn goodness, that did need this woe, This sin, these harms of all kinds fierce and rude, To shape it out, making it live and grow. 2. But thou art making me, I thank thee, sire. What thou hast done and doest thou know'st well, And I will help thee:--gently in thy fire I will lie burning; on thy potter's-wheel I will whirl patient, though my brain should reel; Thy grace shall be enough the grief to quell, And growing strength perfect through weakness d...
George MacDonald
Virgin Youth
Now and againAll my body springs alive,And the life that is polarised in my eyes,That quivers between my eyes and mouth,Flies like a wild thing across my body,Leaving my eyes half-empty, and clamorous,Filling my still breasts with a flush and a flame,Gathering the soft ripples below my breastsInto urgent, passionate waves,And my soft, slumbering bellyQuivering awake with one impulse of desire,Gathers itself fiercely together;And my docile, fluent armsKnotting themselves with wild strengthTo clasp what they have never clasped.Then I tremble, and go tremblingUnder the wild, strange tyranny of my body,Till it has spent itself,And the relentless nodality of my eyes reasserts itself,Till the bursten flood of life ebbs back to my ey...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
A Dialogue
MORTALThe world is full of selfishness and greed.Lord, I would lave its sin.SPIRITYea, mortal, earth of thy good help has need.Go cleanse THYSELF within.MORTALMine ear is hurt by harsh and evil speech.I would reform men's ways.SPIRITThere is but one convincing way to teach.Speak THOU but words of praise.MORTALOn every hand is wretchedness and grief,Despondency and fear.Lord, I would give my fellow men relief.SPIRITBe, then, all hope, all cheer.MORTALLord, I look outward and grow sick at heart,Such need of change I see.SPIRITMortal, look IN. Do thy allotted part,And leave the rest to ME.
What Little Things!
From "One Day and Another"What little things are thoseThat hold our happiness!A smile, a glance, a roseDropped from her hair or dress;A word, a look, a touch, -These are so much, so much.An air we can't forget;A sunset's gold that gleams;A spray of mignonette,Will fill the soul with dreamsMore than all history says,Or romance of old days.For of the human heart,Not brain, is memory;These things it makes a partOf its own entity;The joys, the pains whereofAre the very food of love.
Madison Julius Cawein
Life's Burying-Ground.
My graveyard holds no once-loved human forms,Grown hideous and forgotten, left alone,But every agony my heart has known, -The new-born trusts that died, the drift of storms.I visit every day the shadowy grove;I bury there my outraged tender thought;I bring the insult for the love I sought,And my contempt, where I had tried to love.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Full Of Life, Now
Full of life, now, compact, visible,I, forty years old the Eighty-third Year of The States,To one a century hence, or any number of centuries hence,To you, yet unborn, these, seeking you.When you read these, I, that was visible, am become invisible;Now it is you, compact, visible, realizing my poems, seeking me;Fancying how happy you were, if I could be with you, and become your comrade;Be it as if I were with you. (Be not too certain but I am now with you.)
Walt Whitman
Occupation: Father
My son finds occupationin almost nothing, in everything:my soapy penitential toothpaste,his mother's loosened hairorts, containers, useless things;watches as I peeas at Victoria Falls,once pushed his head between my kneesto risk some sort of baptism.Before his birth I thoughtI had room for no more love:now when he (say) hurts himselflove, consideration, care(copies from the originals)as if burst inside me.Undoggedly I interest myselfin his uninteresting concerns,grow backward to him,more than hoping to finda forward interest for myself.
Ben Jonson
An Old-World Thicket.
..."Una selva oscura." - Dante.Awake or sleeping (for I know not which)I was or was not mazed within a woodWhere every mother-bird brought up her broodSafe in some leafy nicheOf oak or ash, of cypress or of beech,Of silvery aspen trembling delicately,Of plane or warmer-tinted sycamore,Of elm that dies in secret from the core,Of ivy weak and free,Of pines, of all green lofty things that be.Such birds they seemed as challenged each desire;Like spots of azure heaven upon the wing,Like downy emeralds that alight and sing,Like actual coals on fire,Like anything they seemed, and everything.Such mirth they made, such warblings and such chatWith tongue of music in a well-tuned beak,They seemed to speak more wis...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Suicide
"Curse thee, Life, I will live with thee no more! Thou hast mocked me, starved me, beat my body sore! And all for a pledge that was not pledged by me, I have kissed thy crust and eaten sparingly That I might eat again, and met thy sneers With deprecations, and thy blows with tears,-- Aye, from thy glutted lash, glad, crawled away, As if spent passion were a holiday! And now I go. Nor threat, nor easy vow Of tardy kindness can avail thee now With me, whence fear and faith alike are flown; Lonely I came, and I depart alone, And know not where nor unto whom I go; But that thou canst not follow me I know." Thus I to Life, and ceased; but through my brain My thought ran still, until I spake again:<...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
A Grammarians Funeral
Shortly after the Revival of Learning in EuropeLet us begin and carry up this corpse,Singing together.Leave we the common crofts, the vulgar thorpesEach in its tetherSleeping safe on the bosom of the plain,Cared-for till cock-crow:Look out if yonder be not day againRimming the rock-row!Thats the appropriate country; there, mans thought,Rarer, intenser,Self-gathered for an outbreak, as it ought,Chafes in the censer.Leave we the unlettered plain its herd and crop;Seek we sepultureOn a tall mountain, citied to the top,Crowded with culture!All the peaks soar, but one the rest excels;Clouds overcome it;No! yonder sparkle is the citadelsCircling its summit.Thither our path lies; wind we up the heigh...
Robert Browning