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Behold A Shaking.
1.Man rising to the doom that shall not err, -Which hath most dread: the arouse of all or each;All kindreds of all nations of all speech,Or one by one of him and him and her?While dust reanimate begins to stirHere, there, beyond, beyond, reach beyond reach;While every wave refashions on the beachAlive or dead-in-life some seafarer.Now meeting doth not join or parting part;True meeting and true parting wait till then,When whoso meet are joined for evermore,Face answering face and heart at rest in heart: -God bring us all rejoicing to the shoreOf happy Heaven, His sheep home to the pen.2.Blessèd that flock safe penned in Paradise;Blessèd this flock which tramps in weary ways;All form one fl...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Exit Anima
"Hospes comesque corporis,Quae nunc abitis in loca?"Cease, Wind, to blowAnd drive the peopled snow,And move the haunted arras to and fro,And moan of things I fear to knowYet would rend from thee, Wind, before I goOn the blind pilgrimage.Cease, Wind, to blow.Thy brother too,I leave no print of shoeIn all these vasty rooms I rummage through,No word at threshold, and no clueOf whence I come and whither I pursueThe search of treasures lostWhen time was new.Thou janitorOf the dim curtained door,Stir thy old bones along the dusty floorOf this unlighted corridor.Open! I have been this dark way before;Thy hollow face shall peerIn mine no more. . . . .Sky, the dear sky!Ah, ghostly h...
Bliss Carman
Life Is Love
Is anyone sad in the world, I wonder? Does anyone weep on a day like this,With the sun above and the green earth under? Why, what is life but a dream of bliss?With the sun and the skies and the birds above me, Birds that sing as they wheel and fly -With the winds to follow and say they loved me - Who could be lonely? O ho, not I!Somebody said in the street this morning, As I opened my window to let in the light,That the darkest day of the world was dawning; But I looked, and the East was a gorgeous sightOne who claims that he knows about it Tells me the Earth is a vale of sin;But I and the bees and the birds - we doubt it, And think it a world worth living in.Someone says that hearts are fickle...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Lake of Gaube
The sun is lord and god, sublime, serene,And sovereign on the mountains: earth and airLie prone in passion, blind with bliss unseenBy force of sight and might of rapture, fairAs dreams that die and know not what they were.The lawns, the gorges, and the peaks, are oneGlad glory, thrilled with sense of unisonIn strong compulsive silence of the sun.Flowers dense and keen as midnight stars aflameAnd living things of light like flames in flowerThat glance and flash as though no hand might tameLightnings whose life outshone their stormlit hourAnd played and laughed on earth, with all their powerGone, and with all their joy of life made longAnd harmless as the lightning life of song,Shine sweet like stars when darkness feels them strong.The deep mild ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Lachesis
Over a slow-dying fire,Dreaming old dreams, I am sitting;The flames leap up and expire;A woman sits opposite knitting.Ive taken a Fate to wife;She knits with a half-smile mockingMe, and my dreams, and my life,All into a worsted stocking.
Victor James Daley
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - January.
1. LORD, what I once had done with youthful might, Had I been from the first true to the truth, Grant me, now old, to do--with better sight, And humbler heart, if not the brain of youth; So wilt thou, in thy gentleness and ruth, Lead back thy old soul, by the path of pain, Round to his best--young eyes and heart and brain. 2. A dim aurora rises in my east, Beyond the line of jagged questions hoar, As if the head of our intombed High Priest Began to glow behind the unopened door: Sure the gold wings will soon rise from the gray!-- They rise not. Up I rise, press on the more, To meet the slow coming of the Master's day.
George MacDonald
In Memory of John William Inchbold
Farewell: how should not such as thou fare well,Though we fare ill that love thee, and that live,And know, whate'er the days wherein we dwellMay give us, thee again they will not give?Peace, rest, and sleep are all we know of death,And all we dream of comfort: yet for thee,Whose breath of life was bright and strenuous breath,We think the change is other than we see.The seal of sleep set on thine eyes to-daySurely can seal not up the keen swift lightThat lit them once for ever. Night can slayNone save the children of the womb of night.The fire that burns up dawn to bring forth noonWas father of thy spirit: how shouldst thouDie as they die for whom the sun and moonAre silent? Thee the darkness holds not now:Them, while they looked upon the light,...
Integer Vitae
The man of life upright,Whose guiltless heart is freeFrom all dishonest deeds,Or thought of vanity;The man whose silent daysIn harmless joys are spent,Whom hopes cannot delude,Nor sorrow discontent;That man needs neither towersNor armour for defence,Nor secret vaults to flyFrom thunders violence:He only can beholdWith unaffrighted eyesThe horrors of the deepAnd terrors of the skies.Thus, scorning all the caresThat fate or fortune brings,He makes the heaven his book,His wisdom heavenly things;Good thoughts his only friends,His wealth a well-spent age,The earth his sober innAnd quiet pilgrimage.
Thomas Campion
Sonnet CLI.
Amor, Natura, e la bell' alma umile.DURING A SERIOUS ILLNESS OF LAURA. Love, Nature, Laura's gentle self combines,She where each lofty virtue dwells and reigns,Against my peace: To pierce with mortal painsLove toils--such ever are his stern designs.Nature by bonds so slight to earth confinesHer slender form, a breath may break its chains;And she, so much her heart the world disdains,Longer to tread life's wearying round repines.Hence still in her sweet frame we view decayAll that to earth can joy and radiance lend,Or serve as mirror to this laggard age;And Death's dread purpose should not Pity stay,Too well I see where all those hopes must end,With which I fondly soothed my lingering pilgrimage.WRANGHAM.<...
Francesco Petrarca
The Real
The leaf is faded, and decayed the flower,The birds have ceased to sing in wayside bower,The babbling brook is silenced by the cold,And hill and vale the frost and snow enfold.The life we see seems hasting to the tombNor sun, nor star, relieves the dismal gloom;The good man suffers with the base and vile,And honesty and truth give place to guile.Things are not always as they seem to be;The outer surface only man may see.The summer sleeps beneath the quilt of snow,Behind the clouds is hid the solar glow,The babbling brook will burst its icy bands,And birds will sing, and trees will clap their hands.The fallen leaf has left a bud behind,And flowers will bloom of brightest hue and kind;For when we look beneath the outward crustWi...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Burning Bush
From babyhood I have known the beauty of earth,I learnt it, I think, in the strange months before birth,I learnt it passing and passing by each moonFrom the harvest month into my natal June.My mother, the dear, the lovely I hardly knew,Bearing me must have walked and wandered throughStubble of silver or gold, as moon or sunLit earth in the days when my body was begun.And then October with leaves splendid and blownShe watched with my little body a little grown,And winter fell, and into our being passedFirm frost and icy rivers and the blastOf winds that on the iron clods of ploughBeat with an unseen charging. Then the boughOf spring came green, and her glad body stirredWith a son's wombed leaping, and she heardSongs of the air and woods and wate...
John Drinkwater
Early Death And Fame
For him who must see many years,I praise the life which slips awayOut of the light and mutely; which avoidsFame, and her less fair followers, envy, strife,Stupid detraction, jealousy, cabal,Insincere praises; which descendsThe quiet mossy track to age.But, when immature deathBeckons too early the guestFrom the half-tried banquet of life,Young, in the bloom of his days;Leaves no leisure to press,Slow and surely, the sweetsOf a tranquil life in the shade;Fuller for him be the hours!Give him emotion, though pain!Let him live, let him feel: I have lived!Heap up his moments with life,Triple his pulses with fame!
Matthew Arnold
By An Evolutionist
The Lord let the house of a brute to the soul of a man,And the man said, Am I your debtor?And the LordNot yet; but make it as clean as you can,And then I will let you a better.I.If my body come from brutes, my soul uncertain or a fable,Why not bask amid the senses while the sun of morning shines,I, the finer brute rejoicing in my hounds, and in my stable,Youth and health, and birth and wealth, and choice of women and of wines?II.What hast thou done for me, grim Old Age, save breaking my bones on the rack?Would I had past in the morning that looks so bright from afar!OLD AGEDone for thee? starved the wild beast that was linkt with thee eighty years back.Less weight now for the ladder-of-heaven that hangs on a s...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Life's Priestess.
All to herself a woman never singsA happy song. Oh no! but it is soAs when the thrush has closed down his wingsWithin the wood, and hears his hidden woeFrom his own bill fill aisles of leaves, and goAbout the wood and come to him again.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
A Man In His Life
A man doesn't have time in his lifeto have time for everything.He doesn't have seasons enough to havea season for every purpose. EcclesiastesWas wrong about that.A man needs to love and to hate at the same moment,to laugh and cry with the same eyes,with the same hands to throw stones and to gather them,to make love in war and war in love.And to hate and forgive and remember and forget,to arrange and confuse, to eat and to digest what historytakes years and years to do.A man doesn't have time.When he loses he seeks, when he findshe forgets, when he forgets he loves, when he loves he begins to forget.
Yehuda Amichai
Virtue.
Each must in virtue strive for to excel;That man lives twice that lives the first life well.
Robert Herrick
The End
Though man through life so swiftly wends, And o'er its journey runs his race;Though rough, or smooth, or 'round the bends, In distance putting fleetest friend:Alas! there comes a halting place, A place of rest - the journey's end!
Edward Smyth Jones
Fate
Her planted eye to-day controls,Is in the morrow most at home,And sternly calls to being soulsThat curse her when they come.
Ralph Waldo Emerson