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Consolation
Mist clogs the sunshine.Smoky dwarf housesHem me round everywhere;A vague dejectionWeighs down my soul.Yet, while I languish,Everywhere countlessProspects unroll themselves,And countless beingsPass countless moods.Far hence, in Asia,On the smooth convent-roofs,On the gilt terraces,Of holy Lassa,Bright shines the sun.Grey time-worn marblesHold the pure Muses;In their cool gallery,By yellow Tiber,They still look fair.Strange unloved uproarShrills round their portal;Yet not on HeliconKept they more cloudlessTheir noble calm.Through sun-proof alleysIn a lone, sand-hemm'dCity of Africa,A blind, led beggar,Age-bow'd, asks alms.No bolder robberErst abode ambush'd...
Matthew Arnold
The Widower's Lament.
Age yellows my leaf with a daily decline,And nature turns sick with decay;Short is the thread on life's spool that is mine,And few are my wishes to stay:The bud, that has seen but the sun of an hour,When storms overtake it may sigh;But fruit, that has weather'd life's sunshine and shower,Drops easy and gladly to die.The prop of my age, and the balm of my pain,With the length of life's years has declin'd;And, like the last sheep of the flock on the plain,She leaves me uneasy behind:I think of the days when our hearts they were one,And she of my youth was the pride;I look for the prop of my age, but it's gone,And I long to drop down by her side.
John Clare
Jaguar
Nasal intonations of lightand clicking tongues...publicity of windowsstoning me with pent-up cries...smells of abattoirs...smells of long-dead meat.Some day-end -while the sand is yet cozy as a blanketoff the warm body of a squaw,and the jaguars are out to kill...with a blue-black night coming onand a painted cloudstalking the first star -I shall go alone into the Silence...the coiled Silence...where a cry can run only a little wayand waver and dwindleand be lost.And there...where tiny antlers clinch and strainas life grapples in a million avid points,and threshing thingsstrike and die,letting their hate live onin the spreading purple of a wound...I toowill make covert of a...
Lola Ridge
Doubt.
I do not know if all the fault be mine, Or why I may not think of thee and be At peace with mine own heart. UnceasinglyGrim doubts beset me, bygone words of thine Take subtle meaning, and I cannot rest Till all my fears and follies are confessed.Perhaps the wild wind's questioning has brought My heart its melancholy, for, alone In the night stillness, I can hear him moanIn sobbing gusts, as though he vainly sought Some bygone bliss. Against the dripping pane In storm-blown torrents beats the driving rain.Nay I will tell thee all, I will not hide One thought from thee, and if I do thee wrong So much the more must I be brave and strongTo show my fault. And if thou then shouldst chide I will accept repr...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
The Glimpse
She sped through the doorAnd, following in haste,And stirred to the core,I entered hot-faced;But I could not find her,No sign was behind her."Where is she?" I said:- "Who?" they asked that sat there;"Not a soul's come in sight."- "A maid with red hair."- "Ah." They paled. "She is dead.People see her at night,But you are the firstOn whom she has burstIn the keen common light."It was ages ago,When I was quite strong:I have waited since, - O,I have waited so long!- Yea, I set me to ownThe house, where now loneI dwell in void roomsBooming hollow as tombs!But I never come near her,Though nightly I hear her.And my cheek has grown thinAnd my hair has grown grayWith this waiting th...
Thomas Hardy
The Monk's Walk
In this sombre garden closeWhat has come and passed, who knows?What red passion, what white painHaunted this dim walk in vain?Underneath the ivied wall,Where the silent shadows fall,Lies the pathway chill and dampWhere the world-quit dreamers tramp.Just across, where sunlight burns,Smiling at the mourning ferns,Stand the roses, side by side,Nodding in their useless pride.Ferns and roses, who shall sayWhat you witness day by day?Covert smile or dropping eye,As the monks go pacing by.Has the novice come to-dayHere beneath the wall to pray?Has the young monk, lately chidden,Sung his lyric, sweet, forbidden?Tell me, roses, did you noteThat pale father's throbbing throat?Did you hear ...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Sea Of Death. - A Fragment.
- - Methought I sawLife swiftly treading over endless space;And, at her foot-print, but a bygone pace,The ocean-past, which, with increasing wave,Swallow'd her steps like a pursuing grave.Sad were my thoughts that anchor'd silentlyOn the dead waters of that passionless sea,Unstirr'd by any touch of living breath:Silence hung over it, and drowsy Death,Like a gorged sea-bird, slept with folded wingsOn crowded carcases - sad passive thingsThat wore the thin gray surface, like a veilOver the calmness of their features pale.And there were spring-faced cherubs that did sleepLike water-lilies on that motionless deep,How beautiful! with bright unruffled hairOn sleek unfretted brows, and eyes that wereBuried in marble tombs,...
Thomas Hood
Animal Tranquillity And Decay
The little hedgerow birds,That peck along the roads, regard him not.He travels on, and in his face, his step,His gait, is one expression: every limb,His look and bending figure, all bespeakA man who does not move with pain, but movesWith thought. He is insensibly subduedTo settled quiet: he is one by whomAll effort seems forgotten; one to whomLong patience hath such mild composure given,That patience now doth seem a thing of whichHe hath no need. He is by nature ledTo peace so perfect that the young beholdWith envy, what the Old Man hardly feels.
William Wordsworth
The Eye That Never Sleeps
When the heavy, midnight shadows Gather o'er a slumbering world,And the banner folds of darkness Are in gloomy pomp unfurled, -Think, lone watcher, pale and tearful, In thy sad, unpitied lot,By the death couch waking, weeping, There is One who slumbers not! -One who, though no mourning brother Share thy vigils lone and drear,Loving, pitying, as no other Loves or pities, watches near!When the waves, o'erwrought by tempest, Lift their strong arms to the skies,And amid the inky darkness Shrieks of winds and waters rise, -Mariner, 'mid doubt and danger, Wildly tossed upon the deep,Think, o'er all in power presiding There is One who does not sleep -One who holds the risen tempest I...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Vastness
I.Many a hearth upon our dark globe sighsafter many a vanishd face,Many a planet by many a sun may rollwith the dust of a vanishd race.II.Raving politics, never at restas this poorearths pale history runs,What is it all but a trouble of ants in thegleam of a million million of suns?III.Lies upon this side, lies upon that side,truthless violence mournd by the Wise,Thousands of voices drowning his own in apopular torrent of lies upon lies;IV.Stately purposes, valour in battle, gloriousannals of army and fleet,Death for the right cause, death for the wrong cause,trumpets of vi...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Poet To His Childhood
In my thought I see you stand with a path on either hand,--Hills that look into the sun, and there a river'd meadow-land.And your lost voice with the things that it decreed across me thrills, When you thought, and chose the hills.'If it prove a life of pain, greater have I judged the gain.With a singing soul for music's sake, I climb and meet the rain,And I choose, whilst I am calm, my thought and labouring to be Unconsoled by sympathy.'But how dared you use me so? For you bring my ripe years lowTo your child's whim and a destiny your child-soul could not know.And that small voice legislating I revolt against, with tears. But you mark not, through the years.'To the mountain leads my way. If the plains are green to-day,These my ba...
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
Sonnet LVIII.
Not the slow Hearse, where nod the sable plumes, The Parian Statue, bending o'er the Urn, The dark robe floating, the dejection worn On the dropt eye, and lip no smile illumes;Not all this pomp of sorrow, that presumes It pays Affection's debt, is due concern To the FOR EVER ABSENT, tho' it mourn Fashion's allotted time. If Time consumes,While Life is ours, the precious vestal-flame Memory shou'd hourly feed; - if, thro' each day, She with whate'er we see, hear, think, or say,Blend not the image of the vanish'd Frame, O! can the alien Heart expect to prove, In worlds of light and life, a reunited love!
Anna Seward
Departure Of The Good Daemon
What can I do in poetry,Now the good spirit's gone from me?Why, nothing now but lonely sitAnd over-read what I have writ.
Robert Herrick
Sonnet.
He comes to me like air on parching grass;His eyes are wells where truth lives, found at last;Summer is fragrant should he this way pass;His calm love is a chain that binds me fast....Yet often melancholy will forecastThat time when I shall have grown old - when he -Still rapturous in his struggle with life's blast -Shall give a pitying side glance to me,Who skirt the fog-fringe of eternity,Straining mine eyes to catch what shadowy signOf good or evil omen there may be,Yet no sure good nor evil can divine:Only some hints of doubtful sound and light,That lonelier leave the uncompanioned night.
Thomas Runciman
The Walk
You did not walk with me Of late to the hill-top tree By the gated ways, As in earlier days; You were weak and lame, So you never came,And I went alone, and I did not mind,Not thinking of you as left behind. I walked up there to-day Just in the former way: Surveyed around The familiar ground By myself again: What difference, then?Only that underlying senseOf the look of a room on returning thence.
Melancholia
Silently without my window,Tapping gently at the pane,Falls the rain.Through the trees sighs the breezeLike a soul in pain.Here alone I sit and weep;Thought hath banished sleep.Wearily I sit and listenTo the water's ceaseless drip.To my lipFate turns up the bitter cup,Forcing me to sip;'T is a bitter, bitter drink,Thus I sit and think,--Thinking things unknown and awful,Thoughts on wild, uncanny themes,Waking dreams.Spectres dark, corpses stark,Show the gaping seamsWhence the cold and cruel knifeStole away their life.Bloodshot eyes all strained and staring,Gazing ghastly into mine;Blood like wineOn the brow--clotted now--Shows death's dreadful sign.Lonely vigil still ...
Sonnet: - IX.
Another day of rest, and I sit hereAmong the trees, green mounds, and leaves as sereAs my own blasted hopes. There was a timeWhen Love and perfect Happiness did chimeLike two sweet sounds upon this blessed day;But one has flown forever, far awayFrom this poor Earth's unsatisfied desiresTo love eternal, and the sacred firesWith which the other lighted up my mindHave faded out and left no trace behind,But dust and bitter ashes. Like a barkBecalmed, I anchor through the midnight dark,Still hoping for another dawn of Love.Bring back my olive branch of Happiness, O dove!
Charles Sangster
Husks
She looked at her neighbour's house in the light of the waning day -A shower of rice on the steps, and the shreds of a bride's bouquet.And then she drew the shade, to shut out the growing gloom,But she shut it into her heart instead. (Was that a voice in the room?)'My neighbour is sad,' she sighed, 'like the mother bird who seesThe last of her brood fly out of the nest to make its home in the trees' -And then in a passion of tears - 'But, oh, to be sad like her:Sad for a joy that has come and gone!' (Did some one speak, or stir?)She looked at her faded hands, all burdened with costly rings;She looked on her widowed home, all burdened with priceless things.She thought of the dead years gone, of the empty years ahead -(Yes, something stirred and something sp...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox