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The Deserted House
I.Life and Thought have gone awaySide by side,Leaving door and windows wide;Careless tenants they!II.All within is dark as night:In the windows is no light;And no murmur at the door,So frequent on its hinge before.III.Close the door, the shutters close,Or thro the windows we shall seeThe nakedness and vacancyOf the dark deserted house.IV.Come away; no more of mirthIs here or merry-making sound.The house was builded of the earth,And shall fall again to ground.V.Come away; for Life and ThoughtHere no longer dwell,But in a city gloriousA great and distant cityhave boughtA mansion incorruptib...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Wistful Lady
'Love, while you were away there came to me - From whence I cannot tell -A plaintive lady pale and passionless,Who bent her eyes upon me critically,And weighed me with a wearing wistfulness, As if she knew me well.""I saw no lady of that wistful sort As I came riding home.Perhaps she was some dame the Fates constrainBy memories sadder than she can support,Or by unhappy vacancy of brain, To leave her roof and roam?""Ah, but she knew me. And before this time I have seen her, lending earTo my light outdoor words, and pondering each,Her frail white finger swayed in pantomime,As if she fain would close with me in speech, And yet would not come near."And once I saw her beckoning with her hand A...
Thomas Hardy
Life-Weary
O Thou that walkest with nigh hopeless feetPast the one harbour, built for thee and thine.Doth no stray odour from its table greet,No truant beam from fire or candle shine?At his wide door the host doth stand and call;At every lattice gracious forms invite;Thou seest but a dull-gray, solid wallIn forest sullen with the things of night!Thou cravest rest, and Rest for thee doth crave,The white sheet folded down, white robe apart.--Shame, Faithless! No, I do not mean the grave!I mean Love's very house and hearth and heart.
George MacDonald
I Don't Know If You're Alive Or Dead
I don't know if you're alive or dead.Can you on earth be sought,Or only when the sunsets fadeBe mourned serenely in my thought?All is for you: the daily prayer,The sleepless heat at night,And of my verses, the whiteFlock, and of my eyes, the blue fire.No-one was more cherished, no-one torturedMe more, notEven the one who betrayed me to torture,Not even the one who caressed me and forgot.
Anna Akhmatova
Winter Nightfall
The old yellow stucco Of the time of the Regent Is flaking and peeling: The rows of square windows In the straight yellow building Are empty and still; And the dusty dark evergreens Guarding the wicket Are draped with wet cobwebs, And above this poor wilderness Toneless and sombre Is the flat of the hill. They said that a colonel Who long ago died here Was the last one to live here: An old retired colonel, Some Fraser or Murray, I don't know his name; Death came here and summoned him, And the shells of him vanished Beyond all speculation; And silence resumed here, Silence and emptiness, And nobody came. Was it ...
John Collings Squire, Sir
A Mood
A blight, a gloom, I know not what, has crept upon my gladness--Some vague, remote ancestral touch of sorrow, or of madness;A fear that is not fear, a pain that has not pain's insistence;A sense of longing, or of loss, in some foregone existence;A subtle hurt that never pen has writ nor tongue has spoken--Such hurt perchance as Nature feels when a blossomed bough is broken.
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
Social Amenities
I am getting on well with this anecdote,When suddenly I recallThe many times I have told it of old,And all the worked-up phrases, and the dying fallOf voice, well timed in the crisis, the noteOf mock-heroic ingeniously struck -The whole thing sticks in my throat,And my face all tingles and pricks with shameFor myself and my hearers.These are the social pleasures, my God!But I finish the story triumphantly all the same.
Aldous Leonard Huxley
Resolution And Independence
There was a roaring in the wind all night;The rain came heavily and fell in floods;But now the sun is rising calm and bright;The birds are singing in the distant woods;Over his own sweet voice the Stock-dove broods;The Jay makes answer as the Magpie chatters;And all the air is filled with pleasant noise of waters.All things that love the sun are out of doors;The sky rejoices in the morning's birth;The grass is bright with rain-drops; on the moorsThe hare is running races in her mirth;And with her feet she from the plashy earthRaises a mist, that, glittering in the sun,Runs with her all the way, wherever she doth run.I was a Traveller then upon the moor;I saw the hare that raced about with joy;I heard the woods and distant waters roar;
William Wordsworth
Night In The Old Home
When the wasting embers redden the chimney-breast,And Life's bare pathway looms like a desert track to me,And from hall and parlour the living have gone to their rest,My perished people who housed them here come back to me.They come and seat them around in their mouldy places,Now and then bending towards me a glance of wistfulness,A strange upbraiding smile upon all their faces,And in the bearing of each a passive tristfulness."Do you uphold me, lingering and languishing here,A pale late plant of your once strong stock?" I say to them;"A thinker of crooked thoughts upon Life in the sere,And on That which consigns men to night after showing the day to them?"" - O let be the Wherefore! We fevered our years not thus:Take of Life what it grants, wi...
Drink.
I.An English village, a summer scene,A homely cottage, a garden green,An opening vista, a cloudless sky,A bee that hums as it passes by;A babe that chuckles among the flowers,A smile that enlivens the mid-day hours,A wife that is fair as the sunny day,A peace that the world cannot take away,A hope that is humble and daily bread,A thankful soul that is comforted,A cosy cot and a slumbering child,A life and a love that are undefiled,A thought that is silent, an earnest prayer,The noiseless step of a phantom there!II.A drunken husband, a wailing wife;Oh, a weary way is the way of life!A heartless threat and a cruel blowAnd grief that the world can never know;A tongue obscene and a will pervers...
Lennox Amott
Satires Of Circumstances In Fifteen Glimpses - XV In The Moonlight
"O lonely workman, standing thereIn a dream, why do you stare and stareAt her grave, as no other grave there were?"If your great gaunt eyes so importuneHer soul by the shine of this corpse-cold moon,Maybe you'll raise her phantom soon!""Why, fool, it is what I would rather seeThan all the living folk there be;But alas, there is no such joy for me!""Ah she was one you loved, no doubt,Through good and evil, through rain and drought,And when she passed, all your sun went out?""Nay: she was the woman I did not love,Whom all the others were ranked above,Whom during her life I thought nothing of."
Harmony Of Evening
Now those days arrive when, stem throbbing,each flower sheds its fragrance like a censer:sounds and scents twine in the evening air:languorous dizziness, Melancholy dancing!Each flower sheds its fragrance like a censer:the violin quivers, a heart thats suffering:languorous dizziness, Melancholy dancing!the sky is lovely, sad like a huge altar.The violin quivers, a heart thats suffering:a heart, hating the vast black void, so tender!the sky is lovely, sad like a huge altar:the sun is drowned, in its own blood congealing.A heart, hating the vast black void, so tender:each trace of the luminous past its gathering!The sun is drowned, in its own blood congealingA vessel of the host, your memory shines there.
Charles Baudelaire
Sonnet: When I Have Fears That I May Cease To Be
When I have fears that I may cease to beBefore my pen has glean'd my teeming brain,Before high piled books, in charactry,Hold like rich garners the full-ripen'd grain;When I behold, upon the night's starr'd face,Huge cloudy symbols of a high romance,And think that I may never live to traceTheir shadows, with the magic hand of chance;And when I feel, fair creature of an hour,That I shall never look upon thee more,Never have relish in the faery powerOf unreflecting love; then on the shoreOf the wide world I stand alone, and thinkTill Love and Fame to nothingness do sink.
John Keats
Stars
Alone in the nightOn a dark hillWith pines around meSpicy and still,And a heaven full of starsOver my head,White and topazAnd misty red;Myriads with beatingHearts of fireThat aeonsCannot vex or tire;Up the dome of heavenLike a great hill,I watch them marchingStately and still,And I know that IAm honored to beWitnessOf so much majesty.
Sara Teasdale
Nay, not To-night
Nay, not to-night; - the slow, sad rain is fallingSorrowful tears, beneath a grieving sky,Far off a famished jackal, faintly calling,Renders the dusk more lonely with its cry.The mighty river rushes, sobbing, seawards,The shadows shelter faint mysterious fears,I turn mine eyes for consolation theewards,And find thy lashes tremulous with tears.If some new soul, asearch for incarnation,Should, through our kisses, enter Life again,It would inherit all our desolation,All the soft sorrow of the slanting rain.When thou desirest Love's supreme surrender,Come while the morning revels in the light,Bulbuls around us, passionately tender,Singing among the roses red and white.Thus, if it be my sweet and sacred duty,Subservient...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Palingenesis
I lay upon the headland-height, and listenedTo the incessant sobbing of the sea In caverns under me,And watched the waves, that tossed and fled and glistened,Until the rolling meadows of amethyst Melted away in mist.Then suddenly, as one from sleep, I started;For round about me all the sunny capes Seemed peopled with the shapesOf those whom I had known in days departed,Apparelled in the loveliness which gleams On faces seen in dreams.A moment only, and the light and gloryFaded away, and the disconsolate shore Stood lonely as before;And the wild-roses of the promontoryAround me shuddered in the wind, and shed Their petals of pale red.There was an old belief that in the embersOf all things the...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Silence.
I am the word that lovers leave unsaid, The eloquence of ardent lips grown mute,The mourning mother's heart-cry for her dead, The flower of faith that grows to unseen fruit.I am the speech of prophets when their eyes Behold some splendid vision of the soul;The song of morning stars, the hills' replies, The far call of the immaterial pole.And, since I must be mateless, I shall win One boon beyond the meed of common clay:My life shall end where other lives begin, And live when other lives have passed away.
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
Ode To Silence
Aye, but she? Your other sister and my other soul Grave Silence, lovelier Than the three loveliest maidens, what of her? Clio, not you, Not you, Calliope, Nor all your wanton line, Not Beauty's perfect self shall comfort me For Silence once departed, For her the cool-tongued, her the tranquil-hearted, Whom evermore I follow wistfully, Wandering Heaven and Earth and Hell and the four seasons through; Thalia, not you, Not you, Melpomene, Not your incomparable feet, O thin Terpsichore, I seek in this great hall, But one more pale, more pensive, most beloved of you all. I se...
Edna St. Vincent Millay