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The Younger Born
The modern English-speaking young girl is the astonishment of the world and the despair of the older generation. Nothing like her has ever been seen or heard before. Alike in drawing-rooms and the amusement places of the people, she defies conventions in dress, speech, and conduct. She is bold, yet not immoral. She is immodest, yet she is chaste. She has no ideals, yet she is kind and generous. She is an anomaly and a paradox.We are the little daughters of Time and the World his wife,We are not like the children, born in their younger life,We are marred with our mother's follies and torn with our father's strife.We are the little daughters of the modern world,And Time, her spouse.She has brought many children to our father's houseBefore we came, when both our parents ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Doubtful Dreams
Aye, snows are rife in December,And sheaves are in August yet,And you would have me remember,And I would rather forget;In the bloom of the May-day weather,In the blight of October chill,We were dreamers of old together,As of old, are you dreaming still?For nothing on earth is sadderThan the dream that cheated the grasp,The flower that turned to the adder,The fruit that changed to the asp;When the day-spring in darkness closes,As the sunset fades from the hills,With the fragrance of perishd roses,With the music of parchd-up rills.When the sands on the sea-shore nourishRed clover and yellow corn;When figs on the thistle flourish,And grapes grow thick on the thorn;When the dead branch, blighted and blasted,
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The Star-Treader
I A voice cried to me in a dawn of dreams, Saying, "Make haste: the webs of death and birth Are brushed away, and all the threads of earth Wear to the breaking; spaceward gleams Thine ancient pathway of the suns, Whose flame is part of thee; And deeps outreach immutably Whose largeness runs Through all thy spirit's mystery. Go forth, and tread unharmed the blaze Of stars where through thou camest in old days; Pierce without fear each vast Whose hugeness crushed thee not within the past. A hand strikes off the chains of Time, A hand swings back the door of years; Now fall earth's bonds of gladness and of tears, And opens the strait dream to space sublime." II...
Clark Ashton Smith
The Child Year
I"Dying of hunger and sorrow:I die for my youth I fear!"Murmured the midnight-hauntingVoice of the stricken Year.There like a child it perishedIn the stormy thoroughfare:The snow with cruel whitenessHad aged its flowing hair.Ah, little Year so fruitful,Ah, child that brought us bliss,Must we so early lose you -Our dear hopes end in this?II"Too young am I, too tender,To bear earth's avalancheOf wrong, that grinds down life-hope,And makes my heart's-blood blanch."Tell him who soon shall followWhere my tired feet have bled,He must be older, shrewder,Hard, cold, and selfish-bred -"Or else like me be trampledUnder the harsh world's heel.'Tis weakness to be yout...
George Parsons Lathrop
The Misanthrope Reclaimed - ACT III.
Scene I. Near the place of the damned. Enter Werner and Spirit.Werner. What piercing, stunning sounds assail my ear!Wild shrieks and wrathful curses, groans and prayers,A chaos of all cries! making the spaceThrough which they penetrate to flutter likeThe heart of a trapped hare, - are revelling round us. Unlike the gloomy realm we just have quitted,Silent and solemn, all is restless here,All wears the ashy hue of agony.Above us bends a black and starless vault,Which ever echoes back the fearful voicesThat rise from the abodes of wo beneath.Around us grim-browed desolation broods,While, far below, a sea of pale gray clouds,Like to an ocean tempest beaten, boils.Whither shall we direct our journey now?Spirit.
George W. Sands
Death's Eloquence.
When I shall goInto the narrow home that leavesNo room for wringing of the hands and hair,And feel the pressing of the walls which bearThe heavy sod upon my heart that grieves,(As the weird earth rolls on),Then I shall knowWhat is the power of destiny. But still,Still while my life, however sad, be mine,I war with memory, striving to divinePhantom to-morrows, to outrun the past;For yet the tears of final, absolute illAnd ruinous knowledge of my fate I shun.Even as the frail, instinctive weedTries, through unending shade, to reach at lastA shining, mellowing, rapture-giving sun;So in the deed of breathing joy's warm breath,Fain to succeed,I, too, in colorless longings, hope till death.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
For I Must Sing of All I Feel and Know
For I must sing of all I feel and know,Waiting with Memnon passive near the palms,Until the heavenly light doth dawn and growAnd thrill my silence into mystic psalms;From unknown realms the wind streams sad or gay,The trees give voice responsive to its sway.For I must sing: of mountains, deserts, seas,Of rivers ever flowing, ever flowing;Of beasts and birds, of grass and flowers and treesForever fading and forever growing;Of calm and storm, of night and eve and noon,Of boundless space, and sun and stars and moon;And of the secret sympathies that bindAll beings to their wondrous dwelling-place;And of the perfect Unity enshrinedIn omnipresence throughout time and space,Alike informing with its full controlThe dust, the stars, th...
James Thomson
Thoughts
IOf ownership, As if one fit to own things could not at pleasure enter upon all, and incorporate them into himself or herself.IIOf waters, forests, hills;Of the earth at large, whispering through medium of me;Of vista, Suppose some sight in arriere, through the formative chaos, presuming the growth, fulness, life, now attaind on the journey;(But I see the road continued, and the journey ever continued;)Of what was once lacking on earth, and in due time has become supplied, And of what will yet be supplied,Because all I see and know, I believe to have purport in what will yet be supplied.
Walt Whitman
Love And Loss.
Loss molds our lives in many ways,And fills our souls with guesses;Upon our hearts sad hands it laysLike some grave priest that blesses.Far better than the love we win,That earthly passions leaven,Is love we lose, that knows no sin,That points the path to Heaven.Love, whose soft shadow brightens Earth,Through whom our dreams are nearest;And loss, through whom we see the worthOf all that we held dearest.Not joy it is, but miseryThat chastens us, and sorrow;Perhaps to make us all that weExpect beyond To-morrow.Within that life where time and fateAre not; that knows no seeming:That world to which death keeps the gateWhere love and loss sit dreaming.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Bourne
Underneath the growing grass, Underneath the living flowers, Deeper than the sound of showers: There we shall not count the hoursBy the shadows as they pass.Youth and health will be but vain, Beauty reckoned of no worth: There a very little girth Can hold round what once the earthSeemed too narrow to contain.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Rhymes Of A Life-Time
From the first gleam of morning to the grayOf peaceful evening, lo, a life unrolled!In woven pictures all its changes told,Its lights, its shadows, every flitting ray,Till the long curtain, falling, dims the day,Steals from the dial's disk the sunlight's gold,And all the graven hours grow dark and coldWhere late the glowing blaze of noontide lay.Ah! the warm blood runs wild in youthful veins, -Let me no longer play with painted fire;New songs for new-born days! I would not tireThe listening ears that wait for fresher strainsIn phrase new-moulded, new-forged rhythmic chains,With plaintive measures from a worn-out lyre.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Lines on His Twenty-Third Birthday
Last evening's huge lax clouds of turbid whiteGrew dark and louring, burthened with the rainWhich that long wind monotonous all nightSwept clashing loud through Dreamland's still domain,Until my spirit in fatigue's despiteWas driven to weary wakefulness again:With such wild dirge and ceaseless streaming tearsDied out the last of all my ill-used years.The morn his risen pure and fresh and keen;Its perfect vault of bright blue heaven spreads bareAbove the earth's wide laughter twinkling green.The sun, long climbing up with lurid glareAthwart the storm-rack's rent and hurrying screen,Leapt forth at dawn to breathe this stainless air;The strong west wind still streams on full and high,Inspiring fresher life through earth and sky.Y...
To H.R.H. Princess Beatrice
Two Suns of Love make day of human life,Which else with all its pains, and griefs, and deaths,Were utter darknessone, the Sun of dawnThat brightens thro the Mothers tender eyes,And warms the childs awakening worldand oneThe later-rising Sun of spousal Love,Which from her household orbit draws the childTo move in other spheres. The Mother weepsAt that white funeral of the single life,Her maiden daughters marriage; and her tearsAre half of pleasure, half of painthe childIs happyeven in leaving her! but thou,True daughter, whose all-faithful, filial eyesHave seen the loneliness of earthly thrones,Wilt neither quit the widowd Crown, nor letThis later light of Love have risen in vain,But moving thro the Mothers home, betweenThe two ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Closed Door
Shut it out of the heart this grief,O Love, with the years grown old and hoary!And let in joy that life is brief,And give God thanks for the end of the story.The bond of the flesh is transitory,And beauty goes with the lapse of yearsThe brow's white rose and the hair's dark gloryGod be thanked for the severing shears!Over the past, Heart, waste no tears!Over the past and all its madness,Its wine and wormwood, hopes and fears,That never were worth a moment's sadness.Here she lies who was part o' its gladness,Wife and mistress, and shared its woe,The good of life as well as its badness,Look on her face and see if you know.Is this the face? yea, ask it slow!The hair, the form, that we used to cherish?Where is th...
Womanhood
IThe summer takes its hueFrom something opulent as fair in her,And the bright heaven is brighter than it was;Brighter and lovelier,Arching its beautiful blue,Serene and soft, as her sweet gaze, o'er us.IIThe springtime takes its moodsFrom something in her made of smiles and tears,And flowery earth is flowerier than before,And happier, it appears,Adding new multitudesTo flowers, like thoughts, that haunt us evermore.IIISummer and spring are wedIn her - her nature; and the glamour ofTheir loveliness, their bounty, as it were,Of life and joy and love,Her being seems to shed, -The magic aura of the heart of her.
Auguries Of Innocence
To see a World in a Grain of SandAnd a Heaven in a Wild Flower,Hold Infinity in the palm of your handAnd Eternity in an hour.A Robin Red breast in a CagePuts all Heaven in a Rage.A dove house fill'd with doves & PigeonsShudders Hell thro' all its regions.A dog starv'd at his Master's GatePredicts the ruin of the State.A Horse misus'd upon the RoadCalls to Heaven for Human blood.Each outcry of the hunted HareA fibre from the Brain does tear.A Skylark wounded in the wing,A Cherubim does cease to sing.The Game Cock clipp'd and arm'd for fightDoes the Rising Sun affright.Every Wolf's & Lion's howlRaises from Hell a Human Soul.The wild deer, wand'ring here & there,Keeps the Human Soul from Care.T...
William Blake
The Solitary
I have been lonely all my days on earth, Living a life within my secret soul,With mine own springs of sorrow and of mirth, Beyond the world's control.Though sometimes with vain longing I have sought To walk the paths where other mortals tread,To wear the clothes for other mortals wrought, And eat the selfsame bread--Yet have I ever found, when thus I strove To mould my life upon the common plan,That I was furthest from all truth and love, And least a living man.Truth frowned upon my poor hypocrisy, Life left my soul, and dwelt but in my sense;No man could love me, for all men could see The hollow vain pretence.Their clothes sat on me with outlandish air, Up...
Robert Fuller Murray
Five Criticisms - IV.
(On Certain Realists.)You with the quick sardonic eyeFor all the mockeries of life,Beware, in this dark masque of things that seem,Lest even that tragic irony,Which you discern in this our mortal strife,Trick you and trap you, also, with a dream.Last night I saw a dead man borne alongThe city streets, passing a boisterous throngThat never ceased to laugh and shout and dance:And yet, and yet,For all the poison bitter minds might brewFrom themes like this, I knewThat the stern Truth would not permit her glanceThus to be foiled by flying straws of chance,For her keen eyes on deeper skies are set,And laws that tragic ironists forget.She saw the dead man's life, from birth to death,--All that he knew of love and ...
Alfred Noyes