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At Twilight Time
At twilight time when tolls the chime, And saddest notes are falling,A lonely bird with plaintive word Across the dusk is calling.Vain doth it wait for one dear mate, That ne'er shall know the morrow;Then sinks to rest with drooping crest In one long dream of sorrow.Dearest, when night is here, To thee I'm calling,Sadly as tear on tear Is slowly falling,Oh, fold me near, more near - In love enthralling!Here on thy breast, While life shall last,With thee I stay. Here will I restTill night is past, And comes the day!
Arthur Macy
The Helpless
Those poor, heartbroken wretches, doomedTo hear at night the clocks' hard tones;They have no beds to warm their limbs,But with those limbs must warm cold stones;Those poor weak men, whose coughs and ailingsForce them to tear at iron railings.Those helpless men that starve, my pity;Whose waking day is never done;Who, save for their own shadows, areDoomed night and day to walk alone:They know no bright face but the sun's,So cold and dark are human ones.
William Henry Davies
The Man Who Forgot
At a lonely cross where bye-roads metI sat upon a gate;I saw the sun decline and set,And still was fain to wait.A trotting boy passed up the wayAnd roused me from my thought;I called to him, and showed where layA spot I shyly sought."A summer-house fair stands hidden whereYou see the moonlight thrown;Go, tell me if within it thereA lady sits alone."He half demurred, but took the track,And silence held the scene;I saw his figure rambling back;I asked him if he had been."I went just where you said, but foundNo summer-house was there:Beyond the slope 'tis all bare ground;Nothing stands anywhere."A man asked what my brains were worth;The house, he said, grew rotten,And was pulled dow...
Thomas Hardy
A Barkeeper's Coarse Complaint
It's enough to make me throw the chair through the panes of themirror Into the street -There I sit with raised eyebrows:All bars are full,My bar is empty - isn't that terrific...Isn't that strange... isn't that enough to make you puke,,,The damned jerks - the miserable phonies -Everyone goes right by me...Bloody mess...Here I am burning gas and electricity -May God and the devil damn me to hell:Damn It all... why is my bar the only empty one...Grumpy, reproachful waiters standing around -It is my fault -Not one damned person comes to the door -Cramped in a corner I sit with a hopeful face.No customers come. -The food rots, the wine and bread.I might as well shut the joint.And cry myself to death.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Lines: 'We Meet Not As We Parted'.
1.We meet not as we parted,We feel more than all may see;My bosom is heavy-hearted,And thine full of doubt for me: -One moment has bound the free.2.That moment is gone for ever,Like lightning that flashed and died -Like a snowflake upon the river -Like a sunbeam upon the tide,Which the dark shadows hide.3.That moment from time was singledAs the first of a life of pain;The cup of its joy was mingled- Delusion too sweet though vain!Too sweet to be mine again.4.Sweet lips, could my heart have hiddenThat its life was crushed by you,Ye would not have then forbiddenThe death which a heart so trueSought in your briny dew.5..........Methinks too little cost<...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
A Maid Who Died Old
Frail, shrunken face, so pinched and worn,That life has carved with care and doubt!So weary waiting, night and morn,For that which never came about!Pale lamp, so utterly forlorn,In which God's light at last is out.Gray hair, that lies so thin and primOn either side the sunken brows!And soldered eyes, so deep and dim,No word of man could now arouse!And hollow hands, so virgin slim,Forever clasped in silent vows!Poor breasts! that God designed for love,For baby lips to kiss and press;That never felt, yet dreamed thereof,The human touch, the child caress -That lie like shriveled blooms aboveThe heart's long-perished happiness.O withered body, Nature gaveFor purposes of death and birth,That never knew, and ...
Madison Julius Cawein
I Am Content.
("J'habite l'ombre.")[1855.] True; I dwell lone, Upon sea-beaten cape, Mere raft of stone; Whence all escapeSave one who shrinks not from the gloom,And will not take the coward's leap i' the tomb. My bedroom rocks With breezes; quakes in storms, When dangling locks Of seaweed mock the formsOf straggling clouds that trail o'erheadLike tresses from disrupted coffin-lead. Upon the sky Crape palls are often nailed With stars. Mine eye Has scared the gull that sailedTo blacker depths with shrillest scream,Still fainter, till like voices in a dream. My days become More plaintive, wan, and pale, While ...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Doubt
My soul lives in my body's house,And you have both the house and her,But sometimes she is less your ownThan a wild, gay adventurer;A restless and an eager wraith,How can I tell what she will do,Oh, I am sure of my body's faith,But what if my soul broke faith with you?
Sara Teasdale
Sonnet LXV.
Io avrò sempre in odio la fenestra.BETTER IS IT TO DIE HAPPY THAN TO LIVE IN PAIN. Always in hate the window shall I bear,Whence Love has shot on me his shafts at will,Because not one of them sufficed to kill:For death is good when life is bright and fair,But in this earthly jail its term to outwearIs cause to me, alas! of infinite ill;And mine is worse because immortal still,Since from the heart the spirit may not tear.Wretched! ere this who surely ought'st to knowBy long experience, from his onward courseNone can stay Time by flattery or by force.Oft and again have I address'd it so:Mourner, away! he parteth not too soonWho leaves behind him far his life's calm June.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
The Voice
As the kindling glances,Queen-like and clear,Which the bright moon lancesFrom her tranquil sphereAt the sleepless watersOf a lonely mere,On the wild whirling waves, mournfully, mournfully,Shiver and die.As the tears of sorrowMothers have shedPrayers that tomorrowShall in vain be spedWhen the flower they flow forLies frozen and deadFall on the throbbing brow, fall on the burning breast,Bringing no rest.Like bright waves that fallWith a lifelike motionOn the lifeless margin of the sparkling Ocean;A wild rose climbing up a mouldering wallA gush of sunbeams through a ruined hallStrains of glad music at a funeralSo sad, and with so wild a startTo this deep-sobered heart,So anxiously and pai...
Matthew Arnold
Faces
People that I meet and passIn the city's broken roar,Faces that I lose so soonAnd have never found before,Do you know how much you tellIn the meeting of our eyes,How ashamed I am, and sadTo have pierced your poor disguise?Secrets rushing without soundCrying from your hiding placesLet me go, I cannot bearThe sorrow of the passing faces.People in the restless street,Can it be, oh can it beIn the meeting of our eyesThat you know as much of me?
Constancy to an Ideal Object
Since all, that beat about in Nature's range,Or veer or vanish; why should'st thou remainThe only constant in a world of change,O yearning THOUGHT! that liv'st but in the brain?Call to the HOURS, that in the distance play,The faery people of the future dayFond THOUGHT! not one of all that shining swarmWill breathe on thee with life-enkindling breath,Till when, like strangers shelt'ring from a storm,Hope and Despair meet in the porch of Death!Yet still thou haunt'st me; and though well I see,She is not thou, and only thou art she,Still, still as though some dear embodied Good,Some living Love before my eyes there stoodWith answering look a ready ear to lend,I mourn to thee and say, `Ah! loveliest Friend!That this the meed of all my toils might b...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The Seven Sisters
Or, The Solitude Of BinnorieSeven Daughter had Lord Archibald,All children of one mother:You could not say in one short dayWhat love they bore each other.A garland, of seven lilies, wrought!Seven sisters that together dwell;But he, bold Knight as ever fought,Their Father, took of them no thought,He loved the wars so well.Sing, mournfully, oh! mournfully,The solitude of Binnorie!Fresh blows the wind, a western wind,And from the shores of Erin,Across the wave, a Rover braveTo Binnorie is steering:Right onward to the Scottish strandThe gallant ship is borne;The warriors leap upon the land,And hark! the Leader of the bandHath blown his bugle horn.Sing, mournfully, oh! mournfully,The solitude of Binnor...
William Wordsworth
Meditations. (Translations From The Hebrew Poets Of Medaeval Spain.)
Forget thine anguish,Vexed heart, again.Why shouldst thou languish,With earthly pain?The husk shall slumber,Bedded in claySilent and sombre,Oblivion's prey!But, Spirit immortal,Thou at Death's portal,Tremblest with fear.If he caress thee,Curse thee or bless thee,Thou must draw near,From him the worth of thy works to hear.Why full of terror,Compassed with error,Trouble thy heart,For thy mortal part?The soul flies home -The corpse is dumb.Of all thou didst have,Follows naught to the grave.Thou fliest thy nest,Swift as a bird to thy place of rest.What avail grief and fasting,Where nothing is lasting?Pomp, domination,Become tribulation.In a health-...
Emma Lazarus
The Hermit.
By the waters of a river, where the rocks like giants stand,There a stranger, young and favored, built a home with his own hand.Hewed the logs and reared the roof-tree, where for years alone he dwelt,Wanderer from the sunny Southland, and from pangs his heart had felt.Legend says high-born and wealthy, seeking there in Nature's wildsTo forget a maiden fickle, basking in a rival's smiles.Where the music of the wild birds, echoed from the cliffs around,Blended with the voice of waters, flowing past with silvery sound;Where in Springtime wild flowers blooming shed their incense day and night,And the rugged cliff-sides wearing robes of dogwood, snowy white;Where in Summer old trees spreading overhead a leafy roofFlung their shadows, deep and coolin...
George W. Doneghy
I Wonder If The Sepulchre
I wonder if the sepulchreIs not a lonesome way,When men and boys, and larks and JuneGo down the fields to hay!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
To The Moon.
1.Art thou pale for wearinessOf climbing heaven and gazing on the earth,Wandering companionlessAmong the stars that have a different birth, -And ever changing, like a joyless eyeThat finds no object worth its constancy?2.Thou chosen sister of the Spirit,That grazes on thee till in thee it pities...
Exile
By the sad waters of separationWhere we have wandered by divers ways,I have but the shadow and imitationOf the old memorial days.In music I have no consolation,No roses are pale enough for me;The sound of the waters of separationSurpasseth roses and melody.By the sad waters of separationDimly I hear from an hidden placeThe sigh of mine ancient adoration:Hardly can I remember your face.If you be dead, no proclamationSprang to me over the waste, gray sea:Living, the waters of separationSever for ever your soul from me.No man knoweth our desolation;Memory pales of the old delight;While the sad waters of separationBear us on to the ultimate night.
Ernest Christopher Dowson