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The Voice
Woman much missed, how you call to me, call to me,Saying that now you are not as you wereWhen you had changed from the one who was all to me,But as at first, when our day was fair.Can it be you that I hear? Let me view you, then,Standing as when I drew near to the townWhere you would wait for me: yes, as I knew you then,Even to the original air-blue gown!Or is it only the breeze, in its listlessnessTravelling across the wet mead to me here,You being ever consigned to existlessness,Heard no more again far or near? Thus I; faltering forward, Leaves around me falling,Wind oozing thin through the thorn from norward And the woman calling.December 1912.
Thomas Hardy
Exiled
Searching my heart for its true sorrow, This is the thing I find to be: That I am weary of words and people, Sick of the city, wanting the sea; Wanting the sticky, salty sweetness Of the strong wind and shattered spray; Wanting the loud sound and the soft sound Of the big surf that breaks all day. Always before about my dooryard, Marking the reach of the winter sea, Rooted in sand and dragging drift-wood, Straggled the purple wild sweet-pea; Always I climbed the wave at morning, Shook the sand from my shoes at night, That now am caught beneath great buildings, Stricken with noise, confused ...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
George And Sarah Green
Who weeps for strangers? Many weptFor George and Sarah Green;Wept for that pair's unhappy fate,Whose grave may here be seen.By night, upon these stormy fells,Did wife and husband roam;Six little ones at home had left,And could not find that home.For 'any' dwelling-place of manAs vainly did they seek.He perish'd; and a voice was heardThe widow's lonely shriek.Not many steps, and she was leftA body without lifeA few short steps were the chain that boundThe husband to the wife.Now do those sternly-featured hillsLook gently on this grave;And quiet now are the depths of air,As a sea without a wave.But deeper lies the heart of peaceIn quiet more profound;The heart of quietness is here<...
William Wordsworth
The Woman I Met
A stranger, I threaded sunken-heartedA lamp-lit crowd;And anon there passed me a soul departed,Who mutely bowed.In my far-off youthful years I had met her,Full-pulsed; but now, no more life's debtor,Onward she slidIn a shroud that furs half-hid."Why do you trouble me, dead woman,Trouble me;You whom I knew when warm and human?How it beThat you quitted earth and are yet upon itIs, to any who ponder on it,Past being read!""Still, it is so," she said."These were my haunts in my olden sprightlyHours of breath;Here I went tempting frail youth nightlyTo their death;But you deemed me chaste me, a tinselled sinner!How thought you one with pureness in herCould pace this streetEyeing some man to greet?...
Terminus
Terminus shows the ways and says, "All things must have an end." Oh, bitter thought we hid away When first you were my friend. We hid it in the darkest place Our hearts had place to hide, And took the sweet as from a spring Whose waters would abide. For neither life nor the wide world Has greater store than this: - The thought that runs through hands and eyes And fills the silences. There is a void the agéd world Throws over the spent heart; When Life has given all she has, And Terminus says depart. When we must sit with folded hands, And see with inward eye A void rise like an arctic breath To hollow the morrow's sky. To-morrow...
Edgar Lee Masters
To Mary Shelley.
My dearest Mary, wherefore hast thou gone,And left me in this dreary world alone?Thy form is here indeed - a lovely one -But thou art fled, gone down the dreary road,That leads to Sorrow's most obscure abode;Thou sittest on the hearth of pale despair,WhereFor thine own sake I cannot follow thee.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Prairie
Where yesterday rolled long waves of goldBeneath the burnished blue of the sky,A silver-white sea lies still and cold,And a bitter wind blows by.But nothing passes the door all day,Though my watching eyes grow worn and dim,Save a lean, grey wolf that swings awayTo the far horizon rim.Then, one by one, the stars glisten outLike frozen tears on a purple pall -The darkness folds my cabin aboutAnd the snow begins to fall.I will make a hearth-fire red and brightAnd set a light by the window paneFor one who follows the trail to-nightThat will bring him home again.Love will ride with him my heart to bless -Joy will out-step him across the floor -What matters the great white lonelinessWhen we bar the cabin door...
Virna Sheard
Dispossessed
Tender and tremulous green of leavesTurned up by the wind,Twanging among the vines -Wind in the grassBlowing a clear pathFor the new-stripped soul to pass...The naked soul in the sunlight...Like a wisp of smoke in the sunlightOn the hill-side shimmering.Dance light on the wind, little soul,Like a thistle-down floatingOver the butterfliesAnd the lumbering bees...Come away from that treeAnd its shadow grey as a stone...Bathe in the pools of lightOn the hillside shimmering -Shining and wetted and warm in the sun-spray falling like golden rain -But do not linger and lookAt that bleak thing under the tree.
Lola Ridge
The Watch-Light.
Above the roofs and chimney-tops, And through the slow November rain, A light from some far attic pane,Shines twinkling through the water-drops.Some lonely watcher waits and weeps, Like me, the step that comes not yet;-- Her watch for weary hours is set,While far below the city sleeps.The level lamp-rays lay the floors, And bridge the dark that lies below, O'er which my fancies come and go,And peep, and listen at the doors;And bring me word how sweet and plain, And quaint the lonely attic room, Where she sits singing in the gloom,Words sadder than the autumn rain.A thousand times by sea and shore, In my wild dreams I see him lie, With face upturned toward the sky,Murdered, ...
Kate Seymour Maclean
When Lost.
If at hooam yo have to tew,Though yor comforts may be few,An yo think yore lot is hard, and yor prospects bad;Yo may swear ther's nowt gooas reight,Wi' yor friends an wi' yor meyt,But yo'll nivver know ther vally till j'o've lost em, lad.Though yo've but a humble cot,An yore share's a seedy lot;Though yo goa to bed i'th dumps, an get up i'th mornin mad,Yet yo'll find its mich moor wise,What yo have to fondly prize,For yo'll nivver know ther vally till yo've lost em, lad.
John Hartley
Melancholy.
Daughter of my nobler hope That dying gave thee birth, Sweet Melancholy! For memory of the dead, In her dear stead, 'Bide thou with me, Sweet Melancholy!As purple shadows to the tree,When the last sun-rays sadly slopeAthwart the bare and darkening earth, Art thou to me, Sweet Melancholy!
George Parsons Lathrop
Song: A Spirit Haunts The Years Last Hours
I.A spirit haunts the years last hoursDwelling amid these yellowing bowers:To himself he talks;For at eventide, listening earnestly,At his work you may hear him sob and sighIn the walks;Earthward he boweth the heavy stalksOf the mouldering flowers:Heavily hangs the broad sunflowerOver its grave i the earth so chilly;Heavily hangs the hollyhock,Heavily hangs the tiger-lily.II.The air is damp, and hushd, and close,As a sick mans room when he taketh reposeAn hour before death;My very heart faints and my whole soul grievesAt the moist rich smell of the rotting leaves,And the breathOf the fading edges of box beneath,And the years last rose.Heavily hangs the broad sunflower<...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Grief's Hero.
A youth unto herself Grief took,Whom everything of joy forsook,And men passed with denying head,Saying: "'T were better he were dead."Grief took him, and with master-touchMolded his being. I marveled muchTo see her magic with the clay,So much she gave - and took away.Daily she wrought, and her designGrew daily clearer and more fine,To make the beauty of his shapeServe for the spirit's free escape.With liquid fire she filled his eyes.She graced his lips with swift surmiseOf sympathy for others' woe,And made his every fibre flowIn fairer curves. On brow and chinAnd tinted cheek, drawn clean and thin,She sculptured records rich, great Grief!She made him loving, made him lief.I marveled; for, where others saw
Rhymes And Rhythms - XXII
Trees and the menace of night;Then a long, lonely, leaden mereBacked by a desolate fellAs by a spectral battlement; and then,Low-brooding, interpenetrating all,A vast, grey, listless, inexpressive sky,So beggared, so incredibly bereftOf starlight and the song of racing worldsIt might have bellied down upon the VoidWhere as in terror Light was beginning to be.Hist! In the trees fulfilled of night(Night and the wretchedness of the sky)Is it the hurry of the rain?Or the noise of a drive of the DeadStreaming before the irresistible WillThrough the strange dusk of this, the Debateable LandBetween their place and ours?Like the forgetfulnessOf the work-a-day world made visible,A mist falls from the melancholy sky:
William Ernest Henley
Sympathy.
There should be no despair for youWhile nightly stars are burning;While evening pours its silent dew,And sunshine gilds the morning.There should be no despair, though tearsMay flow down like a river:Are not the best beloved of yearsAround your heart for ever?They weep, you weep, it must be so;Winds sigh as you are sighing,And winter sheds its grief in snowWhere Autumn's leaves are lying:Yet, these revive, and from their fateYour fate cannot be parted:Then, journey on, if not elate,Still, NEVER broken-hearted!
Emily Bronte
Evening.
Rest, beauty, stillness: not a waif of a cloudFrom gray-blue east sheer to the yellow west -No film of mist the utmost slopes to shroud.The earth lies grace, by quiet airs caressed,And shepherdeth her shadows, but each stream,Free to the sky, is by that glow possessed,And traileth with the splendors of a dreamAthwart the dusky land. Uplift thine eyes!Unbroken by a vapor or a gleam,The vast clear reach of mild, wan twilight skies.But look again, and lo, the evening star!Against the pale tints black the slim elms rise,The earth exhales sweet odors nigh and far,And from the heavens fine influences fall.Familiar things stand not for what they are:What they suggest, foreshadow, or recallThe spirit i...
Emma Lazarus
Isle Of Man
Did pangs of grief for lenient time too keen,Grief that devouring waves had caused, or guiltWhich they had witnessed, sway the man who builtThis Homestead, placed where nothing could be seen,Nought heard, of ocean troubled or serene?A tired Ship-soldier on paternal land,That o'er the channel holds august command,The dwelling raised, a veteran Marine.He, in disgust, turned from the neighbouring seaTo shun the memory of a listless lifeThat hung between two callings. May no strifeMore hurtful here beset him, doomed though free,Self-doomed, to worse inaction, till his eyeShrink from the daily sight of earth and sky!
Ulysses
It little profits that an idle king,By this still hearth, among these barren crags,Match'd with an aged wife, I mete and doleUnequal laws unto a savage race,That hoard, and sleep, and feed, and know not me.I cannot rest from travel; I will drinkLife to the lees. All times I have enjoy'dGreatly, have suffer'd greatly, both with thoseThat loved me, and alone; on shore, and whenThro' scudding drifts the rainy HyadesVext the dim sea. I am become a name;For always roaming with a hungry heartMuch have I seen and known,-- cities of menAnd manners, climates, councils, governments,Myself not least, but honor'd of them all,--And drunk delight of battle with my peers,Far on the ringing plains of windy Troy.I am a part of all that I have met;Ye...