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On The Death Of A Very Young Gentleman.
He who could view the book of destiny,And read whatever there was writ of thee,O charming youth, in the first opening page,So many graces in so green an age,Such wit, such modesty, such strength of mind,A soul at once so manly and so kind;Would wonder, when he turn'd the volume o'er,And after some few leaves should find no more,Nought but a blank remain, a dead void space,A step of life that promised such a race.We must not, dare not think, that Heaven beganA child, and could not finish him a man;Reflecting what a mighty store was laidOf rich materials, and a model made:The cost already furnish'd; so bestow'd,As more was never to one soul allow'd:Yet after this profusion spent in vain,Nothing but mouldering ashes to remain,I guess n...
John Dryden
Sonnet CCXXIV.
Cara la vita, e dopo lei mi pare.HONOUR TO BE PREFERRED TO LIFE. Methinks that life in lovely woman first,And after life true honour should be dear;Nay, wanting honour--of all wants the worst--Friend! nought remains of loved or lovely here.And who, alas! has honour's barrier burst,Unsex'd and dead, though fair she yet appear,Leads a vile life, in shame and torment curst,A lingering death, where all is dark and drear.To me no marvel was Lucretia's end,Save that she needed, when that last disgraceAlone sufficed to kill, a sword to die.Sophists in vain the contrary defend:Their arguments are feeble all and base,And truth alone triumphant mounts on high!MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Poems From "A Shropshire Lad" - XLIII - The Immortal Part
When I meet the morning beam,Or lay me down at night to dream,I hear my bones within me say,"Another night, another day.""When shall this slough of sense be cast,This dust of thoughts be laid at last,The man of flesh and soul be slainAnd the man of bone remain?""This tongue that talks, these lungs that shout,These thews that hustle us about,This brain that fills the skull with schemes,And its humming hive of dreams,-""These to-day are proud in powerAnd lord it in their little hour:The immortal bones obey controlOf dying flesh and dying soul."" 'Tis long till eve and morn are gone:Slow the endless night comes on,And late to fulness grows the birthThat shall last as long as earth.""Wanderers e...
Alfred Edward Housman
Villanelle
We said farewell, my youth and I,When all fair dreams were gone or going,And Loves red lips were cold and dry.When white blooms fell from tree-tops high,Our Austral winters way of snowing,We said farewell, my youth and I.We did not sigh, what use to sighWhen Death passed as a mower mowing,And Loves red lips were cold and dry?But hearing Lifes stream thunder by,That sang of old through flowers flowing,We said farewell, my youth and I.There was no hope in the blue sky,No music in the low winds blowing,And Loves red lips were cold and dry.My hair is black as yet, then whySo sad! I know not, only knowingWe said farewell, my youth and I.All are not buried when they die;Dead souls there are t...
Victor James Daley
The Living Water
I that speak unto thee am he. John 4:26.She left her home that mornIn fair Samaria's land,All heedless of her state forlorn,Sin-bound, both heart and hand.With prejudicial prideShe scorned the meek requestOf One who sat the well beside,With heat and thirst opprest."Thou art a Jew," she said,"And asketh drink of me?Samaria's daughter was not bredTo deal with such as thee."She would not yield a sipE'en if its maker sued,While he from love, with thirsting lip,Sought and her heart renewed.He made her ask for life,Eternal life through him,And "living water" was the typeTo her perception dim.O yes! She fain would tasteAnd never thirst again,And never cross the burning wasteIn wearines...
Nancy Campbell Glass
The Blessed Virgin compared to the Air we Breathe
Wild air, world-mothering air,Nestling me everywhere,That each eyelash or hairGirdles; goes home betwixtThe fleeciest, frailest-flixedSnowflake; that's fairly mixedWith, riddles, and is rifeIn every least thing's life;This needful, never spent,And nursing element;My more than meat and drink,My meal at every wink;This air, which, by life's law,My lung must draw and drawNow but to breathe its praise,Minds me in many waysOf her who not onlyGave God's infinityDwindled to infancyWelcome in womb and breast,Birth, milk, and all the restBut mothers each new graceThat does now reach our race -Mary Immaculate,Merely a woman, yetWhose presence, power isGreat as no goddess'sWas deemèd, dream...
Gerard Manley Hopkins
Uselessness.
Let mine not be that saddest fate of all To live beyond my greater self; to see My faculties decaying, as the treeStands stark and helpless while its green leaves fall.Let me hear rather the imperious call, Which all men dread, in my glad morning time, And follow death ere I have reached my prime,Or drunk the strengthening cordial of life's gall.The lightning's stroke or the fierce tempest blast Which fells the green tree to the earth to-dayIs kinder than the calm that lets it last, Unhappy witness of its own decay. May no man ever look on me and say,"She lives, but all her usefulness is past."
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Through A Glass Darkly
What we, when face to face we seeThe Father of our souls, shall be,John tells us, doth not yet appear;Ah! did he tell what we are here!A mind for thoughts to pass into,A heart for loves to travel through,Five senses to detect things near,Is this the whole that we are here?Rules baffle instincts--instinct rules,Wise men are bad--and good are fools,Facts evil--wishes vain appear,We cannot go, why are we here?O may we for assurance's sake,Some arbitrary judgement take,And wilfully pronounce it clear,For this or that 'tis we are here?Or is it right, and will it do,To pace the sad confusion through,And say:--It doth not yet appear,What we shall be, what we are here?Ah yet, when all is thought and...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Reminiscences Of The Departed.
His mission soon accomplished,His race on earth soon run,He passed to realms of glory,Above the rising sun.So beautiful that infant,When in death's arms he lay;It seemed like peaceful slumber,That morn might chase away.But morning light was powerless,Those eyelids to unclose;And sunshine saw and left him,In undisturbed repose.The light of those blue orbsThat drank the sunbeams in,Now yields to night, and darknessHolds undisputed reign.That little form so graceful,The light brown chestnut hair;Those half formed words when uttered,That face so sweet and fair;All, all his ways so winning,Were impotent to saveHis life, when called to yield itBy Him that life who gave.
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
Written In A Volume Of Goethe
Six thankful weeks,--and let it beA meter of prosperity,--In my coat I bore this book,And seldom therein could I look,For I had too much to think,Heaven and earth to eat and drink.Is he hapless who can spareIn his plenty things so rare?
Ralph Waldo Emerson
A Gentleman's Epitaph On Himself And A Lady, Who Were Buried Together
I dwelt in the shade of a city,She far by the sea,With folk perhaps good, gracious, witty;But never with me.Her form on the ballroom's smooth flooringI never once met,To guide her with accents adoringThrough Weippert's "First Set." {1}I spent my life's seasons with pale onesIn Vanity Fair,And she enjoyed hers among hale onesIn salt-smelling air.Maybe she had eyes of deep colour,Maybe they were blue,Maybe as she aged they got duller;That never I knew.She may have had lips like the coral,But I never kissed them,Saw pouting, nor curling in quarrel,Nor sought for, nor missed them.Not a word passed of love all our lifetime,Between us, nor thrill;We'd never a husband-and-wife time,
Thomas Hardy
In Vita. LXVII.
Since thou and I have proven many a timeThat all our hope betrays us and deceives,To that consummate good which never grievesUplift thy heart, towards a happier clime.This life is like a field of flowering thyme,Amidst the herbs and grass the serpent lives;If aught unto the sight brief pleasure gives,'T is but to snare the soul with treacherous lime.So, wouldst thou keep thy spirit free from cloud,A tranquil habit to thy latest day,Follow the few, and not the vulgar crowd.Yet mayest thou urge, "Brother, the very wayThou showest us, wherefrom thy footsteps proud(And never more than now) so oft did stray."
Emma Lazarus
Gemini And Virgo.
Some vast amount of years ago,Ere all my youth had vanished from me,A boy it was my lot to know,Whom his familiar friends called Tommy.I love to gaze upon a child;A young bud bursting into blossom;Artless, as Eve yet unbeguiled,And agile as a young opossum:And such was he. A calm-browed lad,Yet mad, at moments, as a hatter:Why hatters as a race are madI never knew, nor does it matter.He was what nurses call a 'limb;'One of those small misguided creatures,Who, though their intellects are dim,Are one too many for their teachers:And, if you asked of him to sayWhat twice 10 was, or 3 times 7,He'd glance (in quite a placid way)From heaven to earth, from earth to heaven:And smile, and look politel...
Charles Stuart Calverley
Joy
What were this life without her?Joy, whose young face is sweetWith dreams that flit about her,And rapture wild of feet!With hope, that knows no languor,And love, that knows no sighs,And mirth, like some rich anger,High-sparkling in her eyes.Come! bid adieu to Sorrow;And arm in arm with Joy,We 'll journey towards Tomorrow,And let no Care decoyOur souls from all clean Pleasures,That take from Time's lean handThe hour-glass he treasures,And change to gold its sand.
Madison Julius Cawein
On Music
Many love music but for musics sake;Many because her touches can awakeThoughts that repose within the breast half dead,And rise to follow where she loves to lead.What various feelings come from days gone by!What tears from far-off sources dim the eye!Few, when light fingers with sweet voices play,And melodies swell, pause, and melt away,Mind how at every touch, at every tone,A spark of life hath glistend and hath gone.
Walter Savage Landor
Nature II
She is gamesome and good,But of mutable mood,--No dreary repeater now and again,She will be all things to all men.She who is old, but nowise feeble,Pours her power into the people,Merry and manifold without bar,Makes and moulds them what they are,And what they call their city wayIs not their way, but hers,And what they say they made to-day,They learned of the oaks and firs.She spawneth men as mallows fresh,Hero and maiden, flesh of her flesh;She drugs her water and her wheatWith the flavors she finds meet,And gives them what to drink and eat;And having thus their bread and growth,They do her bidding, nothing loath.What's most theirs is not their own,But borrowed in atoms from iron and stone,And in their vaunted wor...
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXXI.
Non può far morte il dolce viso amaro.SINCE HER DEATH HE HAS CEASED TO LIVE. Death cannot make that beauteous face less fair,But that sweet face may lend to death a grace;My spirit's guide! from her each good I trace;Who learns to die, may seek his lesson there.That holy one! who not his blood would spare,But did the dark Tartarean bolts unbrace;He, too, doth from my soul death's terrors chase:Then welcome, death! thy impress I would wear.And linger not! 'tis time that I had fled;Alas! my stay hath little here avail'd,Since she, my Laura blest, resign'd her breath:Life's spring in me hath since that hour lain dead,In her I lived, my life in hers exhaled,The hour she died I felt within me death!WOLLASTON.
On Himself.
If that my fate has now fulfill'd my year,And so soon stopt my longer living here;What was't, ye gods, a dying man to save,But while he met with his paternal grave!Though while we living 'bout the world do roam,We love to rest in peaceful urns at home,Where we may snug, and close together lieBy the dead bones of our dear ancestry.
Robert Herrick