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Cloud
A fog has destroyed the world so gently.Bloodless trees dissolve in smoke.And shadows hover where shrieks are heard.Burning beasts evaporate like breath.Captured flies are the gas lanterns.And each flickers, still attempting to escape.But to one side, high in the distance, the poisonous moon,The fat fog-spider, lies in wait, smoldering.We, however, loathsome, suited for death,Trample along, crunching this desert splendor.And silently stab the white eyes of miseryLike spears into the swollen night.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Finis
It seemed that from the west The live red flame of sunset, Eating the dead blue sky And cold insensate peaks, Was loosened slowly, and fell. Above it, a few red stars Burned down like low candle-flames Into the gaunt black sockets Of the chill insensible mountains. But in the ascendant skies (Cloudless, like some vast corpse Unfeatured, cerementless) Succeeded nor star nor planet. It may have been that black, Pulseless, dead stars arose And crossed as of old the heavens. But came no living orb, Nor comet seeming the ghost, Homeless, of an outcast world, Seeking its former place That is no more nor shall be In all the Cosmos again. Null, bla...
Clark Ashton Smith
Ode IX(II); At Study
Whither did my fancy stray?By what magic drawn awayHave I left my studious theme?From this philosophic page,From the problems of the sage,Wandering thro' a pleasing dream?'Tis in vain alas! I find,Much in vain, my zealous mindWould to learned wisdom's throneDedicate each thoughtful hour:Nature bids a softer powerClaim some minutes for his own.Let the busy or the wiseView him with contemptuous eyes;Love is native to the heart:Guide its wishes as you will;Without Love you'll find it stillVoid in one essential part.Me though no peculiar fairTouches with a lover's care;Though the pride of my desireAsks immortal friendship's name,Asks the palm of honest fame,And the old heroic lyre;Though the day...
Mark Akenside
Sonnet CCXIV.
In dubbio di mio stato, or piango, or canto.TO HIS LONGING TO SEE HER AGAIN IS NOW ADDED THE FEAR OF SEEING HER NO MORE. Uncertain of my state, I weep and sing,I hope and tremble, and with rhymes and sighsI ease my load, while Love his utmost triesHow worse my sore afflicted heart to sting.Will her sweet seraph face again e'er bringTheir former light to these despairing eyes.(What to expect, alas! or how advise)Or must eternal grief my bosom wring?For heaven, which justly it deserves to win,It cares not what on earth may be their fate,Whose sun it was, where centred their sole gaze.Such terror, so perpetual warfare in,Changed from my former self, I live of lateAs one who midway doubts, and fears and strays.MACG...
Francesco Petrarca
Accepted
You are no longer young,Nor are you very old.There are homes where those belong.You know you do not fitWhen you observe the coldStares of those who sitIn bath-chairs or the park(A stick, then, at their side)Or find yourself in the darkAnd see the lovers who,In love and in their stride,Don't even notice you.This is a time to beginYour life. It could be new.The sheer not fitting inWith the old who envy youAnd the young who want to win,Not knowing false from true,Means you have libertyDenied to their extremes.At last now you can beWhat the old cannot recallAnd the young long for in dreams,Yet still include them all.
Elizabeth Jennings
Revulsion
Though I waste watches framing words to fetterSome spirit to mine own in clasp and kiss,Out of the night there looms a sense 'twere betterTo fail obtaining whom one fails to miss.For winning love we win the risk of losing,And losing love is as one's life were riven;It cuts like contumely and keen ill-usingTo cede what was superfluously given.Let me then feel no more the fateful thrillingThat devastates the love-worn wooer's frame,The hot ado of fevered hopes, the chillingThat agonizes disappointed aim!So may I live no junctive law fulfilling,And my heart's table bear no woman's name.1866.
Thomas Hardy
Love And Death
What time the mighty moon was gathering lightLove paced the thymy plots of Paradise,And all about him rolld his lustrous eyes;When, turning round a cassia, full in view,Death, walking all alone beneath a yew,And talking to himself, first met his sight.You must begone, said Death, these walks are mine.Love wept and spread his sheeny vans for flight;Yet ere he parted said, This hour is thine:Thou art the shadow of life, and as the treeStands in the sun and shadows all beneath,So in the light of great eternityLife eminent creates the shade of death.The shadow passeth when the tree shall fall,But I shall reign for ever over all.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Song. To - [Harriet].
Stern, stern is the voice of fate's fearful command,When accents of horror it breathes in our ear,Or compels us for aye bid adieu to the land,Where exists that loved friend to our bosom so dear,'Tis sterner than death o'er the shuddering wretch bending,And in skeleton grasp his fell sceptre extending,Like the heart-stricken deer to that loved covert wending,Which never again to his eyes may appear -And ah! he may envy the heart-stricken quarry,Who bids to the friend of affection farewell,He may envy the bosom so bleeding and gory,He may envy the sound of the drear passing knell,Not so deep is his grief on his death couch reposing,When on the last vision his dim eyes are closing!As the outcast whose love-raptured senses are losing,Th...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Mirrors Of Life And Death.
The mystery of Life, the mysteryOf Death, I seeDarkly as in a glass;Their shadows pass,And talk with me.As the flush of a Morning Sky,As a Morning Sky colorless -Each yields its measure of lightTo a wet world or a dry;Each fares through day to nightWith equal pace,And then each oneIs done.As the Sun with glory and graceIn his face,Benignantly hot,Graciously radiant and keen,Ready to rise and to run, -Not without spot,Not even the Sun.As the MoonOn the wax, on the wane,With night for her noon;Vanishing soon,To appear again.As Roses that droopHalf warm, half chill, in the languid May,And breathe out a scentSweet and faint;Till the wind gives one ...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Home
I came back late and tired last nightInto my little room,To the long chair and the firelightAnd comfortable gloom.But as I entered softly inI saw a woman there,The line of neck and cheek and chin,The darkness of her hair,The form of one I did not knowSitting in my chair.I stood a moment fierce and still,Watching her neck and hair.I made a step to her; and sawThat there was no one there.It was some trick of the firelightThat made me see her there.It was a chance of shade and lightAnd the cushion in the chair.Oh, all you happy over the earth,That night, how could I sleep?I lay and watched the lonely gloom;And watched the moonlight creepFrom wall to basin, round the room,All night I...
Rupert Brooke
Sonnet: - XIV.
There is no sadness here. Oh, that my heartWere calm and peaceful as these dreamy groves!That all my hopes and passions, and deep loves,Could sit in such an atmosphere of peace,Where no unholy impulses would startResponsive to the throes that never ceaseTo keep my spirit in such wild unrest.'Tis only in the struggling human breastThat the true sorrow lives. Our fruitful joysHave stony kernels hidden in their core.Life in a myriad phases passeth here,And death as various - an equal poise;Yet all is but a solemn change - no more;And not a sound save joy pervades the atmosphere.
Charles Sangster
To Himself.
Nor wilt thou rest forever, weary heart. The last illusion is destroyed, That I eternal thought. Destroyed! I feel all hope and all desire depart, For life and its deceitful joys. Forever rest! Enough! Thy throbbings cease! Naught can requite thy miseries; Nor is earth worthy of thy sighs. Life is a bitter, weary load, The world a slough. And now, repose! Despair no more, but find in Death The only boon Fate on our race bestows! Still, Nature, art thou doomed to fall, The victim scorned of that blind, brutal power That rules and ruins all.
Giacomo Leopardi
Fragment: Thoughts Come And Go In Solitude.
My thoughts arise and fade in solitude,The verse that would invest them melts awayLike moonlight in the heaven of spreading day:How beautiful they were, how firm they stood,Flecking the starry sky like woven pearl!
Lines Written From Home
Though bleak these woods, and damp the ground,With fallen leaves so thickly strewn,And cold the wind that wanders roundWith wild and melancholy moan;There is a friendly roof I know,Might shield me from the wintry blast;There is a fire whose ruddy glowWill cheer me for my wanderings past.And so, though still where'er I goCold stranger glances meet my eye;Though, when my spirit sinks in woe,Unheeded swells the unbidden sigh;Though solitude, endured too long,Bids youthful joys too soon decay,Makes mirth a stranger to my tongue,And overclouds my noon of day;When kindly thoughts that would have wayFlow back, discouraged, to my breast,I know there is, though far away,A home where heart and soul may rest.
Anne Bronte
Out Of The Window
In the middle of countries, far from hills and sea,Are the little places one passes by in trainsAnd never stops at; where the skies extendUninterrupted, and the level plainsStretch green and yellow and green without an end.And behind the glass of their Grand ExpressFolk yawn away a province through,With nothing to think of, nothing to do,Nothing even to look at--never a "view"In this damned wilderness.But I look out of the window and findMuch to satisfy the mind.Mark how the furrows, formed and wheeledIn a motion orderly and staid,Sweep, as we pass, across the fieldLike a drilled army on parade.And here's a market-garden, barredWith stripe on stripe of varied greens ...Bright potatoes, flower starred,And the opacous colour of ...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
The Music of the World and of the Soul
IWhy should I say I see the things I see not?Why be and be not?Show love for that I love not, and fear for what I fear not?And dance about to music that I hear not?Who standeth still i the streetShall be hustled and justled about;And he that stops i the dance shall be spurned by the dancers feet,Shall be shoved and be twisted by all he shall meet,And shall raise up an outcry and rout;And the partner, too,What s the partner to do?While all the while tis but, perchance, an humming in mine ear,That yet anon shall hear,And I anon, the music in my soul,In a moment read the whole;The music in my heart,Joyously take my part,And hand in hand, and heart with heart, with these retreat, advance;And borne on wings of wavy sound...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Night
He cried out through the night:"Where is the light?Shall nevermoreOpen Heaven's door?Oh, I am leftLonely, bereft!" He cried out through the night:It spread vaguely white,With its ghost of a moonAbove the dark swoonOf the earth lying chill,Breathless, grave still. He cried out through the night:His voice in its mightRang forth far and far,And then like a starDwindled from senseIn the Immense. He cried out through the night:No answering light,No syllabled sound;Beneath and aroundA long shuddering thrillThen all again still.
James Thomson
Farfaraway
What sight so lured him thro the fields he knewAs where earths green stole into heavens own hue,Farfaraway?What sound was dearest in his native dells?The mellow lin-lan-lone of evening bellsFarfaraway.What vague world-whisper, mystic pain or joy,Thro those three words would haunt him when a boy,Farfaraway?A whisper from his dawn of life? a breathFrom some fair dawn beyond the doors of deathFarfaraway?Far, far, how far? from oer the gates of Birth,The faint horizons, all the bounds of earth,Farfaraway?What charm in words, a charm no words could give?O dying words, can Music make you liveFarfaraway?