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A Woman Young And Old
IFATHER AND CHILDShe hears me strike the board and sayThat she is under banOf all good men and women,Being mentioned with a manThat has the worst of all bad names;And thereupon repliesThat his hair is beautiful,Cold as the March wind his eyes.IIBEFORE THE WORLD WAS MADEIF I make the lashes darkAnd the eyes more brightAnd the lips more scarlet,Or ask if all be rightFrom mirror after mirror,No vanity's displayed:I'm looking for the face I hadBefore the world was made.What if I look upon a manAs though on my beloved,And my blood be cold the whileAnd my heart unmoved?Why should he think me cruelOr that he is betrayed?I'd have him love the thing that wasBefore the world wa...
William Butler Yeats
Evening
Houses stand stiffly next to their fences.Let your eyes, last sparrows, flutter.Bluebottles alight on your face.Don't you, Kuno, feel the eternal mills -The unfeeling one bores holes in your head.Look once more at the moon, the mustard-pot murderer.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Gentle Lady, Do Not Sing
Gentle lady, do not singSad songs about the end of love;Lay aside sadness and singHow love that passes is enough.Sing about the long deep sleepOf lovers that are dead, and howIn the grave all love shall sleep:Love is aweary now.
James Joyce
Sonnet CCXIII.
O misera ed orribil visione.HE CANNOT BELIEVE IN HER DEATH, BUT IF TRUE, HE PRAYS GOD TO TAKE HIM ALSO FROM LIFE. O misery! horror! can it, then, be true,That the sweet light before its time is spent,'Mid all its pains which could my life content,And ever with fresh hopes of good renew?If so, why sounds not other channels through,Nor only from herself, the great event?No! God and Nature could not thus consent,And my dark fears are groundless and undue.Still it delights my heart to hope once moreThe welcome sight of that enchanting face,The glory of our age, and life to me.But if, to her eternal home to soar,That heavenly spirit have left her earthly place,Oh! then not distant may my last day be!MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
The Bay Of Cortes
The sea is a requisitioned article in my possession. Above, in fat circles of conformity, glide turkey vultures, their combs a rich obscenely red. The guano rocks are isles and stepping stones of bird waste. They lie thick and bedeviled with fish fur, a dull lavender cached hard to the sun seems to shine a metallic harvest white as desert rocklets scattered to the breeze. A speck of a fisherman dots the horizon. His craft a barque in loneliness across the sea. Dolphins inveigh the richness of the depths, persuade latitudes to drift about their wake. Pelicans sour the parabola distances between light and sound, become chancy over this distant breath of song. Above the cliffs a...
Paul Cameron Brown
Unsolved
Amid my books I lived the hurrying years, Disdaining kinship with my fellow man; Alike to me were human smiles and tears, I cared not whither Earth's great life-stream ran, Till as I knelt before my mouldered shrine, God made me look into a woman's eyes; And I, who thought all earthly wisdom mine, Knew in a moment that the eternal skies Were measured but in inches, to the quest That lay before me in that mystic gaze. "Surely I have been errant: it is best That I should tread, with men their human ways." God took the teacher, ere the task was learned, And to my lonely books again I turned.
John McCrae
The Seer Of Hearts
For mocking on men's facesHe only sees insteadThe hidden, hundred tracesOf tears their eyes have shed.Above their lips denying,Through all their boasting dares,He hears the anguished cryingOf old unanswered prayers.And through the will's relianceHe only sees arightA frightened child's defianceLeft lonely in the night.
Theodosia Garrison
Shadow Song.
The night is long And there are no stars, - Let me but dream That the long fields gleamWith sunlight and song,Then I shall not long For the light of stars.Let me but dream, - For there are no stars, - Dream that the ache And the wild heart-breakAre but things that seem.Ah! let me dream For there are no stars.
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
The Burden
One grief on me is laidEach day of every year,Wherein no soul can aid,Whereof no soul can hear:Whereto no end is seenExcept to grieve again,Ah, Mary Magdalene,Where is there greater pain?To dream on dear disgraceEach hour of every day,To bring no honest faceTo aught I do or say:To lie from morn till e'en,To know my lies are vain,Ah, Mary Magdalene,Where can be greater pain?To watch my steadfast fearAttend mine every wayEach day of every year,Each hour of every day:To burn, and chill between,To quake and rage again,Ah, Mary Magdalene,Where shall be greater pain:One grave to me was given,To guard till Judgment Day,But God looked down from HeavenAnd rolled the Ston...
Rudyard
A Man Doesn't Have Time In His Life
A man doesn't have time in his lifeto have time for everything.He doesn't have seasons enough to havea season for every purpose. EcclesiastesWas wrong about that.A man needs to love and to hate at the same moment,to laugh and cry with the same eyes,with the same hands to throw stones and to gather them,to make love in war and war in love.And to hate and forgive and remember and forget,to arrange and confuse, to eat and to digestwhat historytakes years and years to do.A man doesn't have time.When he loses he seeks, when he findshe forgets, when he forgets he loves, when he loveshe begins to forget.And his soul is seasoned, his soulis very professional.Only his body remains foreveran amateur. It tries and...
Yehuda Amichai
The Messenger.
Is his form hidden by some cliff or crag,Or does he loiter on the shelving shore?We know not, though we know he waits for us,Somewhere upon the road that lies before.And when he bids us we must follow him,Must leave our half-drawn nets, our houses, lands,And those we love the most, and best, ah theyIn vain will cling to us with pleading hands!He will not wait for us to gird our robes,And be they white as saints, or soiled and dim,We can but gather them around our form,And take his icy hand and follow him.Oh! will our palm cling to another palmLoath, loath to loose our hold of love's warm grasp.Or shall we free our hand from the hand of grief,And reach it gladly out to meet his clasp?Sometimes I marvel when we two shall m...
Marietta Holley
Finale - The Wayside Inn - Part Third
These are the tales those merry guestsTold to each other, well or ill;Like summer birds that lift their crestsAbove the borders of their nestsAnd twitter, and again are still.These are the tales, or new or old,In idle moments idly told;Flowers of the field with petals thin,Lilies that neither toil nor spin,And tufts of wayside weeds and gorseHung in the parlor of the innBeneath the sign of the Red Horse.And still, reluctant to retire,The friends sat talking by the fireAnd watched the smouldering embers burnTo ashes, and flash up againInto a momentary glow,Lingering like them when forced to go,And going when they would remain;For on the morrow they must turnTheir faces homeward, and the painOf part...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Death.
1.They die - the dead return not - MiserySits near an open grave and calls them over,A Youth with hoary hair and haggard eye -They are the names of kindred, friend and lover,Which he so feebly calls - they all are gone -Fond wretch, all dead! those vacant names alone,This most familiar scene, my pain -These tombs - alone remain.2.Misery, my sweetest friend - oh, weep no more!Thou wilt not be consoled - I wonder not!For I have seen thee from thy dwelling's doorWatch the calm sunset with them, and this spotWas even as bright and calm, but transitory,And now thy hopes are gone, thy hair is hoary;This most familiar scene, my pain -These tombs - alone remain.NOTE:_5 calls editions 1839; called 1824.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
September Woodlands.
This is not sadness in the wood;The yellowbirdFlits joying through the solitude,By no thought stirredSave of his little duskier mateAnd rompings jolly.If there's a Dryad in the wood,She is not sad.Too wise the spirits are to brood;Divinely glad,They dream with countenance sedateNot melancholy.
Bliss Carman
The Rice-boat
I slept upon the Rice-boatThat, reef protected, layAt anchor, where the palm-treesInfringe upon the bay.The windless air was heavyWith cinnamon and rose,The midnight calm seemed waiting,Too fateful for repose.One joined me on the Rice-boatWith wild and waving hair,Whose vivid words and laughterAwoke the silent air.Oh, beauty, bare and shining,Fresh washen in the bay,One well may love by moonlightWhat one would not love by day!Above among the cordageThe night wind hardly stirred,The lapping of the ripplesWas all the sound we heard.Love reigned upon the Rice-boat,And Peace controlled the sea,The spirit's consolation,The senses' ecstasy.Though many things and mightyAre further...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
The Open Window
The old house by the lindens Stood silent in the shade,And on the gravelled pathway The light and shadow played.I saw the nursery windows Wide open to the air;But the faces of the children, They were no longer there.The large Newfoundland house-dog Was standing by the door;He looked for his little playmates, Who would return no more.They walked not under the lindens, They played not in the hall;But shadow, and silence, and sadness Were hanging over all.The birds sang in the branches, With sweet, familiar tone;But the voices of the children Will be heard in dreams alone!And the boy that walked beside me, He could not understandWhy closer in mine, a...
Blank Misgivings Of A Creature Moving About In Worlds Not Realised.
IHere am I yet, another twelvemonth spent,One-third departed of the mortal span,Carrying on the child into the man,Nothing into reality. Sails rent,And rudder broken, reason impotentAffections all unfixed; so forth I fareOn the mid seas unheedingly, so dareTo do and to be done by, well content.So was it from the first, so is it yet;Yea, the first kiss that by these lips was setOn any human lips, methinks was sinSin, cowardice, and falsehood; for the willInto a deed een then advanced, whereinGod, unidentified, was thought-of still.IIThough to the vilest things beneath the moonFor poor Ease sake I give away my heart,And for the moments sympathy let partMy sight and sense of truth, Thy precious boon,My ...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Seven Sonnets on the Thought of Death 1
IThat children in their loveliness should dieBefore the dawning beauty, which we knowCannot remain, has yet begun to go;That when a certain period has passed by,People of genius and of faculty,Leaving behind them some result to show,Having performed some function, should foregoThe task which younger hands can better ply,Appears entirely natural. But that oneWhose perfectness did not at all consistIn things towards forming which time can have doneAnything, whose sole office was to exist,Should suddenly dissolve and cease to beIs the extreme of all perplexity.IIThat there are better things within the wombOf Nature than to our unworthy viewShe grants for a possession, may be true:The cycle of the birthplace and ...