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Footfalls
The embers were blinking and clinking away,The casement half open was thrown;There was nothing but cloud on the skirts of the Day,And I sat on the threshold alone!And said to the river which flowed by my doorWith its beautiful face to the hill,I have waited and waited, all wearied and sore,But my love is a wanderer still!And said to the wind, as it paused in its flightTo look through the shivering pane,There are memories moaning and homeless to-nightThat can never be tranquil again!And said to the woods, as their burdens were borneWith a flutter and sigh to the eaves,They are wrinkled and wasted, and tattered and torn,And we too have our withering leaves.Did I hear a low echo of footfalls about,Whilst watchin...
Henry Kendall
Those Tiny Fingers.
She has gone for ever from earth away,Yet those tiny fingers haunt me still;In the silent night, when the moons pale ray,Silvers the leaves on the window sill.Just between sleeping and waking I lie,Makebelieve feeling their velvet touch,Darling! My darling! Oh, why should you die!Leaving me lonely, who loved so much?Those tiny fingers that used to strayOver my face which is wrinkled now;Those little white hands - how they used to play,With the wanton curls round my once fair brow.Thy soft blue eyes and thy dimpled cheeks,I seem to see now as I saw them then;And a whispering voice to my sad heart speaks, -'Thou shalt meet her again,' - but when? oh, when?Deep in the grave was the coffin laid,And buried with it was my purest lov...
John Hartley
Music. [A Nocturne.]
The soul of love is harmony; as suchAll melodies, that with wide pinions beatElastic bars, which mew it in the flesh,Till 'twould away to kiss their throats and cling,Are kindred to the soul, and while they sway,Lords of its action molding all at will.Ah! neither was I I, nor knew the clay,For all my soul lay on full waves of songReverberating 'twixt the earth and moon.O soft complaints, that haunted all the heartWith dreams of love long cherished, love dreams foundOn sunset mountains gorgeous toward the West:Kisses - soft kisses bartered 'mid pale budsOf bursting Springs; and vows of fondest faithKept evermore; and eyes whose witcheryMight lure old saints down to the lowest hellFor one swift glance, - sweet, melancholy eyesYe...
Madison Julius Cawein
After
After the end that is drawing near Comes, and I no more see your faceWorn with suffering, lying here, What shall I do with the empty place?You are so weary, that if I could I would not hinder, I would not keepThe great Creator of all things good, From giving his own beloved sleep.But over and over I turn this thought. After they bear you away to the tomb,And banish the glasses, and move the cot, What shall I do with the empty room?And when you are lying at rest, my own, Hidden away in the grass and flowers,And I listen in vain for your sigh and moan, What shall I do with the silent hours?O God! O God! in the great To Be What canst Thou give me to compensateFor the terrible silenc...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Sonnet: - XV.
Last night I heard the plaintive whippoorwill,And straightway Sorrow shot his swiftest dart.I know not why, but it has chilled my heartLike some dread thing of evil. All night longMy nerves were shaken, and my pulse stood still,And waited for a terror yet to comeTo strike harsh discords through my life's sweet song.Sleep came - an incubus that filled the sumOf wretchedness with dreams so wild and chillThe sweat oozed from me like great drops of gall;An evil spirit kept my mind in thrall,And rolled my body up like a poor scrollOn which is written curses that the soulShrinks back from when it sees some hellish carnival.
Charles Sangster
The Last Eve Of Summer
Summer's last sun nigh unto setting shinesThrough yon columnar pines,And on the deepening shadows of the lawnIts golden lines are drawn.Dreaming of long gone summer days like this,Feeling the wind's soft kiss,Grateful and glad that failing ear and sightHave still their old delight,I sit alone, and watch the warm, sweet dayLapse tenderly away;And, wistful, with a feeling of forecast,I ask, "Is this the last?"Will nevermore for me the seasons runTheir round, and will the sunOf ardent summers yet to come forgetFor me to rise and set?"Thou shouldst be here, or I should be with theeWherever thou mayst be,Lips mute, hands clasped, in silences of speechEach answering unto each.For this still hour, ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Sonnet XXV.
Quanto più m' avvicino al giorno estremo.HE CONSOLES HIMSELF THAT HIS LIFE IS ADVANCING TO ITS CLOSE. Near and more near as life's last period draws,Which oft is hurried on by human woe,I see the passing hours more swiftly flow,And all my hopes in disappointment close.And to my heart I say, amidst its throes,"Not long shall we discourse of love below;For this my earthly load, like new-fall'n snowFast melting, soon shall leave us to repose.With it will sink in dust each towering hope,Cherish'd so long within my faithful breast;No more shall we resent, fear, smile, complain:Then shall we clearly trace why some are blest,Through deepest misery raised to Fortune's top,And why so many sighs so oft are heaved in vain."
Francesco Petrarca
If I Forget Thee, O Jerusalem.
Out of the melancholy that is madeOf ebbing sorrow that too slowly ebbs,Comes back a sighing whisper of the reed,A note in new love-pipings on the bough,Grieving with grief till all the full-fed airAnd shaken milky corn doth wot of it,The pity of it trembling in the talkOf the beforetime merrymaking brook -Out of that melancholy will the soul,In proof that life is not forsaken quiteOf the old trick and glamour which made glad;Be cheated some good day and not perceiveHow sorrow ebbing out is gone from view,How tired trouble fall'n for once on sleep,How keen self-mockery that youth's eager dreamInterpreted to mean so much is foundTo mean and give so little - frets no more,Floating apart as on a cloud - O thenNot e'en so much as murmur...
Jean Ingelow
Cold Comfort
Say, will it, when our hairs are grey,And wintry suns half light the day,Which cheering hope and strengthening trustHave left, departed, turned to dust,Say, will it soothe lone years to extractFrom fitful shows with sense exactTheir sad residuum, small, of fact?Will trembling nerves their solace findIn plain conclusions of the mind?Or errant fancies fond, that stillTo fretful motions prompt the will,Repose upon effect and cause,And action of unvarying laws,And human lifes familiar doom,And on the all-concluding tomb.Or were it to our kind and race,And our instructed selves, disgraceTo wander then once more in you,Green fields, beneath the pleasant blue;To dream as we were used to dream,And let things be whateer t...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Hesperus
Ah whither dost thou float, sweet silent star,In yonder floods of evening's dying light?Before the fanning wings of rising night,Methinks thy silvery bark is driven farTo some lone isle or calmly havened shore,Where the lorn eye of man can follow thee no more.How many a one hath watched thee even as I,And unto thee and thy receding rayPoured forth his thoughts with many a treasured sighToo sweet and strange for the remorseless day;But thou hast gone and left unto their sightToo great a host of stars, and yet too black a night.E'en as I gaze upon thee, thy bright formDoth sail away among the cloudy islesAround whose shores the sea of sunlight smiles.On thee may break no black and boisterous stormTo turn the tenour of thy calm career....
Ronald Ross
The Little Green Orchard
Some one is always sitting there, In the little green orchard; Even when the sun is high In noon's unclouded sky, And faintly droning goes The bee from rose to rose,Some one in shadow is sitting there In the little green orchard.Yes, when the twilight's falling softly In the little green orchard; When the grey dew distills And every flower-cup fills; When the last blackbird says, 'What - what!' and goes her way - ssh!I have heard voices calling softly In the little green orchardNot that I am afraid of being there, In the little green orchard; Why, when the moon's been bright, Shedding her lonesome light, And moths like ghosties come, ...
Walter De La Mare
The Night Watch
Beneath the trees with heedful step and slowAt night I go,Fearful upon their whispering to breakLest they awakeOut of those dreams of heavenly light that fillTheir branches stillWith a soft murmur of memoried ecstasy.There 'neath each treeNightlong a spirit watches, and I feelHis breath unsealThe fast-shut thoughts and longings of tired day,That flutter awayMothlike on luminous soft wings and frailAnd moonlike pale.There in the flowering chestnuts' bowering gloomAnd limes' perfumeWandering wavelike through the moondrawn nightThat heaves toward light,There hang I my dark thoughts and deeper prayers;And as the airsOf star-kissed dawn come stirring and o'er-creepThe ford of sleep,Thy shape, great Love, grows sha...
John Frederick Freeman
Morituri Salutamus - Poem For The Fiftieth Anniversary Of The Class Of 1825 In Bowdoin College
Tempora labuntur, tacitisque senescimus annis,Et fugiunt freno non remorante dies.--OVID, Fastorum, Lib. vi."O Caesar, we who are about to dieSalute you!" was the gladiators' cryIn the arena, standing face to faceWith death and with the Roman populace.O ye familiar scenes,--ye groves of pine,That once were mine and are no longer mine,--Thou river, widening through the meadows greenTo the vast sea, so near and yet unseen,--Ye halls, in whose seclusion and reposePhantoms of fame, like exhalations, roseAnd vanished,--we who are about to dieSalute you; earth and air and sea and sky,And the Imperial Sun that scatters downHis sovereign splendors upon grove and town.Ye do not answer us! ye do not hear!We are forgotten; an...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Half Of Life Gone.
The days have slain the days,and the seasons have gone byAnd brought me the summer again;and here on the grass I lieAs erst I lay and was gladere I meddled with right and with wrong.Wide lies the mead as of old,and the river is creeping alongBy the side of the elm-clad bankthat turns its weedy stream;And grey o'er its hither lipthe quivering rushes gleam.There is work in the mead as of old;they are eager at winning the hay,While every sun sets brightand begets a fairer day.The forks shine white in the sunround the yellow red-wheeled wain,Where the mountain of hay grows fast;and now from out of the laneComes the ox-team drawing another,comes the bailiff and the beer,And thump, thump, goes the farmer's nag
William Morris
Meditations In Time Of Civil War
Ii(Ancestral Houses)Surely among a rich man s flowering lawns,Amid the rustle of his planted hills,Life overflows without ambitious pains;And rains down life until the basin spills,And mounts more dizzy high the more it rainsAs though to choose whatever shape it willsAnd never stoop to a mechanicalOr servile shape, at others' beck and call.Mere dreams, mere dreams! Yet Homer had not SungHad he not found it certain beyond dreamsThat out of life's own self-delight had sprungThe abounding glittering jet; though now it seemsAs if some marvellous empty sea-shell flungOut of the obscure dark of the rich streams,And not a fountain, were the symbol whichShadows the inherited glory of the rich.Some violent bitter man, some powerful man...
William Butler Yeats
Faces
A late snow beatsWith cold white fists upon the tenements -Hurriedly drawing blinds and shutters,Like tall old slatternsPulling aprons about their heads.Lights slanting out of Mott StreetGibber out,Or dribble through bar-room slits,Anonymous shapesConniving behind shuttered panesCaper and disappear...Where the BoweryIs throbbing like a fistulaBack of her ice-scabbed fronts.Livid facesGlimmer in furtive doorways,Or spill out of the black pockets of alleys,Smears of faces like muddied beads,Making a ghastly rosaryThe night mumbles overAnd the snow with its devilish and silken whisper...Patrolling arcsBlowing shrill blasts over the Bread LineStalk them as they pass,Silent as though accouc...
Lola Ridge
His Place.
So all things come to our mind at last,He is close by your side in the twilight gloom,And you two are alone in the dim old room,Yet he is mute, as you bade him be, time past.You bade him to weary you, never againWith his idle love, in truth he was wise,For he spake no more, although in his eyesYou read, you fancied, a language of pain.But this is past, and vex you he never will,With loving glance, or look of sad reproach;His lips move not, smile not at your approach;The flowers he clasps are not more calm and still.Your favorite flowers he has heard you praise,Purple pansies, and lilies creamy white;But he offers them not to you to-night,He troubles you not, he has learned "his place."You wished to teach him that lesson,...
Marietta Holley
The Widow To Her Hour-Glass.
Come, friend, I'll turn thee up again:Companion of the lonely hour!Spring thirty times hath fed with rainAnd cloath'd with leaves my humble bower,Since thou hast stoodIn frame of wood,On Chest or Window by my side:At every Birth still thou wert near,Still spoke thine admonitions clear. -And, when my Husband died,I've often watch'd thy streaming sandAnd seen the growing Mountain rise,And often found Life's hopes to standOn props as weak in Wisdom's eyes:Its conic crownStill sliding down,Again heap'd up, then down again;The sand above more hollow grew,Like days and years still filt'ring through,And mingling joy and pain.While thus I spin and sometimes sing,(For now and then my heart will glow)Thou m...
Robert Bloomfield