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Distant Voices
I left my home for travelling;Because I heard the strange birds singIn foreign skies, and felt their wingBrush past my soul impatiently;I saw the bloom on flower and treeThat only grows beyond the sea.Methought the distant voices spakeMore wisdom than near tongues can make;I followed-lest my heart should break.And what is past is past and done.I dreamt, and here the dream begun:I saw a salmon in the sunLeap from the river to the shore-Ah! strange mishap, so wounded sore,To his sweet stream to turn no more.A bird from neath his mothers breast,Spread his weak wings in vain request;Never again to reach his nest.I saw a blossom bloom too soonUpon a summers afternoon;Twill breathe no mo...
Dora Sigerson Shorter
Avalon
I Dreamed my soul went wandering inAn island dim with mystery;An island that, because of sin,No mortal eye shall ever see.And while I walked, one came, unseen,And gazed into my eyes: ah me!Her presence was a rose betweenThe wind and me, blown dreamily.The lily, that lifts up its dome,A tabernacle for the bee,A faery chapel fair as foam,Had not her absolute purity.The bird, that hymns the falling leaf,That breaks its heart in melody,Says to the soul no raptured griefSuch as her presence said to me.That moment when I felt her eyes,Their starry transport, instantlyI felt the indomitable skies,With all their worlds, were less to me.And when her hand lay in my own,Far intimations flashed th...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Death Of Autumn.
Discrowned and desolate,And wandering with dim eyes and faded hair,Singing sad songs to comfort her despair, Grey Autumn meets her fate. Forsaken and aloneShe haunts the ruins of her queenly state,Like banished Eve at Eden's flaming gate, Making perpetual moan. Crazed with her grief she movesAlong the banks of the frost-charmed rills,And all the hollows of the wooded hills, Searching for her lost loves. From verdurous base to cope,The sunny hill-sides, and sweet pasture lands,Where bubbling brooks reach ever-dimpled hands Along the amber slope,-- And valleys drowsed between,In the ...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Human Lifes Mystery
We sow the glebe, we reap the corn,We build the house where we may rest,And then, at moments, suddenly,We look up to the great wide sky,Inquiring wherefore we were born For earnest or for jest?The senses folding thick and darkAbout the stifled soul within,We guess diviner things beyond,And yearn to them with yearning fond;We strike out blindly to a markBelieved in, but not seen.We vibrate to the pant and thrillWherewith Eternity has curledIn serpent-twine about Gods seat;While, freshening upward to His feet,In gradual growth His full-leaved willExpands from world to world.And, in the tumult and excessOf act and passion under sun,We sometimes hear, oh, soft and far,As silver star did touch with st...
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
The Mother
So quietly I seem to sit apart;I think she does not know or guess at all,How dear this certain hour to my old heart,When in our quiet street the shadows fall.She leans and listens at the little gate.I sit so still, not any eye might seeHow watchfully before her there I waitFor that one step that brings my world to me.She does not know that long before they meet(So eagerly must go a love athirst),My heart outstrips the flying of her feet,And meets and greets him first--and greets him first.
Theodosia Garrison
The Better Day
Harsh thoughts, blind angers, and fierce hands,That keep this restless world at strife,Mean passions that, like choking sands,Perplex the stream of life,Pride and hot envy and cold greed,The cankers of the loftier will,What if ye triumph, and yet bleed?Ah, can ye not be still?Oh, shall there be no space, no time,No century of weal in store,No freehold in a nobler clime,Where men shall strive no more?Where every motion of the heartShall serve the spirit's master-call,Where self shall be the unseen part,And human kindness all?Or shall we but by fits and gleamsSink satisfied, and cease to rave,Find love but in the rest of dreams,And peace but in the grave?
Archibald Lampman
Faith And Despondency.
"The winter wind is loud and wild,Come close to me, my darling child;Forsake thy books, and mateless play;And, while the night is gathering gray,We'll talk its pensive hours away;"Ierne, round our sheltered hallNovember's gusts unheeded call;Not one faint breath can enter hereEnough to wave my daughter's hair,And I am glad to watch the blazeGlance from her eyes, with mimic rays;To feel her cheek, so softly pressed,In happy quiet on my breast,"But, yet, even this tranquillityBrings bitter, restless thoughts to me;And, in the red fire's cheerful glow,I think of deep glens, blocked with snow;I dream of moor, and misty hill,Where evening closes dark and chill;For, lone, among the mountains cold,Lie those that I h...
Emily Bronte
The Waning Moon.
I've watched too late; the morn is near;One look at God's broad silent sky!Oh, hopes and wishes vainly dear,How in your very strength ye die!Even while your glow is on the cheek,And scarce the high pursuit begun,The heart grows faint, the hand grows weak,The task of life is left undone.See where upon the horizon's brim,Lies the still cloud in gloomy bars;The waning moon, all pale and dim,Goes up amid the eternal stars.Late, in a flood of tender light,She floated through the ethereal blue,A softer sun, that shone all nightUpon the gathering beads of dew.And still thou wanest, pallid moon!The encroaching shadow grows apace;Heaven's everlasting watchers soonShall see thee blotted from thy place.
William Cullen Bryant
Rhymes And Rhythms - XVI
One with the ruined sunset,The strange forsaken sands,What is it waits and wandersAnd signs with desperate hands?What is it calls in the twilight,Calls as its chance were vain?The cry of a gull sent seawardOr the voice of an ancient pain?The red ghost of the sunset,It walks them as its own,These dreary and desolate reaches . . .But O that it walked alone!
William Ernest Henley
The Glen of Arrawatta
A sky of wind! And while these fitful gustsAre beating round the windows in the cold,With sullen sobs of rain, behold I shapeA settlers story of the wild old times:One told by camp-fires when the station draysWere housed and hidden, forty years ago;While swarthy drivers smoked their pipes, and drew,And crowded round the friendly gleaming flameThat lured the dingo, howling, from his caves,And brought sharp sudden feet about the brakes.A tale of Love and Death. And shall I sayA tale of love in death for all the patient eyesThat gathered darkness, watching for a sonAnd brother, never dreaming of the fateThe fearful fate he met alone, unknown,Within the ruthless Australasian wastes?For in a far-off, sultry summer, rimmedWith thun...
Henry Kendall
The Living Lost.
Matron! the children of whose love,Each to his grave, in youth hath passed,And now the mould is heaped aboveThe dearest and the last!Bride! who dost wear the widow's veilBefore the wedding flowers are pale!Ye deem the human heart enduresNo deeper, bitterer grief than yours.Yet there are pangs of keener wo,Of which the sufferers never speak,Nor to the world's cold pity showThe tears that scald the cheek,Wrung from their eyelids by the shameAnd guilt of those they shrink to name,Whom once they loved with cheerful will,And love, though fallen and branded, still.Weep, ye who sorrow for the dead,Thus breaking hearts their pain relieve;And reverenced are the tears ye shed,And honoured ye who grieve.The praise of th...
Kuno's Nocturne
Every day, when it gets so very darkThat I can read no more,I walk along the street singing,Look at every girl...Whether perhaps - who knows -Today of all days a miracle will take place:That I shall come home redeemed,Peaceful and forever free...From such pursuits I come backTo the house tired and confused,I know a secret remedyThat can extinguish all suffering -
Alfred Lichtenstein
Philomela
Hark! ah, the nightingaleThe tawny-throated!Hark, from that moonlit cedar what a burst!What triumph! hark! what pain!O wanderer from a Grecian shore,Still, after many years, in distant lands,Still nourishing in thy bewilder'd brainThat wild, unquench'd, deep-sunken, old-world painSay, will it never heal?And can this fragrant lawnWith its cool trees, and night,And the sweet, tranquil Thames,And moonshine, and the dew,To thy rack'd heart and brainAfford no balm?Dost thou to-night behold,Here, through the moonlight on this English grass,The unfriendly palace in the Thracian wild?Dost thou again peruseWith hot cheeks and sear'd eyesThe too clear web, and thy dumb sister's shame?Dost thou once more ass...
Matthew Arnold
Lines - Written On Visiting A Scene In Argyleshire
At the silence of twilight's contemplative hour,I have mused in a sorrowful mood,On the wind-shaken weeds that embosom the bower,Where the home of my forefathers stood.All ruin'd and wild is their roofless abode;And lonely the dark raven's sheltering tree;And travell'd by few is the grass-cover'd road,Where the hunter of deer and the warrior trode,To his hills that encircle the sea.Yet wandering, I found on my ruinous walk,By the dial-stone aged and green,One rose of the wilderness left on its stalk,To mark where a garden had been.Like a brotherless hermit, the last of its race,All wild in the silence of nature, it drew,From each wandering sun-beam, a lonely embrace,For the night-weed and thorn overshadow'd the place,Where the flowe...
Thomas Campbell
On Going Unnoticed
As vain to raise a voice as a sighIn the tumult of free leaves on high.What are you in the shadow of treesEngaged up there with the light and breeze?Less than the coral-root you knowThat is content with the daylight low,And has no leaves at all of its own;Whose spotted flowers hang meanly down.You grasp the bark by a rugged pleat,And look up small from the forest's feet.The only leaf it drops goes wide,Your name not written on either side.You linger your little hour and are gone,And still the wood sweep leafily on,Not even missing the coral-root flowerYou took as a trophy of the hour.
Robert Lee Frost
Fragment Of Chorus Of A Dejaneira
O frivolous mind of man,Light ignorance, and hurrying, unsure thoughts,Though man bewails you not,How I bewail you!Little in your prosperityDo you seek counsel of the Gods.Proud, ignorant, self-adored, you live alone.In profound silence sternAmong their savage gorges and cold springsUnvisited remainThe great oracular shrines.Thither in your adversityDo you betake yourselves for light,But strangely misinterpret all you hear.For you will not put onNew hearts with the inquirers holy robe,And purged, considerate minds.And him on whom, at the endOf toil and dolour untold,The Gods have said that reposeAt last shall descend undisturbd,Him you expect to beholdIn an easy old age, in a happy home;
The Dwelling-Place
Deep in a forest where the kestrel screamed,Beside a lake of water, clear as glass,The time-worn windows of a stone house gleamed, Named only 'Alas.'Yet happy as the wild birds in the gladesOf that green forest, thridding the still airWith low continued heedless serenades, Its heedless people were.The throbbing chords of violin and lute,The lustre of lean tapers in dark eyes,Fair colours, beauteous flowers, dainty fruit Made earth seem ParadiseTo them that dwelt within this lonely house:Like children of the gods in lasting peace,They ate, sang, danced, as if each day's carouse Need never pause, nor cease.Some might cry, Vanity! to a weeping lyre,Some in that deep pool mock their longings vain,Came...
Walter De La Mare
The Sad Man
No, I have no capacity for life.I could be considered foolish -Today I am not going to the restaurant.I am after all this time weary of the waiters,Who scornfully bring us, with their smug grimaces,Dark beer and make us so confusedThat we cannot find our homeAnd we mustUse the foolish street lightsTo prop ourselves upwith weak hands.Today I have bigger things in mind -Ah, I shall find out the meaning of existence.And in the evening I shall do some roller skatingOr go at some point to Temple.