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Spirit Song
Thou wert once the purest waveWhere the tempests roar;Thou art now a golden waveOn the golden shore --Ever -- ever -- evermore!Thou wert once the bluest waveShadows e'er hung o'er;Thou art now the brightest waveOn the brightest shore --Ever -- ever -- evermore!Thou wert once the gentlest waveOcean ever bore;Thou art now the fairest waveOn the fairest shore --Ever -- ever -- evermore!Whiter foam than thine, O wave,Wavelet never wore,Stainless wave; and now you laveThe far and stormless shore --Ever -- ever -- evermore!Who bade thee go, O bluest wave,Beyond the tempest's roar?Who bade thee flow, O fairest wave,Unto the golden shore,Ever -- ever -- evermore?Who wav...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Henry, Aged Eight Years.
Yellow leaves, how fast they flutter - woodland hollows thickly strewing, Where the wan October sunbeams scantly in the mid-day win,While the dim gray clouds are drifting, and in saddened hues imbuing All without and all within!All within! but winds of autumn, little Henry, round their dwelling Did not load your father's spirit with those deep and burdened sighs; -Only echoed thoughts of sadness, in your mother's bosom swelling, Fast as tears that dim her eyes.Life is fraught with many changes, checked with sorrow and mutation, But no grief it ever lightened such a truth before to know: -I behold them - father, mother - as they seem to contemplation, Only three short weeks ago!Saddened for the morrow's parting - up the stair...
Jean Ingelow
Elegiac Stanzas
Lulled by the sound of pastoral bells,Rude Nature's Pilgrims did we go,From the dread summit of the QueenOf mountains, through a deep ravine,Where, in her holy chapel, dwells"Our Lady of the Snow."The sky was blue, the air was mild;Free were the streams and green the bowers;As if, to rough assaults unknown,The genial spot had 'ever' shownA countenance that as sweetly smiled--The face of summer-hours.And we were gay, our hearts at ease;With pleasure dancing through the frameWe journeyed; all we knew of care--Our path that straggled here and there;Of trouble--but the fluttering breeze;Of Winter--but a name.If foresight could have rent the veilOf three short days--but hush--no more!Calm is the grave, and c...
William Wordsworth
The Maiden's Sorrow.
Seven long years has the desert rainDropped on the clods that hide thy face;Seven long years of sorrow and painI have thought of thy burial-place.Thought of thy fate in the distant west,Dying with none that loved thee near;They who flung the earth on thy breastTurned from the spot williout a tear.There, I think, on that lonely grave,Violets spring in the soft May shower;There, in the summer breezes, waveCrimson phlox and moccasin flower.There the turtles alight, and thereFeeds with her fawn the timid doe;There, when the winter woods are bare,Walks the wolf on the crackling snow.Soon wilt thou wipe my tears away;All my task upon earth is done;My poor father, old and gray,Slumbers beneath the churchyard s...
William Cullen Bryant
Winter-Lull
Because of the silent snow, we are all hushedInto awe.No sound of guns, nor overhead no rushedVibration to drawOur attention out of the void wherein we are crushed.A crow floats past on level wingsNoiselessly.Uninterrupted silence swingsInvisibly, inaudiblyTo and fro in our misgivings.We do not look at each other, we hideOur daunted eyes.White earth, and ruins, ourselves, and nothing beside.It all beliesOur existence; we wait, and are still denied.We are folded together, men and the snowy groundInto nullity.There is silence, only the silence, never a soundNor a verityTo assist us; disastrously silence-bound!
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
No Message
She heard the story of the end,Each message, too, she heard;And there was one for every friend;For her alone, no word.And shall she bear a heavier heart,And deem his love was fled;Because his soul from earth could partLeaving her name unsaid?No, No! Though neither sign nor soundA parting thought expressed,Not heedless passed the Homeward-BoundOf her he loved the best.Of voyage-perils, bravely borne,He would not tell the tale;Of shattered planks and canvas torn,And war with wind and gale.He waited, till the light-house starShould rise against the sky;And from the mainland, looming far,The forest scents blow by.He hoped to tell, assurance sweet!That pain and grief were oer,What bl...
Mary Hannay Foott
Five Criticisms - IV.
(On Certain Realists.)You with the quick sardonic eyeFor all the mockeries of life,Beware, in this dark masque of things that seem,Lest even that tragic irony,Which you discern in this our mortal strife,Trick you and trap you, also, with a dream.Last night I saw a dead man borne alongThe city streets, passing a boisterous throngThat never ceased to laugh and shout and dance:And yet, and yet,For all the poison bitter minds might brewFrom themes like this, I knewThat the stern Truth would not permit her glanceThus to be foiled by flying straws of chance,For her keen eyes on deeper skies are set,And laws that tragic ironists forget.She saw the dead man's life, from birth to death,--All that he knew of love and ...
Alfred Noyes
The Long Lane
All through the summer night, down the long lane in flower, The moon-white lane,All through the summer night,--dim as a shower, Glimmer and fade the Twain:Over the cricket hosts, throbbing the hour by hour, Young voices bloom and wane.Down the long lane they go, and past one window, pale With visions silver-blurred;Stirring the heart that waits,--the eyes that fail After a spring deferred.Query, and hush, and Ah!--dim through a moon-lit veil, The same one word.Down the long lane, entwined with all the fragrance there; The lane in flower somehowWith youth, and plighted hands, and star-strewn air, And muted 'Thee' and 'Thou':--All the wild bloom an...
Josephine Preston Peabody
For All The Grief
For all the grief I have given with wordsMay now a few clear flowers blow,In the dust, and the heat, and the silence of birds, Where the lonely go.For the thing unsaid that heart asked of meBe a dark, cool water calling - callingTo the footsore, benighted, solitary, When the shadows are falling.O, be beauty for all my blindness,A moon in the air where the weary wend,And dews burdened with loving-kindness In the dark of the end.
Walter De La Mare
The Dream
Thou scarest me with dreams. -JOB.When Night's last hours, like haunting spirits, creepWith listening terrors round the couch of sleep,And Midnight, brooding in its deepest dye,Seizes on Fear with dismal sympathy,"I dreamed a dream" something akin to fate,Which Superstition's blackest thoughts create--Something half natural to the grave that seems,Which Death's long trance of slumber haply dreams;A dream of staggering horrors and of dread,Whose shadows fled not when the vision fled,But clung to Memory with their gloomy view,Till Doubt and Fancy half believed it true.That time was come, or seem'd as it was come,When Death no longer makes the grave his home;When waking spirits leave their earthly restTo mix for ever with the ...
John Clare
The Heart Unseen
So many times the heart can break, So many ways,Yet beat along and beat along So many days.A fluttering thing we never see, And only hearWhen some stern doctor to our side Presses his ear.Strange hidden thing, that beats and beats We know not why,And makes us live, though we indeed Would rather die.Mysterious, fighting, loving thing, So sad, so true -I would my laughing eyes some day Might look on you.
Richard Le Gallienne
At Castle Wood
The day is done, the winter sunIs setting in its sullen sky;And drear the course that has been run,And dim the hearts that slowly die.No star will light my coming night;No morn of hope for me will shine;I mourn not heaven would blast my sight,And I ne'er longed for joys divine.Through life's hard task I did not askCelestial aid, celestial cheer;I saw my fate without its mask,And met it too without a tear.The grief that pressed my aching breastWas heavier far than earth can be;And who would dread eternal restWhen labour's hour was agony?Dark falls the fear of this despairOn spirits born of happiness;But I was bred the mate of care,The foster-child of sore distress.No sighs for me, no sympathy...
Emily Bronte
Lament Of An Icarus
Lovers of whores dont care,happy, calm and replete:But my arms are incomplete,grasping the empty air.Thanks to stars, incomparable ones,that blaze in the depths of the skies,all my destroyed eyessee, are the memories of suns.I look, in vain, for beginning and endof the heavens slow revolve:Under an unknown eye of fire, I ascendfeeling my wings dissolve.And, scorched by desire for the beautiful,I will not know the bliss,of giving my name to that abyss,that knows my tomb and funeral.
Charles Baudelaire
The Tryst
Flee into some forgotten night and beOf all dark long my moon-bright company:Beyond the rumour even of Paradise come,There, out of all remembrance, make our home:Seek we some close hid shadow for our lair,Hollowed by Noah's mouse beneath the chairWherein the Omnipotent, in slumber bound,Nods till the piteous Trump of Judgment sound.Perchance Leviathan of the deep seaWould lease a lost mermaiden's grot to me,There of your beauty we would joyance make -A music wistful for the sea-nymph's sake:Haply Elijah, o'er his spokes of fire,Cresting steep Leo, or the heavenly Lyre,Spied, tranced in azure of inanest space,Some eyrie hostel, meet for human grace,Where two might happy be - just you and I -Lost in the uttermost of Eternity.Think! In...
Unseen Spirits
The shadows lay along Broadway,T was near the twilight-tide,And slowly there a lady fairWas walking in her pride.Alone walked she; but, viewlessly,Walked spirits at her side.Peace charmed the street beneath her feet,And Honor charmed the air;And all astir looked kind on her,And called her good as fair,For all God ever gave to herShe kept with chary care.She kept with care her beauties rareFrom lovers warm and true,For her heart was cold to all but gold,And the rich came not to woo,But honored well are charms to sellIf priests the selling do.Now walking there was one more fair,A slight girl, lily-pale;And she had unseen companyTo make the spirit quail:Twixt Want and Scorn she walked forlorn...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Trees And The Menace Of Night
Trees and the menace of night;Then a long, lonely, leaden mereBacked by a desolate fell,As by a spectral battlement; and then,Low-brooding, interpenetrating all,A vast, gray, listless, inexpressive sky,So beggared, so incredibly bereftOf starlight and the song of racing worlds,It might have bellied down upon the VoidWhere as in terror Light was beginning to be.Hist! In the trees fulfilled of night(Night and the wretchedness of the sky)Is it the hurry of the rain?Or the noise of a drive of the Dead,Streaming before the irresistible WillThrough the strange dusk of this, the Debateable LandBetween their place and ours?Like the forgetfulnessOf the work-a-day world made visible,A mist falls from the melancholy sky.
William Ernest Henley
Closing Chords.
I.Death's Eloquence.When I shall goInto the narrow home that leavesNo room for wringing of the hands and hair,And feel the pressing of the walls which bearThe heavy sod upon my heart that grieves,(As the weird earth rolls on),Then I shall knowWhat is the power of destiny. But still,Still while my life, however sad, be mine,I war with memory, striving to divinePhantom to-morrows, to outrun the past;For yet the tears of final, absolute illAnd ruinous knowledge of my fate I shun.Even as the frail, instinctive weedTries, through unending shade, to reach at lastA shining, mellowing, rapture-giving sun;So in the deed of breathing joy's warm breath,Fain to succeed,I, too, in colorless longings, hope til...
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
I Would I Were A Careless Child.
1I would I were a careless child,Still dwelling in my Highland cave,Or roaming through the dusky wild,Or bounding o'er the dark blue wave;The cumbrous pomp of Saxon [1] pride,Accords not with the freeborn soul,Which loves the mountain's craggy side,And seeks the rocks where billows roll.2.Fortune! take back these cultur'd lands,Take back this name of splendid sound!I hate the touch of servile hands,I hate the slaves that cringe around:Place me among the rocks I love,Which sound to Ocean's wildest roar;I ask but this - again to roveThrough scenes my youth hath known before.3.Few are my years, and yet I feelThe World was ne'er design'd for me:Ah! why do dark'ning s...
George Gordon Byron