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On A Mourner
I.Nature, so far as in her lies,Imitates God, and turns her faceTo every land beneath the skies,Counts nothing that she meets with base,But lives and loves in every place;II.Fills out the homely quickset-screens,And makes the purple lilac ripe,Steps from her airy hill, and greensThe swamp, where hummd the dropping snipe,With moss and braided marish-pipe;III.And on thy heart a finger lays,Saying, Beat quicker, for the timeIs pleasant, and the woods and waysAre pleasant, and the beech and limePut forth and feel a gladder clime.IV.And murmurs of a deeper voice,Going before to some far shrine,Teach that sick heart the stronger choice,
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Twilight Night
(The Argosy, March 1866.)IWe met, hand to hand, We clasped hands close and fast,As close as oak and ivy stand; But it is past: Come day, come night, day comes at last.We loosed hand from hand, We parted face from face;Each went his way to his own land. At his own pace, Each went to fill his separate place.If we should meet one day, If both should not forget,We shall clasp hands the accustomed way, As when we metSo long ago, as I remember yet.IIWhere my heart is (wherever that may be) Might I but follow!If you fly thither over heath and lea,O honey-seeking bee, O careless swallow,Bid some for whom I watch keep watch for me.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Sonnet XXXV.
Il figliuol di Latona avea già nove.THE GRIEF OF PHOEBUS AT THE LOSS OF HIS LOVE. Nine times already had Latona's sonLook'd from the highest balcony of heavenFor her, who whilom waked his sighs in vain,And sighs as vain now wakes in other breasts;Then seeking wearily, nor knowing whereShe dwelt, or far or near, and why delay'd,He show'd himself to us as one, insaneFor grief, who cannot find some loved lost thing:And thus, for clouds of sorrow held aloof,Saw not the fair face turn, which, if I live,In many a page shall praised and honour'd be,The misery of her loss so changed her mienThat her bright eyes were dimm'd, for once, with tears,Thereon its former gloom the air resumed.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Easter Night
All night had shout of men and cry Of woeful women filled His way; Until that noon of sombre sky On Friday, clamour and display Smote Him; no solitude had He, No silence, since Gethsemane. Public was Death; but Power, but Might, But Life again, but Victory, Were hushed within the dead of night, The shutterd dark, the secrecy. And all alone, alone, alone He rose again behind the stone.
Alice Meynell
Ghosts
There are ghosts in the room.As I sit here alone, from the dark corners there They come out of the gloom,And they stand at my side and they lean on my chair. There's the ghost of a HopeThat lighted my days with a fanciful glow. In her hand is the ropeThat strangled her life out. Hope was slain long ago. But her ghost comes to-night,With its skeleton face and expressionless eyes, And it stands in the light,And mocks me, and jeers me with sobs and with sighs. There's the ghost of a Joy,A frail, fragile thing, and I prized it too much, And the hands that destroyClasped it close, and it died at the withering touch. There's the ghost of a Love,Born with joy, reared with hope, died in pain ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To a Star.
Dreary and dismal and dark Is the night of life to me, With nothing but clouds in the heaven above, Cruelly hiding the star that I love, Whose radiance was rapture to see. While the blasts from the cold frozen North Are biting right in to my soul - While the pitiless blasts from the bleak, barren shore Of the crystalline ocean incessantly roar, And the tempests that sweep from the pole. Oh! the gloom of the dark, dreary night, Concealing the star that I love! Oh! how bitter the anguish, bereft of its beam! While the beings around me are such that I seem In a dungeon of demons to move. Oh! when will the clouds clear away? And brighten the heaven abo...
W. M. MacKeracher
Night
I love the silent hour of night,For blissful dreams may then arise,Revealing to my charmed sightWhat may not bless my waking eyes!And then a voice may meet my earThat death has silenced long ago;And hope and rapture may appearInstead of solitude and woe.Cold in the grave for years has lainThe form it was my bliss to see,And only dreams can bring againThe darling of my heart to me.
Anne Bronte
Perfections
Only themselves understand themselves, and the like of themselves,As Souls only understand Souls.
Walt Whitman
Unforgotten
I know a garden where the lilies gleam,And one who lingers in the sunshine there;She is than white-stoled lily far more fair,And oh, her eyes are heaven-lit with dream.I know a garret, cold and dark and drear,And one who toils and toils with tireless pen,Until his brave, sad eyes grow weary - thenHe seeks the stars, pale, silent as a seer.And ah, it's strange, for desolate and dimBetween these two there rolls an ocean wide;Yet he is in the garden by her side,And she is in the garret there with him.
Robert William Service
Dirge
Gone is he now.One flower the lessIs left to makeFor thee less loneEarth's wilderness,Where thouMust still live on.What hath been, ne'erMay be again.Yet oft of old,To cheat despair,Tales false and fairIn vainOf death were told.O vain belief!O'erweening dreams!Trust not fond hope,Nor think that blissWhich neither seems,Nor is,Aught else than grief.
Robert Calverley Trevelyan
Quid Hic Agis?
IWhen I weekly knewAn ancient pew,And murmured thereThe forms of prayerAnd thanks and praiseIn the ancient ways,And heard read outDuring August droughtThat chapter from KingsHarvest-time brings;- How the prophet, brokenBy griefs unspoken,Went heavily awayTo fast and to pray,And, while waiting to die,The Lord passed by,And a whirlwind and fireDrew nigher and nigher,And a small voice anonBade him up and be gone, -I did not apprehendAs I sat to the endAnd watched for her smileAcross the sunned aisle,That this tale of a seerWhich came once a yearMight, when sands were heaping,Be like a sweat creeping,Or in any degreeBear on her or on me!II
Thomas Hardy
The Traveller
Reply to Rudyard Kipling's "He travels the fastest who travels alone."Who travels alone with his eyes on the heights,Though he laughs in the day time oft weeps in the nights;For courage goes down at the set of the sun,When the toil of the journey is all borne by one.He speeds but to grief though full gaily he rideWho travels alone without love at his side.Who travels alone without lover or friendBut hurries from nothing, to naught at the end.Though great be his winnings and high be his goal,He is bankrupt in wisdom and beggared in soul.Life's one gift of value to him is deniedWho travels alone without love at his side.It is easy enough in this world to make hasteIf one live for that purpose - but think of the waste...
A Broken Prayer
0 Lord, my God, how longShall my poor heart pant for a boundless joy?How long, O mighty Spirit, shall I hearThe murmur of Truth's crystal waters slideFrom the deep caverns of their endless being,But my lips taste not, and the grosser airChoke each pure inspiration of thy will?I am a denseness 'twixt me and the light;1 cannot round myself; my purest thought,Ere it is thought, hath caught the taint of earth,And mocked me with hard thoughts beyond my will.I would be a windWhose smallest atom is a viewless wing,All busy with the pulsing life that throbsTo do thy bidding; yea, or the meanest thingThat has relation to a changeless truth,Could I but be instinct with thee--each thoughtThe lightning of a pure intelligence,And eve...
George MacDonald
Erinna
They sent you in to say farewell to me,No, do not shake your head; I see your eyesThat shine with tears. Sappho, you saw the sunJust now when you came hither, and again,When you have left me, all the shimmeringGreat meadows will laugh lightly, and the sunPut round about you warm invisible armsAs might a lover, decking you with light.I go toward darkness tho I lie so still.If I could see the sun, I should look upAnd drink the light until my eyes were blind;I should kneel down and kiss the blades of grass,And I should call the birds with such a voice,With such a longing, tremulous and keen,That they would fly to me and on the breastBear evermore to tree-tops and to fieldsThe kiss I gave them. Sappho, tell me this,Was I not sometimes fair? ...
Sara Teasdale
Bad Weather
A frozen moon stands waxen,White shadows,Dead face,Above me and the dullEarth.Throws green lightLike a garment,A wrinkled one,On bluish land.But from the edgeOf the city,Like a soft hand without fingers,Gently risesAnd fearfully threatening like deathDark, nameless...RisingWithout sound,An empty slow sea swells towards us -At first it was only like a wearyMoth, which crawled over the last houses.Now it is a black bleeding hole.It has already buried the city and half the sky.Ah, had I flown -Now it is too late.My head falls intoDesolate hands.On the horizon an apparition like a shriekAnnouncesTerror and imminent end.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Marthy's Younkit.
The mountain brook sung lonesomelikeAnd loitered on its wayEz if it waited for a childTo jine it in its play;The wild flowers of the hillsideBent down their heads to hearThe music of the little feetThat had, somehow, grown so dear;The magpies, like winged shadders,Wuz a-flutterin' to and froAmong the rocks and holler stumpsIn the ragged gulch below;The pines 'nd hemlock tosst their boughs(Like they wuz arms) 'nd madeSoft, sollum music on the slopeWhere he had often played.But for these lonesome, sollum voicesOn the mountain side,There wuz no sound the summer dayThat Marthy's younkit died.We called him Marthy's younkit,For Marthy wuz the nameUv her ez wuz his mar, the wifeUv Sorry Tom--the same
Eugene Field
Parting.
There's no use in weeping,Though we are condemned to part:There's such a thing as keepingA remembrance in one's heart:There's such a thing as dwellingOn the thought ourselves have nursed,And with scorn and courage tellingThe world to do its worst.We'll not let its follies grieve us,We'll just take them as they come;And then every day will leave usA merry laugh for home.When we've left each friend and brother,When we're parted wide and far,We will think of one another,As even better than we are.Every glorious sight above us,Every pleasant sight beneath,We'll connect with those that love us,Whom we truly love till death!In the evening, when we're sittingBy the fire, perchance alone,
Charlotte Bronte
Loved And Lost, or The Sky-Lark And The Violet
LOVED AND LOST, - OR - THE SKY-LARK AND THE VIOLET.VIOLET'S SONGI. Come down from thy dazzling sphere, Bird of the gushing song!Come down where the young leaves whisper low,While the breeze steals in with a murmurous flow,And the tender branches wave to and fro In the soft air all day long! I have watched thy daring wing Cleaving the sun-bright air,Where the snowy cloud is asleep in light,Or dreamily floating in robes of white,While thy soul gushed forth in its song's free might, Till my spirit is dim with care. For oh, I have loved thee well, Thou of the soaring wing! -And I fear lest the angels that sit on high,In the ca...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)