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Moonlight
As a pale phantom with a lamp Ascends some ruin's haunted stair,So glides the moon along the damp Mysterious chambers of the air.Now hidden in cloud, and now revealed, As if this phantom, full of pain,Were by the crumbling walls concealed, And at the windows seen again.Until at last, serene and proud In all the splendor of her light,She walks the terraces of cloud, Supreme as Empress of the Night.I look, but recognize no more Objects familiar to my view;The very pathway to my door Is an enchanted avenue.All things are changed. One mass of shade, The elm-trees drop their curtains down;By palace, park, and colonnade I walk as in a foreign town.The very ground b...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Vacant Day
As I did walk in meadows greenI heard the summer noon resoundWith call of myriad things unseenThat leapt and crept upon the ground.High overhead the windless airThrobbed with the homesick coursing cryOf swallows that did everywhereWake echo in the sky.Beside me, too, clear waters coursedWhich willow branches, lapsing low,Breaking their crystal gliding forcedTo sing as they did flow.I listened; and my heart was dumbWith praise no language could express;Longing in vain for him to comeWho had breathed such blessednessOn this fair world, wherein we passSo chequered and so brief a stay;And yearned in spirit to learn, alas,What kept him still away.
Walter De La Mare
Fafaia
Stars that seem so close and bright,Watched by lovers through the night,Swim in emptiness, men say,Many a mile and year away.And yonder star that burns so white,May have died to dust and nightTen, maybe, or fifteen year,Before it shines upon my dear.Oh! often among men below,Heart cries out to heart, I know,And one is dust a many years,Child, before the other hears.Heart from heart is all as far,Fafaia, as start from star.
Rupert Brooke
The Golden Mile-Stone
Leafless are the trees; their purple branchesSpread themselves abroad, like reefs of coral, Rising silentIn the Red Sea of the Winter sunset.From the hundred chimneys of the village,Like the Afreet in the Arabian story, Smoky columnsTower aloft into the air of amber.At the window winks the flickering fire-light;Here and there the lamps of evening glimmer, Social watch-firesAnswering one another through the darkness.On the hearth the lighted logs are glowing,And like Ariel in the cloven pine-tree For its freedomGroans and sighs the air imprisoned in them.By the fireside there are old men seated,Seeing ruined cities in the ashes, Asking sadlyOf the Pa...
The Coquette.
Alone she sat with her accusing heart, That, like a restless comrade frightened sleep, And every thought that found her, left a dart That hurt her so, she could not even weep. Her heart that once had been a cup well filled With love's red wine, save for some drops of gall She knew was empty; though it had not spilled Its sweets for one, but wasted them on all. She stood upon the grave of her dead truth, And saw her soul's bright armor red with rust, And knew that all the riches of her youth Were Dead Sea apples, crumbling into dust. Love that had turned to bitter, biting scorn, Hearthstones despoiled, and homes made desolate, Made her cry out that she was ever b...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Sonnet XLI.
Perch' io t' abbia guardato di menzogna.IN HER PRESENCE HE CAN NEITHER SPEAK, WEEP, NOR SIGH. Although from falsehood I did thee restrainWith all my power, and paid thee honour due,Ungrateful tongue; yet never did accrueHonour from thee, but shame, and fierce disdain:Most art thou cold, when most I want the strainThy aid should lend while I for pity sue;And all thy utterance is imperfect too,When thou dost speak, and as the dreamer's vain.Ye too, sad tears, throughout each lingering nightUpon me wait, when I alone would stay;But, needed by my peace, you take your flight:And, all so prompt anguish and grief t' impart,Ye sighs, then slow, and broken breathe your way:My looks alone truly reveal my heart.NOTT.
Francesco Petrarca
A Forsaken Garden
In a coign of the cliff between lowland and highland,At the sea-down's edge between windward and lee,Walled round with rocks as an inland island,The ghost of a garden fronts the sea.A girdle of brushwood and thorn enclosesThe steep square slope of the blossomless bedWhere the weeds that grew green from the graves of its rosesNow lie dead.The fields fall southward, abrupt and broken,To the low last edge of the long lone land.If a step should sound or a word be spoken,Would a ghost not rise at the strange guest's hand?So long have the grey bare walks lain guestless,Through branches and briars if a man make way,He shall find no life but the sea-wind's, restlessNight and day.The dense hard passage is blind and stifledThat crawls b...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Sonnet
To-day was but a dead day in my hands. Hour by hour did nothing more than pass, Mere idle winds above the faded grass. And I, as though a captive held in bands, Who, seeing a pageant, wonders much, but stands Apart, saw the sun blaze his course with brass And sink into his fabled sea of glass With glory of farewell to many lands. Thou knowest, thou who talliest life by days, That I have suffered more than pain of toil, Ah, more than they whose wounds are soothed with oil, And they who see new light on beaten ways! The prisoner I, who grasps his iron bars And stares out into depth on depth of stars!
John Charles McNeill
My own heart
My own heart let me have more pity on; letMe live to my sad self hereafter kind,Charitable; not live this tormented mindWith this tormented mind tormenting yet.I cast for comfort I can no more getBy groping round my comfortless, than blindEyes in their dark can day or thirst can findThirst's all-in-all in all a world of wet.Soul, self; come, poor Jackself, I do adviseYou, jaded, let be; call off thoughts awhileElsewhere; leave comfort root-room; let joy sizeAt God knows when to God knows what; whose smile's not wrung, see you; unforeseen times rather - as skiesBetweenpie mountains - lights a lovely mile.
Gerard Manley Hopkins
Fragment. Trionfo Della Morte.
Now since nor grief nor fear was longer there,Each thought on her fair face was clear to see,Composed into the calmness of despair -Not like a flame extinguished violently,But one consuming of its proper light.Even so, in peace, serene of soul, passed she.Even as a lamp, so lucid, softly-bright,Whose sustenance doth fail by slow degrees,Wearing unto the end, its wonted plight.Not pale, but whiter than the snow one seesFlaking a hillside through the windless air.Like one o'erwearied, she reposed in peaceAs 't were a sweet sleep filled each lovely eye,The soul already having fled from there.And this is what dull fools have named to die.Upon her fair face death itself seemed fair.
Emma Lazarus
Francis Thompson
Thou hadst no home, and thou couldst seeIn every street the windows' light:Dragging thy limbs about all night,No window kept a light for thee.However much thou wert distressed,Or tired of moving, and felt sick,Thy life was on the open deck,Thou hadst no cabin for thy rest.Thy barque was helpless 'neath the sky,No pilot thought thee worth his painsTo guide for love or money gains,Like phantom ships the rich sailed by.Thy shadow mocked thee night and day,Thy life's companion, it alone;It did not sigh, it did not moan,But mocked thy moves in every way.In spite of all, the mind had force,And, like a stream whose surface flowsThe wrong way when a strong wind blows,It underneath maintained its course.
William Henry Davies
The Dying Need But Little, Dear,
The dying need but little, dear, --A glass of water's all,A flower's unobtrusive faceTo punctuate the wall,A fan, perhaps, a friend's regret,And certainly that oneNo color in the rainbowPerceives when you are gone.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Sonnet LXXVI.
Ahi bella libertà, come tu m' hai.HE DEPLORES HIS LOST LIBERTY AND THE UNHAPPINESS OF HIS PRESENT STATE. Alas! fair Liberty, thus left by thee,Well hast thou taught my discontented heartTo mourn the peace it felt, ere yet Love's dartDealt me the wound which heal'd can never be;Mine eyes so charm'd with their own weakness growThat my dull mind of reason spurns the chain;All worldly occupation they disdain,Ah! that I should myself have train'd them so.Naught, save of her who is my death, mine earConsents to learn; and from my tongue there flowsNo accent save the name to me so dear;Love to no other chase my spirit spurs,No other path my feet pursue; nor knowsMy hand to write in other praise but hers.MACGREGOR.
Autumn
The sad nights are here and the sad mornings,The air is filled with portents and with warnings,Clouds that vastly loom and winds that cry,A mournful prescienceOf bright things going hence;Red leaves are blown about the widowed sky,And late disconsolate bloomsDankly bestrewThe garden walks, as in deserted roomsThe parted guest, in haste to bid adieu,Trinklets and shreds forgotten left behind,Torn letters and a ribbon once so brave -Wreckage none cares to save,And hearts grow sad to find;And phantom echoes, as of old foot-falls,Wander and weary out in the thin air,And the last cricket calls -A tiny sorrow, shrilling "Where? ah! where?"
Richard Le Gallienne
Friendship.
ON A SUN-PORTRAIT OF HER HUSBAND, SENT BY HIS WIFE TO THEIR FRIEND.Beautiful eyes, - and shall I see no moreThe living thought when it would leap from them,And play in all its sweetness 'neath their lids?Here was a man familiar with fair heightsThat poets climb. Upon his peace the tearsAnd troubles of our race deep inroads made,Yet life was sweet to him; he kept his heartAt home. Who saw his wife might well have thought, -"God loves this man. He chose a wife for him, -The true one!" O sweet eyes, that seem to live,I know so much of you, tell me the rest!Eyes full of fatherhood and tender careFor small, young children. Is a message hereThat you would fain have sent, but had not time?If such there be, I promise, by long loveAnd perfec...
Jean Ingelow
Wincing
You can't go back,to Love, a home.memories of Pearl Baileyeven a scatterbrained jobcurled like a Morning Gloryabout the ribs of day.Everyone repeats not going back.A sly ripple on the cape of wind,peaking withabsentminded glee,into that bulge from withinyour past, beyond your left arm,called "before".Dismissing angels, refusing tocourt hardship, not to mentionwincing that comes from attachingthe mouth too fiercely on privale partsand all flasks with firm memory;wheeling drunkenly on her thought.her sayings, sculling backwaters of your mindwith little fingers each repeatingsane warnings.
Paul Cameron Brown
Waking
Lying beneath a hundred seas of sleepWith all those heavy waves flowing over me,And I unconscious of the rolling nightUntil, slowly, from deep to lesser deepRisen, I felt the wandering seas no longer cover meBut only air and light....It was a sleepSo dark and so bewilderingly deepThat only death's were deeper or completer,And none when I awoke stranger or sweeter.Awake, the strangeness still hung over meAs I with far-strayed senses stared at the light.I--and who was I?Saw--oh, with what unaccustomed eye!The room was strange and everything was strangeLike a strange room entered by wild moonlight;And yet familiar as the light swept over meAnd I rose from the night.Strange--yet stranger I.And as one climbs from ...
John Frederick Freeman
Vigil
Dark is the night,The fire burns faint and low,Hours - days - years,Into grey ashes go;I strive to read,But sombre is the glow.Thumbed are the pages,And the print is small;Mocking the windsThat from the darkness call;Feeble the fire that lendsIts light withal.O ghost, draw nearer;Let thy shadowy hair,Blot out the pagesThat we cannot share;Be ours the one last leafBy Fate left bare!Let's Finis scrawl,And then Life's book put by;Turn each to eachIn all simplicity:Ere the last flame is goneTo warm us by.