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Life's Undercurrent.
Within the precincts of a hospital, I wandered in a sympathetic mood;Where face to face with wormwood and with gall, With wrecks of pain and stern vicissitude,The eye unused to human miseryMight view life's undercurrent vividly.My gaze soon rested on the stricken form Of one succumbing to the fever's drouth,With throbbing brow intolerably warm, With wasted lips and mute appealing mouth;And when I watched that prostrate figure thereI thought that fate must be the worst to bear.I next beheld a thin but patient face, Aged by the constant twinge of hopeless pain,Wheeled in an easy chair from place to place, A form which ne'er might stand erect again;I viewed that human shipwreck in his chair,And thought a fate li...
Alfred Castner King
Night
The sun descending in the west,The evening star does shine;The birds are silent in their nest,And I must seek for mine.The moon, like a flowerIn heaven's high bower,With silent delight,Sits and smiles on the night.Farewell, green fields and happy grove,Where flocks have ta'en delight.Where lambs have nibbled, silent moveThe feet of angels bright;Unseen they pour blessing,And joy without ceasing,On each bud and blossom,And each sleeping bosom.They look in every thoughtless nestWhere birds are covered warm;They visit caves of every beast,To keep them all from harm:If they see any weepingThat should have been sleeping,They pour sleep on their head,And sit down by their bed.When wolv...
William Blake
Unity
I dreamed that life and time and space were one, And the pure trance of dawn; The increase drawnFrom all the journeys of the travelling sun,And the long mysteries of sound and sight, The whispering rains,And far, calm waters set in lonely plains, And cry of birds at night.I dreamed that these and love and death were one, And all eternity, The life to beTherewith entwined, throughout the ages spun;And so with Grief, my playmate; him I knew One with the rest, -One with the mounting day, the east and west - Lord, is it true?Lord, do I dream? Methinks a key unlocksSome dungeon door, in thrall of blackened towers,On ecstasies, half hid, like chill white flowersBlown in the secret places of the rocks.
Violet Jacob
Misery
Out of this oubliette between the mountainsfive valleys go, five passes like gates;three of them black in shadow, two of them brightwith distant sunshine;and sunshine fills one high valley bed,green grass shining, and little white houseslike quartz crystals,little, but distinct a way off.Why don't I go?Why do I crawl about this pot, this oubliette,stupidly?Why don't I go?But where?If I come to a pine-wood, I can't sayNow I am arrived!What are so many straight trees to me!STERZING
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
No Place
When days grow long, and brain and hands grow weary, And hot the city street,Forth to the haunts, by cooling winds made cheery We fly with willing feet.We leave our cares and labours all behind us, The city's noise and din,And, hid securely where they cannot find us, We drink the sunshine in.But when the days grow long with bitter sorrow, And hearts grow sick with woe,Where are the haunts that we may seek to-morrow? Where can we hide or go?Holds earth no nook, where hearts with sorrow breaking, May find a summer's rest?A season's respite from the weary aching That gnaws within the breast?O God! if we could fly and leave behind us Our crosses and our grief,Could hide a season where t...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Voices Of The Death Chamber.
The night lamp is faintly gleaming Within my chamber still,And the heavy shades of midnight Each gloomy angle fill,And my worn and weary watchers Scarce dare to move or weep,For they think that I am buried In deep and quiet sleep.But, hush! what are those voices Heard on the midnight air,Of strange celestial sweetness, Breathing of love and prayer?Nearer they grow and clearer, I hear now what they say -To the Kingdom of God's glory, They're calling me away!See my gentle mother softly To me approaches now,What is the change she readeth Upon my pale damp brow?She clasps her hands in anguish Whose depth no words might say?Has she, too, heard the voices That a...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
A Night-Piece
The sky is overcastWith a continuous cloud of texture close,Heavy and wan, all whitened by the Moon,Which through that veil is indistinctly seen,A dull, contracted circle, yielding lightSo feebly spread, that not a shadow falls,Chequering the ground from rock, plant, tree, or tower.At length a pleasant instantaneous gleamStartles the pensive traveller while he treadsHis lonesome path, with unobserving eyeBent earthwards; he looks up the clouds are splitAsunder, and above his head he seesThe clear Moon, and the glory of the heavens.There, in a black-blue vault she sails along,Followed by multitudes of stars, that, smallAnd sharp, and bright, along the dark abyssDrive as she drives: how fast they wheel away,Yet vanish not! the wind is in th...
William Wordsworth
A Midsummer Holiday:- II. A Haven
East and north a waste of waters, south and westLonelier lands than dreams in sleep would feign to be,When the soul goes forth on travel, and is prestRound and compassed in with clouds that flash and fleeDells without a streamlet, downs without a tree,Cirques of hollow cliff that crumble, give their guestLittle hope, till hard at hand he pause, to seeWhere the small town smiles, a warm still sea-side nest.Many a lone long mile, by many a headlands crest,Down by many a garden dear to bird and bee,Up by many a sea-downs bare and breezy breast,Winds the sandy strait of road where flowers run free.Here along the deep steep lanes by field and leaKnights have carolled, pilgrims chanted, on their quest,Haply, ere a roof rose toward the bleak strands lee,...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Threnody
The South-wind bringsLife, sunshine and desire,And on every mount and meadowBreathes aromatic fire;But over the dead he has no power,The lost, the lost, he cannot restore;And, looking over the hills, I mournThe darling who shall not return.I see my empty house,I see my trees repair their boughs;And he, the wondrous child,Whose silver warble wildOutvalued every pulsing soundWithin the air's cerulean round,--The hyacinthine boy, for whomMorn well might break and April bloom,The gracious boy, who did adornThe world whereinto he was born,And by his countenance repayThe favor of the loving Day,--Has disappeared from the Day's eye;Far and wide she cannot find him;My hopes pursue, they cannot bind him.Re...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Voice Of Ocean
A cry went through the darkness; and the moon,Hurrying through storm, gazed with a ghastly face,Then cloaked herself in scud: the merman raceOf surges ceased; and then th' Aeolian croonOf the wild siren, Wind, within the shroudsSunk to a sigh. The ocean in that placeSeemed listening; haunted, for a moment's space,By something dread that cried against the clouds.Mystery and night; and with them fog and rain:And then that cry again as if the deepUttered its loneliness in one dark word:Her horror of herself; her Titan pain;Her monsters; and the dead that she must keep,Has kept, alone, for centuries, unheard.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Two Peacocks Of Bedfont.
I.Alas! That breathing Vanity should goWhere Pride is buried, - like its very ghost,Uprisen from the naked bones below,In novel flesh, clad in the silent boastOf gaudy silk that flutters to and fro,Shedding its chilling superstition mostOn young and ignorant natures - as it wontTo haunt the peaceful churchyard of Bedfont!II.Each Sabbath morning, at the hour of prayer,Behold two maidens, up the quiet greenShining, far distant, in the summer airThat flaunts their dewy robes and breathes betweenTheir downy plumes, - sailing as if they wereTwo far-off ships, - until they brush betweenThe churchyard's humble walls, and watch and waitOn either side of the wide open'd gate,III.And there they ...
Thomas Hood
Song.
When you mournfully rivet your tear-laden eyes, That have seen the last sunset of hope pass away,On some bright orb that seems, through the still sapphire skies, In beauty and splendour to roll on its way:Oh, remember this earth, if beheld from afar, Appears wrapt in a halo as soft, and as bright,As the pure silver radiance enshrining yon star, Where your spirit is eagerly soaring to-night.And at this very midnight, perhaps some poor heart, That is aching, or breaking, in that distant sphere;Gazes down on this dark world, and longs to depart From its own dismal home, to a happier one here.
Frances Anne Kemble
Sonnet CLXXXVII.
Quando 'l sol bagna in mur l' aurato carro.HIS NIGHTS ARE, LIKE HIS DAYS, PASSED IN TORMENT. When in the sea sinks the sun's golden light,And on my mind and nature darkness lies,With the pale moon, faint stars and clouded skiesI pass a weary and a painful night:To her who hears me not I then rehearseMy sad life's fruitless toils, early and late;And with the world and with my gloomy fate,With Love, with Laura and myself, converse.Sleep is forbid me: I have no repose,But sighs and groans instead, till morn returns,And tears, with which mine eyes a sad heart feeds;Then comes the dawn, the thick air clearer grows,But not my soul; the sun which in it burnsAlone can cure the grief his fierce warmth breeds.NOTT....
Francesco Petrarca
The Brightness
Away, away--Through that strange void and vastBrimmed with dying day;Away,So that I feelOnly the windOf the world's swift-rolling wheel.See what a mazeOf whirling rays!The sharp windWeakens; the airIs but thin air,Not fume and flying fire....O, heart's desire,Now thou art stillAnd the air chill.And but a stemOf clear cold lightShines in this stony dark.Farewell, world of sense,Too fair, too fairTo be so false!Hence, henceRosy memories,Delight of ears, hands, eyes.RiseWhen I bid, O thouTide of the dark,Whelming the pale last,Reflection of that vastToo-fair deceit.Ah, sweetTo miss the vexing heatOf the heart's desire:Only ...
John Frederick Freeman
In Memory Of M. B.
Here is my gift, not roses on your grave,not sticks of burning incense.You lived aloof, maintaining to the endyour magnificent disdain.You drank wine, and told the wittiest jokes,and suffocated inside stifling walls.Alone you let the terrible stranger in,and stayed with her alone.Now you're gone, and nobody says a wordabout your troubled and exalted life.Only my voice, like a flute, will mournat your dumb funeral feast.Oh, who would have dared believe that half-crazed I,I, sick with grief for the buried past,I, smoldering on a slow fire,having lost everything and forgotten all,would be fated to commemorate a manso full of strength and will and bright inventions,who only yesterday it seems, chatted with me,hiding the trem...
Anna Akhmatova
In An Orchard
Airy and quick and wise In the shed light of the sun, You clasp with friendly eyes The thoughts from mine that run. But something breaks the link; I solitary stand By a giant gully's brink In some vast gloomy land. Sole central watcher, I With steadfast sadness now In that waste place descry 'Neath the awful heavens how Your life doth dizzy drop A little foam of flame From a peak without a top To a pit without a name.
John Collings Squire, Sir
Spinsters
There once was a lonesome, lorn spinster,And luck had for years been ag'inst her; When a man came to burgle She shrieked, with a gurgle,"Stop thief, while I call in a min'ster!"
Unknown
Tarantella
Sad as he sits on the white sea-stoneAnd the suave sea chuckles, and turns to the moon,And the moon significant smiles at the cliffs and the boulders.He sits like a shade by the flood aloneWhile I dance a tarantella on the rocks, and the croonOf my mockery mocks at him over the waves' bright shoulders.What can I do but dance alone,Dance to the sliding sea and the moon,For the moon on my breast and the air on my limbs and the foam on my feet?For surely this earnest man has noneOf the night in his soul, and none of the tuneOf the waters within him; only the world's old wisdom to bleat.I wish a wild sea-fellow would come down the glittering shingle,A soulless neckar, with winking seas in his eyesAnd falling waves in his arms, and the lost soul's k...