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The Call
I must be off where the green boughs beckon--Why should I linger to barter and reckon?The mart may pay me--the mart may cheat me,I have had enough of the huckster's din,The calm of the deep woods waits to greet me,(Heart of the high hills, take me in.)I must be off where the brooks are waking,Where birds are building and green leaves breaking.Why should the hold of an old task bind me?I know of an eyrie I fain would winWhere a wind of the West shall seek me and find me,(Heart of my high hills, take me in.)I must be off where the stars are nearer,Where feet go swifter and eyes see clearer,Little I heed what the toilers name me--I have heard the call that to miss were sin,The April voices that clamour and claim me,(Heart of my h...
Theodosia Garrison
To A Fighter, Dead.
Pass, pass, you fiery spirit! Never blandAnd halting never! Hosted round to-night,At the great wall, with spears of lifted light,Held by embattled seraphim, who standTo greet their friend, their comrade, and their own!Doubtless, spirit made for burning war.Doubtless your God has need of you afar.To lead, for Him, some heav'nly fight and lone.And therefore knights you, thus, before the throne!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Ther's sunshine an storm
Ther's sunshine an storm as we travel along,Throo life's journey whear ivver we be;An its wiser to leeten yor heart wi' a song,Nor to freeat at wbat fate may decree;Yo'll find gooid an bad amang th' fowk 'at yo meet,An' form friendships maybe yo'll regret;But tho' some may deceive an lay snares for yor feet,Pass 'em by, - an' Forgive an' Forget.
John Hartley
The Secret Rose
Far off, most secret, and inviolate Rose,Enfold me in my hour of hours; where thoseWho sought thee in the Holy Sepulchre,Or in the wine vat, dwell beyond the stirAnd tumult of defeated dreams; and deepAmong pale eyelids, heavy with the sleepMen have named beauty. Thy great leaves enfoldThe ancient beards, the helms of ruby and goldOf the crowned Magi; and the king whose eyesSaw the Pierced Hands and Rood of elder riseIn druid vapour and make the torches dim;Till vain frenzy awoke and he died; and himWho met Fand walking among flaming dewBy a gray shore where the wind never blew,And lost the world and Emer for a kiss;And him who drove the gods out of their liss,And till a hundred morns had flowered red,Feasted and wept the barrows of his d...
William Butler Yeats
Going To Heaven!
Going to heaven!I don't know when,Pray do not ask me how, --Indeed, I 'm too astonishedTo think of answering you!Going to heaven! --How dim it sounds!And yet it will be doneAs sure as flocks go home at nightUnto the shepherd's arm!Perhaps you 're going too!Who knows?If you should get there first,Save just a little place for meClose to the two I lost!The smallest "robe" will fit me,And just a bit of "crown;"For you know we do not mind our dressWhen we are going home.I 'm glad I don't believe it,For it would stop my breath,And I 'd like to look a little moreAt such a curious earth!I am glad they did believe itWhom I have never foundSince the mighty autumn afternoonI lef...
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
A Hymn Of Peace
Angel of Peace, thou hast wandered too long!Spread thy white wings to the sunshine of love!Come while our voices are blended in song, -Fly to our ark like the storm-beaten dove!Fly to our ark on the wings of the dove, -Speed o'er the far-sounding billows of song,Crowned with thine olive-leaf garland of love, -Angel of Peace, thou hast waited too long!Joyous we meet, on this altar of thineMingling the gifts we have gathered for thee,Sweet with the odors of myrtle and pine,Breeze of the prairie and breath of the sea, -Meadow and mountain and forest and sea!Sweet is the fragrance of myrtle and pine,Sweeter the incense we offer to thee,Brothers once more round this altar of thine!Angels of Bethlehem, answer the strain!Hark! a new ...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
A Sunbeam.
The sun was hid all day by clouds, The rain fell softly down;A cold gray mist hung o'er the earth, And veiled the silent town.Behind the clouds a sunbeam crept With restless wings of gold;The skies above were bright and warm, The earth below was cold.It glanced along the heavy clouds, Then sought to glide between;But ah! they gathered closer still, With fierce and angry mien.The dancing ray grew strangely still, Just like some weary bird,That droops upon a lonely shore, And sings its song unheard.For on the earth the drooping flowers Were longing for the light;And children with their watching eyes Could trace no sunbeam's flight.At last an angel, wand'ring by,
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Sonnet. To Charity.
O! best-beloved of Heaven, on earth bestow'd,To raise the pilgrim sunk with ghastly fears,To cool his burning wounds, to wipe his tears,And strew with amaranths his thorny road.Alas! how long has Superstition hurl'dThine altars down, thine attributes reviled,The hearts of men with witchcrafts foul beguiled.And spread his empire o'er the vassal world?But truth returns! she spreads resistless day;And mark, the monster's cloud-wrapt fabric falls--He shrinks--he trembles 'mid his inmost halls,And all his damn'd illusions melt away!The charm dissolved--immortal, fair, and free,Thy holy fanes shall rise, celestial Charity!
Thomas Gent
Euroclydon
On the storm-cloven CapeThe bitter waves roll,With the bergs of the Pole,And the darks and the damps of the Northern Sea:For the storm-cloven CapeIs an alien ShapeWith a fearful face; and it moans, and it standsOutside all landsEverlastingly!When the fruits of the yearHave been gathered in Spain,And the Indian rainIs rich on the evergreen lands of the Sun,There comes to this CapeTo this alien Shape,As the waters beat in and the echoes troop forth,The Wind of the North,Euroclydon!And the wilted thyme,And the patches pastOf the nettles castIn the drift of the rift, and the broken rime,Are tumbled and blownTo every zoneWith the famished glede, and the plovers thinnedBy this fourfold...
Henry Kendall
Stanzas Written In Anticipation Of Defeat.
[1]Go seek for some abler defenders of wrong, If we must run the gantlet thro' blood and expense;Or, Goths as ye are, in your multitude strong, Be content with success and pretend not to sense.If the words of the wise and the generous are vain, If Truth by the bowstring must yield up her breath,Let Mutes do the office--and spare her the pain Of an Inglis or Tyndal to talk her to death.Chain, persecute, plunder--do all that you will-- But save us, at least, the old womanly loreOf a Foster, who, dully prophetic of ill, Is at once the two instruments, AUGUR[2] and BORE.Bring legions of Squires--if they'll only be mute-- And array their thick heads against reason and ...
Thomas Moore
A Living And A Dead Faith.
The Lord receives his highest praiseFrom humble minds and hearts sincere;While all the loud professor saysOffends the righteous Judges ear.To walk as children of the day,To mark the precepts holy light,To wage the warfare, watch, and pray,Show who are pleasing in his sight.Not words alone it cost the Lord,To purchase pardon for his own;Nor will a soul, by grace restored,Return the Saviour words alone.With golden bells, the priestly vest,And rich pomegranates borderd round,[1]The need of holiness expressd,And calld for fruit, as well as sound.Easy, indeed, it were to reachA mansion in the courts above,If swelling words and fluent speechMight serve, instead of faith...
William Cowper
Wishing
Do you wish the world were better? Let me tell you what to do:Set a watch upon your actions, Keep them always straight and true;Rid your mind of selfish motives; Let your thoughts be clean and high.You can make a little Eden Of the sphere you occupy.Do you wish the world were wiser? Well, suppose you make a start,By accumulating wisdom In the scrapbook of your heart:Do not waste one page on folly; Live to learn, and learn to live.If you want to give men knowledge You must get it, ere you give.Do you wish the world were happy? Then remember day by dayJust to scatter seeds of kindness As you pass along the way;For the pleasures of the many May be ofttimes traced to one,
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Spot
In years defaced and lost,Two sat here, transport-tossed,Lit by a living loveThe wilted world knew nothing of:Scared momentlyBy gaingivings,Then hoping thingsThat could not be.Of love and us no traceAbides upon the place;The sun and shadows wheel,Season and season sereward steal;Foul days and fairHere, too, prevail,And gust and galeAs everywhere.But lonely shepherd soulsWho bask amid these knollsMay catch a faery soundOn sleepy noontides from the ground:"O not againTill Earth outwearsShall love like theirsSuffuse this glen!"
Thomas Hardy
If Thou Sayest, Behold, We Knew It Not.
- Proverbs xxiv. 11, 12.1.I have done I know not what, - what have I done?My brother's blood, my brother's soul, doth cry:And I find no defence, find no reply,No courage more to run this race I runNot knowing what I have done, have left undone;Ah me, these awful unknown hours that flyFruitless it may be, fleeting fruitless byRank with death-savor underneath the sun.For what avails it that I did not knowThe deed I did? what profits me the pleaThat had I known I had not wronged him so?Lord Jesus Christ, my God, him pity Thou;Lord, if it may be, pity also me:In judgment pity, and in death, and now.2.Thou Who hast borne all burdens, bear our load,Bear Thou our load whatever load it be;Our guilt, our s...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto X
When we had passed the threshold of the gate(Which the soul's ill affection doth disuse,Making the crooked seem the straighter path),I heard its closing sound. Had mine eyes turn'd,For that offence what plea might have avail'd?We mounted up the riven rock, that woundOn either side alternate, as the waveFlies and advances. "Here some little artBehooves us," said my leader, "that our stepsObserve the varying flexure of the path."Thus we so slowly sped, that with cleft orbThe moon once more o'erhangs her wat'ry couch,Ere we that strait have threaded. But when freeWe came and open, where the mount aboveOne solid mass retires, I spent, with toil,And both, uncertain of the way, we stood,Upon a plain more lonesome, than the roadsThat...
Dante Alighieri
Response
Beside that milestone where the level sun,Nigh unto setting, sheds his last, low raysOn word and work irrevocably done,Lifes blending threads of good and ill outspun,I hear, O friends! your words of cheer and praise,Half doubtful if myself or otherwise.Like him who, in the old Arabian joke,A beggar slept and crowned Caliph woke.Thanks not the less. With not unglad surpriseI see my life-work through your partial eyes;Assured, in giving to my home-taught songsA higher value than of right belongs,You do but read between the written linesThe finer grace of unfulfilled designs
John Greenleaf Whittier
Envoy.
Clear was the night: the moon was young:The larkspurs in the plotsMingled their orange with the goldOf the forget-me-nots.The poppies seemed a silver mist:So darkly fell the gloom.You scarce had guessed yon crimson streaksWere buttercups in bloom.But one thing moved: a little childCrashed through the flower and fern:And all my soul rose up to greetThe sage of whom I learn.I looked into his awful eyes:I waited his decree:I made ingenious attemptsTo sit upon his knee.The babe upraised his wondering eyes,And timidly he said,"A trend towards experimentIn modern minds is bred."I feel the will to roam, to learnBy test, experience, _nous_,That fire is hot and ocean deep,And wolves...
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Dedication
Grant me a moment of peace,Let me but open mine eyes,Forgetting the empire of liesAnd warfares majestic increaseOf national folly and hate;Ere I return to my fate,Grant me a moment of peace.To what is I would turn from what seemsFrom a world where men fall and adoreThe god that Fear shuddering boreTo Greed in the desert of dreams,Unholy, inhuman, impure;From the State to the loves that endure,To what is I would turn from what seems.No man has been richer than I,Though he staggered with infinite goldAnd bought of whatever is soldOf the beauty that money can buy.In the wealth that is lost in the martAnd is stored in the innermost heartNo man has been richer than I.Humbly, a pilgrim, I stood,W...
John Le Gay Brereton