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Story of Udaipore: Told by Lalla-ji, the Priest
"And when the Summer Heat is great, And every hour intense, The Moghra, with its subtle flowers, Intoxicates the sense."The Coco palms stood tall and slim, against the golden-glow,And all their grey and graceful plumes were waving to and fro.She lay forgetful in the boat, and watched the dying SunSink slowly lakewards, while the stars replaced him, one by one.She saw the marble Temple walls long white reflections make,The echoes of their silvery bells were blown across the lake.The evening air was very sweet; from off the island bowersCame scents of Moghra trees in bloom, and Oleander flowers. "The Moghra flowers that smell so sweet When love's young fancies play; The acrid Moghra flowers, still sweet
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
To Water Lilies.
Beautiful flowers! with your petals bright,Ye float on the waves like spirits of light,Wooing the zephyr that ruffles your leavesWith a gentle sigh, like a lover that grieves,When his mistress, blushing, turns awayFrom his pleading voice and impassioned lay.Beautiful flowers! the sun's westward beam,Still lingering, plays on the crystal stream,And ye look like some Naiad's golden shrine,That is lighted up with a flame divine;Or a bark in which love might safely glide,Impelled by the breeze o'er the purple tide.Beautiful flowers! how I love to gazeOn your glorious hues, in the noon-tide blaze,And to see them reflected far belowIn the azure waves, as they onward flow;When the spirit who moves them sighing turnsWhere his golden c...
Susanna Moodie
A Dream Of Antiquity.
I just had turned the classic page. And traced that happy period over,When blest alike were youth and age,And love inspired the wisest sage, And wisdom graced the tenderest lover.Before I laid me down to sleep Awhile I from the lattice gazedUpon that still and moonlight deep, With isles like floating gardens raised,For Ariel there his sports to keep;While, gliding 'twixt their leafy shoresThe lone night-fisher plied his oars.I felt,--so strongly fancy's powerCame o'er me in that witching hour,--As if the whole bright scenery there Were lighted by a Grecian sky,And I then breathed the blissful air That late had thrilled to Sappho's sigh.Thus, waking, dreamt I,--and when Sleep Came o'er my ...
Thomas Moore
The Last Reader
I sometimes sit beneath a treeAnd read my own sweet songs;Though naught they may to others be,Each humble line prolongsA tone that might have passed awayBut for that scarce remembered lay.I keep them like a lock or leafThat some dear girl has given;Frail record of an hour, as briefAs sunset clouds in heaven,But spreading purple twilight stillHigh over memory's shadowed hill.They lie upon my pathway bleak,Those flowers that once ran wild,As on a father's careworn cheekThe ringlets of his child;The golden mingling with the gray,And stealing half its snows away.What care I though the dust is spreadAround these yellow leaves,Or o'er them his sarcastic threadOblivion's insect weavesThough weeds a...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Dear Grif
"Dear Grif,Here is a whiffOf beautiful spring flowers;The big red roseIs for your nose,As toward the sky it towers."Oh, do not frownUpon this crownOf green pinks and blue geraniumBut think of meWhen this you see,And put it on your cranium."
Louisa May Alcott
The Question To Lisetta
What nymph should I admire or trust,But Chloe beauteous, Chloe just?What nymph should I desire to see,But her who leaves the plain for me?To whom should I compose the lay,But her who listens when I play?To whom in song repeat my cares,But her who in my sorrow shares?For whom should I the garland make,But her who joys the gift to take,And boasts she wears it for my sake?In love am I not fully blest?Lisetta, prithee tell the rest.Lisetta's Reply:Sure Chloe just, and Chloe fair,Deserves to be your only care;But, when you and she to-dayFar into the wood did stray,And I happen'd to pass by,Which way did you cast your eye?But, when your cares to her you sing,You dare not tell her whence they spring:Does...
Matthew Prior
Easter Lilies.
Darlings of June and brides of summer sun,Chill pipes the stormy wind, the skies are drear;Dull and despoiled the gardens every one:What do you here?We looked to see your gracious blooms ariseMid soft and wooing airs in gardens green,Where venturesome brown bees and butterfliesShould hail you queen.Here is no bee nor glancing butterfly;They fled on rapid wings before the snow:Your sister lilies laid them down to die,Long, long ago.And here, amid the slowly dropping rain,We keep our Easter feast, with hearts whose careMars the high cadence of each lofty strain,Each thankful prayer.But not a shadow dims your joyance sweet,No baffled hope or memory darkly clad;You lay your whiteness at the Lord's dear feet,
Susan Coolidge
The Little Poem Of Life
I;-- Thou;-- We;-- They;--Small words, but mighty.In their spanAre bound the life and hopes of man.For, first, his thoughts of his own self are full;Until another comes his heart to rule.For them, life's best is centred round their love;Till younger lives come all their love to prove.
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
At Last.
Many have sung of love a root of bane:While to my mind a root of balm it is,For love at length breeds love; sufficient blissFor life and death and rising up again.Surely when light of Heaven makes all things plain,Love will grow plain with all its mysteries;Nor shall we need to fetch from over seasWisdom or wealth or pleasure safe from pain.Love in our borders, love within our heart,Love all in all, we then shall bide at rest,Ended for ever life's unending quest,Ended for ever effort, change and fear:Love all in all; - no more that better partPurchased, but at the cost of all things here.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
April Love
We have walked in Love's land a little way,We have learnt his lesson a little while,And shall we not part at the end of day,With a sigh, a smile?A little while in the shine of the sun,We were twined together, joined lips, forgotHow the shadows fall when the day is done,And when Love is not.We have made no vows--there will none be broke,Our love was free as the wind on the hill,There was no word said we need wish unspoke,We have wrought no ill.So shall we not part at the end of day,Who have loved and lingered a little while,Join lips for the last time, go our way,With a sigh, a smile?
Ernest Christopher Dowson
To A Sleeping Baby's Eyes
And thou, twin orbs of love and joy!Unveil thy glories with the morn--Dear eyes, another day is born--Awake, O little sleeping boy!Bright are the summer morning skies,But in this quiet little roomThere broods a chill, oppressive gloom--All for the brightness of thine eyes.Without those radiant orbs of thineHow dark this little world would be--This sweet home-world that worships thee--So let their wondrous glories shineOn those who love their warmth and joy--Awake, O sleeping little boy.
Eugene Field
Love And The Spring-Flower.
'Tis pity, ev'ry maiden knows,Just as she cools, Love warmer grows;But, if the chill be too severe,Trust me, he'll wither in a tear.Thus will the spring-flow'r bud and blow,Wrapp'd round in many a fold of snow;But, if an ice-wind pierce the sky,'Twill drop upon its bed, and die!
John Carr
Dedication - Leaves from Australian Forests
To her who, cast with me in trying days,Stood in the place of health and power and praise;Who, when I thought all light was out, becameA lamp of hope that put my fears to shame;Who faced for loves sole sake the life austereThat waits upon the man of letters here;Who, unawares, her deep affection showedBy many a touching little wifely mode;Whose spirit, self-denying, dear, divine,Its sorrows hid, so it might lessen mineTo her, my bright, best friend, I dedicateThis book of songs t will help to compensateFor much neglect. The act, if not the rhyme,Will touch her heart, and lead her to the timeOf trials past. That which is most intenseWithin these leaves is of her influence;And if aught here is sweetened with a toneSincere, like love, it c...
Henry Kendall
To Frances S. Osgood
Thou wouldst be loved? then let thy heartFrom its present pathway part not;Being everything which now thou art,Be nothing which thou art not.So with the world thy gentle ways,Thy grace, thy more than beauty,Shall be an endless theme of praise.And love a simple duty.
Edgar Allan Poe
Ode On The Installation Of The Duke Of Devonshire, Chancellor Of The University Of Cambridge, 1862[1]
Hence a while, severer Muses;Spare your slaves till drear October.Hence; for Alma Mater choosesNot to be for ever sober:But, like stately matron gray,Calling child and grandchild round her,Will for them at least be gay;Share for once their holiday;And, knowing she will sleep the sounder,Cheerier-hearted on the morrowRise to grapple care and sorrow,Grandly leads the dance adown, and joins the children's play. So go, for in your places Already, as you see,(Her tears for some deep sorrow scarcely dried),Venus holds court among her sinless graces,With many a nymph from many a park and lea.She, pensive, waits the merrier facesOf those your wittier sisters three,O'er jest and dance and song who still preside,To cheer her...
Charles Kingsley
Afternoon.
Small, shapeless drifts of cloudSail slowly northward in the soft-hued sky, With blur half-tints and rolling summits bright,By the late sun caressed; slight hazes shroud All things afar; shineth each leaf anigh With its own warmth and light. O'erblown by Southland airs,The summer landscape basks in utter peace: In lazy streams the lazy clouds are seen;Low hills, broad meadows, and large, clear-cut squares Of ripening corn-fields, rippled by the breeze, With shifting shade and sheen. Hark! and you may not hearA sound less soothing than the rustle cool Of swaying leaves, the steady wiry droneOf unseen crickets, sudden chirpings clear Of happy birds, the tinkle of the pool, Chafed ...
Emma Lazarus
Blindness
Our true hearts are forever lonely:A wistfulness is in our thought:Our lights are like the dawns which onlySeem bright to us and yet are not.Something you see in me I wis not:Another heart in you I guess:A stranger's lips--but thine I kiss not,Erring in all my tenderness.I sometimes think a mighty loverTakes every burning kiss we give:His lights are those which round us hover:For him alone our lives we live.Ah, sigh for us whose hearts unseeingPoint all their passionate love in vain,And blinded in the joy of being,Meet only when pain touches pain.
George William Russell
Verses To The Tomb Of A Friend.
Dearer to me, thou pile of dust!Tho' with the wild flow'r simply crown'd,Than the vast dome or beauteous bust,By genius form'd, by wit renown'd.Wave, thou wild flow'r! for ever wave,O'er my lov'd relic of delight;My tears shall bathe her green-rob'd graveMore than the dews of heav'n by night.Methinks my Delia bids me go,Says, "Florio, dry that fruitless tear!Feed not a wild flow'r with thy woe,Thy long-lov'd Delia is not here."No drop of feeling from her eyeNow starts to hear thy sorrows speak;And, did thy bosom know one joy,No smile would bloom upon her cheek."Pale, wan, and torpid, droops that cheek,Whereon thy lip impress'd its red;Those eyes, which Florio taught to speak,Unnotic'd close amid the dea...