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The Door
This is the room that thou wast ushered in. Wouldst thou, perchance, a larger freedom win? Wouldst thou escape for deeper or no breath? There is no door but death. Do shadows crouch within the mocking light? Stand thou! but if thy terrored heart takes flight Facing maimed Hope and wide-eyed Nevermore, There is no less one door. Dost thou bewail love's end and friendship's doom, The dying fire, drained cup, and gathering gloom? Explore the walls, if thy soul ventureth, There is no door but death. There is no window. Heaven hangs aloof Above the rents within the stairless roof. Hence, soul, be brave across the ruined floor, Who knocks? Unbolt the door!
Edgar Lee Masters
Debtor
So long as my spirit stillIs glad of breathAnd lifts its plumes of prideIn the dark face of death;While I am curious stillOf love and fame,Keeping my heart too highFor the years to tame,How can I quarrel with fateSince I can seeI am a debtor to life,Not life to me?
Sara Teasdale
The Stranger
Never am I so aloneAs when I walk among the crowd -Blurred masks of stern or grinning stone,Unmeaning eyes and voices loud.Gaze dares not encounter gaze, ...Humbled, I turn my head aside;When suddenly there is a face ...Pale, subdued and grievous-eyed.Ah, I know that visage meek,Those trembling lips, the eyes that shineBut turn from that which they would seekWith an air piteous, divine!There is not a line or scar,Seal of a sorrow or disgrace,But I know like sigils areBurned in my heart and on my face.Speak! O speak! Thou art the one!But thou hast passed with sad head bowed;And never am I so aloneAs when I walk among the crowd.
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols
The Hosts
Purged, with the life they left, of allThat makes life paltry and mean and small,In their new dedication chargedWith something heightened, enriched, enlarged,That lends a light to their lusty browsAnd a song to the rhythm of their tramping feet,These are the men that have taken vows,These are the hardy, the flower, the elite, -These are the men that are moved no moreBy the will to traffic and grasp and storeAnd ring with pleasure and wealth and loveThe circles that self is the center of;But they are moved by the powers that forceThe sea forever to ebb and rise,That hold Arcturus in his course,And marshal at noon in tropic skiesThe clouds that tower on some snow-capped chainAnd drift out over the peopled plain.They are big with the b...
Alan Seeger
Lines Written On Hearing The News Of The Death Of Napoleon.
What! alive and so bold, O Earth?Art thou not overbold?What! leapest thou forth as of oldIn the light of thy morning mirth,The last of the flock of the starry fold?Ha! leapest thou forth as of old?Are not the limbs still when the ghost is fled,And canst thou move, Napoleon being dead?How! is not thy quick heart cold?What spark is alive on thy hearth?How! is not HIS death-knell knolled?And livest THOU still, Mother Earth?Thou wert warming thy fingers oldO'er the embers covered and coldOf that most fiery spirit, when it fled -What, Mother, do you laugh now he is dead?'Who has known me of old,' replied Earth,'Or who has my story told?It is thou who art overbold.'And the lightning of scorn laughed forthAs she sun...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Sonnet CCIII.
L' alto signor, dinanzi a cui non vale.HIS SORROW FOR THE ILLNESS OF LAURA INCREASES, NOT LESSENS, HIS FLAME. The sovereign Lord, 'gainst whom of no availConcealment, or resistance is, or flight,My mind had kindled to a new delightBy his own amorous and ardent ail:Though his first blow, transfixing my best mailWere mortal sure, to push his triumph quiteHe took a shaft of sorrow in his right,So my soft heart on both sides to assail.A burning wound the one shed fire and flame,The other tears, which ever grief distils,Through eyes for your weak health that are as rills.But no relief from either fountain cameMy bosom's conflagration to abate,Nay, passion grew by very pity great.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Good Precepts, Or Counsel
In all thy need, be thou possestStill with a well prepared breast;Nor let the shackles make thee sad;Thou canst but have what others had.And this for comfort thou must know,Times that are ill won't still be so:Clouds will not ever pour down rain;A sullen day will clear again.First, peals of thunder we must hear;When lutes and harps shall stroke the ear.
Robert Herrick
Carving A Name.
I wrote my name upon the sand,And trusted it would stand for aye;But, soon, alas! the refluent seaHad washed my feeble lines away.I carved my name upon the wood,And, after years, returned again;I missed the shadow of the treeThat stretched of old upon the plain.To solid marble next, my nameI gave as a perpetual trust;An earthquake rent it to its base,And now it lies, o'erlaid with dust.All these have failed. In wiser moodI turn and ask myself, "What then?"If I would have my name endure,I'll write it on the hearts of men,In characters of living light,Of kindly deeds and actions wrought.And these, beyond the touch of time,Shall live immortal as my thought.
Horatio Alger, Jr.
Wisdom
The true faith discovered wasWhen painted panel, statuary.Glass-mosaic, window-glass,Amended what was told awryBy some peasant gospeler;Swept the Sawdust from the floorOf that working-carpenter.Miracle had its playtime whereIn damask clothed and on a seatChryselephantine, cedar-boarded,His majestic Mother satStitching at a purple hoardedThat He might be nobly breechedIn starry towers of BabylonNoah's freshet never reached.King Abundance got Him onInnocence; and Wisdom He.That cognomen sounded bestConsidering what wild infancyDrove horror from His Mother's breast.
William Butler Yeats
Delilah
From a PictureThe sun has gone down, spreading wide onThe sky-line one ray of red fire;Prepare the soft cushions of Sidon,Make ready the rich loom of Tyre.The day, with its toil and its sorrow,Its shade, and its sunshine, at lengthHas ended; dost fear for the morrow,Strong man, in the pride of thy strength?Like fire-flies, heavenward clinging,They multiply, star upon star;And the breeze a low murmur is bringingFrom the tents of my people afar.Nay, frown not, I am but a Pagan,Yet little for these things I care;Tis the hymn to our deity DagonThat comes with the pleasant night air.It shall not disturb thee, nor can it;See, closed are the curtains, the lightsGleam down on the cloven pomegranate,
Adam Lindsay Gordon
New Year
Know this! there is nothing can harm you If you are at peace with your soul.Know this, and the knowledge shall arm you With courage and strength to the goal.Your spirit shall break every fetter, And love shall cast out every fear.And grander, and gladder, and better Shall be every added new year.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Farewell
My Horse's feet beside the lake,Where sweet the unbroken moonbeams lay,Sent echoes through the night to wake,Each glistening strand, each heath-fringed bay.The poplar avenue was passd,And the roofed bridge that spans the stream,Up the steep street I hurried fast,Led by thy tapers starlike beam.I came! I saw thee rise:, the bloodPoured flushing to thy languid cheek.Locked in each others arms we stood,In tears, with hearts too full to speak.Days flew; ah, soon I could discernA trouble in thine altered air.Thy hand lay languidly in mine,Thy cheek was grave, thy speech grew rare.I blame thee not:, This heart, I know,To be long lovd was never framd,For something in its depths doth glowToo strange, too r...
Matthew Arnold
To - .
1.I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden,Thou needest not fear mine;My spirit is too deeply ladenEver to burthen thine.2.I fear thy mien, thy tones, thy motion,Thou needest not fear mine;Innocent is the heart's devotionWith which I worship thine.
Thoughts
Of Public Opinion;Of a calm and cool fiat, sooner or later, (How impassive! How certain and final!)Of the President with pale face, asking secretly to himself, What will the people say at last?Of the frivolous JudgeOf the corrupt Congressman, Governor, MayorOf such as these, standing helpless and exposed;Of the mumbling and screaming priest(soon, soon deserted;)Of the lessening, year by year, of venerableness, and of the dicta of officers, statutes, pulpits, schools;Of the rising forever taller and stronger and broader, of the intuitions of men and women, and of self-esteem, and of personality;Of the New WorldOf the Democracies, resplendent, en-masse;Of the conformity of politics, armies, navies, to them and to me,Of the shining sun by themOf the inherent light, greater than the r...
Walt Whitman
Achievement
He held himself splendidly forwardBoth early and late;The aim of his purpose was starward,To master his fate:So he wrought and he toiled and he waited,Till he rose o'er the hordes that he hated,And stood on the heights, as was fated,Made one of the great.Then lo! on the top of the mountain,With walls that were wide,A city! from which, as a fountain,Rose voices that cried:"He comes! Let us forth now to meet him!Both mummer and priest let us greet him!In the city he built let us seat himOn the throne of his pride!"Then out of the city he builded,Of shadows it seems,From gates that his fancy had gildedWith thought's brightest gleams,Strange mimes and chimeras came trooping,With moping and mowing and stoopi...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Modern Climber.
Year after year, as Summer suns come round, Upon the Calais packet am I found: Thence to Geneva hurried by express, I halt for breakfast, bathe, and change my dress. My well-worn knapsack to my back I strap; My Alpine rope I neatly round me wrap; Then, axe in hand, the diligence disdaining, I walk to Chamonix, by way of training. Arrived at Coutlet's Inn by eventide, I interview my porter and my guide: My guide, that Mentor who has dragg'd full oft These aching, shaking, quaking limbs aloft; Braved falling stones, cut steps on ice-slopes steep, That I the glory of his deeds might reap. My porter, who with uncomplaining back O'er passes, peaks, and glaciers bears my pack: Tho' now...
Edward Woodley Bowling
Macbeth
Rose, like dim battlements, the hills and rearedSteep crags into the fading primrose sky;But in the desolate valleys fell small rain,Mingled with drifting cloud. I saw one come,Like the fierce passion of that vacant place,His face turned glittering to the evening sky;His eyes, like grey despair, fixed satelesslyOn the still, rainy turrets of the storm;And all his armour in a haze of blue.He held no sword, bare was his hand and clenched,As if to hide the inextinguishable bloodMurder had painted there. And his wild mouthSeemed spouting echoes of deluded thoughts.Around his head, like vipers all distort,His locks shook, heavy-laden, at each stride.If fire may burn invisible to the eye;O, if despair strive everlastingly;Then haunted here the ...
Walter De La Mare
S. I. W.
"I will to the King, And offer him consolation in his trouble, For that man there has set his teeth to die, And being one that hates obedience, Discipline, and orderliness of life, I cannot mourn him." W. B. Yeats. Patting goodbye, doubtless they told the lad He'd always show the Hun a brave man's face; Father would sooner him dead than in disgrace,-- Was proud to see him going, aye, and glad. Perhaps his Mother whimpered how she'd fret Until he got a nice, safe wound to nurse. Sisters would wish girls too could shoot, charge, curse, . . . Brothers--would send his favourite cigarette, Each week, month after month, they wrote the same...
Wilfred Edward Salter Owen