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On The Final Submission Of The Tyrolese
It was a 'moral' end for which they fought;Else how, when mighty Thrones were put to shame,Could they, poor Shepherds, have preserved an aim,A resolution, or enlivening thought?Nor hath that moral good been 'vainly' sought;For in their magnanimity and famePowers have they left, an impulse, and a claimWhich neither can be overturned nor bought.Sleep, Warriors, sleep! among your hills repose!We know that ye, beneath the stern controlOf awful prudence, keep the unvanquished soul:And when, impatient of her guilt and woes,Europe breaks forth; then, Shepherds! shall ye riseFor perfect triumph o'er your Enemies.
William Wordsworth
Faith Is A Fine Invention
Faith is a fine inventionFor gentlemen who see;But microscopes are prudentIn an emergency!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Despond Who Will, 'I' Heard A Voice Exclaim
Despond who will, 'I' heard a voice exclaim,"Though fierce the assault, and shattered the defense,It cannot be that Britain's social frame,The glorious work of time and providence,Before a flying season's rash pretense,Should fall; that She, whose virtue put to shame,When Europe prostrate lay, the Conqueror's aim,Should perish, self-subverted. Black and denseThe cloud is; but brings 'that' a day of doom.To Liberty? Her sun is up the while,That orb whose beams round Saxon Alfred shone:Then laugh, ye innocent Vales! ye Streams, sweep on,Nor let one billow of our heaven-blest IsleToss in the fanning wind a humbler plume."
Human Lifes Mystery
We sow the glebe, we reap the corn,We build the house where we may rest,And then, at moments, suddenly,We look up to the great wide sky,Inquiring wherefore we were born For earnest or for jest?The senses folding thick and darkAbout the stifled soul within,We guess diviner things beyond,And yearn to them with yearning fond;We strike out blindly to a markBelieved in, but not seen.We vibrate to the pant and thrillWherewith Eternity has curledIn serpent-twine about Gods seat;While, freshening upward to His feet,In gradual growth His full-leaved willExpands from world to world.And, in the tumult and excessOf act and passion under sun,We sometimes hear, oh, soft and far,As silver star did touch with st...
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Cavalry Charge - Königgrätz
We stood, as the helmeted horsemenFormed up in the light of the sun;We knelt, stretching bayonets towards themAs they charged, ere the battle was won.I marked their young leader apparelledAs daintily as for parade,A cigarette smoking, advancingHe laughed, as he pointed his blade.He played with his yellow moustaches,And looked on our ranks, with a scornSuch as mantles 'gainst mist and night-vapourOn the brow of the Son of the morn.He led a bright host where the glitterOf armour illumined the vale;As a flood rises slowly, so, coming,They rode with the sun on their mail.Thus he steadied his men, and none wavered.As the steeds settled down to their stride,And we heard the first rush of the squadrons,Like th...
John Campbell
The Fox & The Mask
A Fox with his foot on a Mask,Thus took the fair semblance to task;"You're a real handsome face;But what part of your caseAre your brains in, good Sir! let me ask?"Masks Are The Faces Of Shams
Walter Crane
By The Barrows
Not far from Mellstock - so tradition saith -Where barrows, bulging as they bosoms wereOf Multimammia stretched supinely there,Catch night and noon the tempest's wanton breath,A battle, desperate doubtless unto death,Was one time fought. The outlook, lone and bare,The towering hawk and passing raven share,And all the upland round is called "The He'th."Here once a woman, in our modern age,Fought singlehandedly to shield a child -One not her own - from a man's senseless rage.And to my mind no patriots' bones there piledSo consecrate the silence as her deedOf stoic and devoted self-unheed.
Thomas Hardy
Composed After Reading A Newspaper Of The Day
"People! your chains are severing link by link;Soon shall the Rich be leveled down the PoorMeet them half way." Vain boast! for These, the moreThey thus would rise, must low and lower sinkTill, by repentance stung, they fear to think;While all lie prostrate, save the tyrant fewBent in quick turns each other to undo,And mix the poison, they themselves must drink.Mistrust thyself, vain Country! cease to cry,"Knowledge will save me from the threatened woe."For, if than other rash ones more thou know,Yet on presumptuous wing as far would flyAbove thy knowledge as they dared to go,Thou wilt provoke a heavier penalty.
Poem: Libertatis Sacra Fames
Albeit nurtured in democracy,And liking best that state republicanWhere every man is Kinglike and no manIs crowned above his fellows, yet I see,Spite of this modern fret for Liberty,Better the rule of One, whom all obey,Than to let clamorous demagogues betrayOur freedom with the kiss of anarchy.Wherefore I love them not whose hands profanePlant the red flag upon the piled-up streetFor no right cause, beneath whose ignorant reignArts, Culture, Reverence, Honour, all things fade,Save Treason and the dagger of her trade,Or Murder with his silent bloody feet.
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
The Instinct Of Hope
Is there another world for this frail dustTo warm with life and be itself again?Something about me daily speaks there must,And why should instinct nourish hopes in vain?'Tis nature's prophesy that such will be,And everything seems struggling to explainThe close sealed volume of its mystery.Time wandering onward keeps its usual paceAs seeming anxious of eternity,To meet that calm and find a resting place.E'en the small violet feels a future powerAnd waits each year renewing blooms to bring,And surely man is no inferior flowerTo die unworthy of a second spring?
John Clare
Mementos.
Arranging long-locked drawers and shelvesOf cabinets, shut up for years,What a strange task we've set ourselves!How still the lonely room appears!How strange this mass of ancient treasures,Mementos of past pains and pleasures;These volumes, clasped with costly stone,With print all faded, gilding gone;These fans of leaves from Indian trees,These crimson shells, from Indian seas,These tiny portraits, set in rings,Once, doubtless, deemed such precious things;Keepsakes bestowed by Love on Faith,And worn till the receiver's death,Now stored with cameos, china, shells,In this old closet's dusty cells.I scarcely think, for ten long years,A hand has touched these relics old;And, coating each, slow-formed, appearsThe growth...
Charlotte Bronte
Sedan
Another battle! and the sounds have rolledBy many a gloomy gorge and wasted plainOer huddled hills and mountains manifold,Like winds that run before a heavy rainWhen Autumn lops the leaves and drooping grain,And earth lies deep in brown and cloudy gold.My brothers, lo! our grand old England stands,With weapons gleaming in her ready hands,Outside the tumult! Let us watch and trustThat she will never darken in the dustAnd drift of wild contention, but remainThe hope and stay of many troubled lands,Where so she waits the issue of the fight,Aloof; but praying God defend the Right!
Henry Kendall
Duffin Johnny. (A Rifleman's Adventure.)
Th' mooin shone breet wi' silver leet,An th' wind wor softly sighin;Th' burds did sleep, an th' snails did creep,An th' buzzards wor a flying;Th' daisies donned ther neet caps on,An th' buttercups wor weary,When Jenny went to meet her John,Her Rifleman, her dearie.Her Johnny seemed as brave a ladAs iver held a rifle,An if ther wor owt in him bad,'Twor nobbut just a trifle.He wore a suit o' sooity grey,To show 'at he wor willinTo feight for th' Queen and countryWhen perfect in his drillin.His heead wor raand, his back wor straight,His legs wor long an steady,His fist wor fully two pund weight,His heart wor true an ready;His upper lip wor graced at th' topWi' mustache strong an bristlin,It railly wo...
John Hartley
Ode in Memory of the American Volunteers Fallen for France
(To have been read before the statue of Lafayette and Washington in Paris, on Decoration Day, May 30, 1916.)IAy, it is fitting on this holiday,Commemorative of our soldier dead,When - with sweet flowers of our New England MayHiding the lichened stones by fifty years made gray -Their graves in every town are garlanded,That pious tribute should be given tooTo our intrepid fewObscurely fallen here beyond the seas.Those to preserve their country's greatness died;But by the death of theseSomething that we can look upon with prideHas been achieved, nor wholly unrepliedCan sneerers triumph in the charge they makeThat from a war where Freedom was at stakeAmerica withheld and, daunted, stood aside.IIBe the...
Alan Seeger
On A Corkscrew
Though I, alas! a prisoner be,My trade is prisoners to set free.No slave his lord's commands obeysWith such insinuating ways.My genius piercing, sharp, and bright,Wherein the men of wit delight.The clergy keep me for their ease,And turn and wind me as they please.A new and wondrous art I showOf raising spirits from below;In scarlet some, and some in white;They rise, walk round, yet never fright.In at each mouth the spirits pass,Distinctly seen as through a glass:O'er head and body make a rout,And drive at last all secrets out;And still, the more I show my art,The more they open every heart. A greater chemist none than IWho, from materials hard and dry,Have taught men to extract with skillMore precious juice than...
Jonathan Swift
Night Burial In The Forest
Lay him down where the fern is thick and fair.Fain was he for life, here lies he low:With the blood washed clean from his brow and his beautiful hair,Lay him here in the dell where the orchids grow.Let the birch-bark torches roar in the gloom,And the trees crowd up in a quiet startled ringSo lone is the land that in this lonely roomNever before has breathed a human thing.Cover him well in his canvas shroud, and the mossPart and heap again on his quiet breast,What recks he now of gain, or love, or lossWho for love gained rest?While she who caused it all hides her insolent eyesOr braids her hair with the ribbons of lust and of lies,And he who did the deed fares out like a hunted beastTo lurk where the musk-ox tramples the barren groun...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Solitude.
Oh ye kindly nymphs, who dwell 'mongst the rocks and the thickets,Grant unto each whatsoe'er he may in silence desire!Comfort impart to the mourner, and give to the doubter instruction,And let the lover rejoice, finding the bliss that he craves.For from the gods ye received what they ever denied unto mortals,Power to comfort and aid all who in you may confide.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Child Saved By Dog.
Johnston he is an engineer, He always looks if track is clear, For he hath a keen eagle eye, Danger afar he doth espy. And he hath too a warm true heart, Of others woes he shares a part; One day he gazed far down the line, And a large dog he could define. So eager busy on the track, In mouth it seemed to lift a pack, But it oftentimes did fail For to raise it o'er the rail. The engineer put on his steam And he loud made his whistle scream, So that the dog would take alarm And thus preserve his life from harm. This noble dog, it feared not danger, Fear to him it was a stranger, ...
James McIntyre