Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 115 of 189
Previous
Next
Lonely Burial
There were not many at that lonely place,Where two scourged hills met in a little plain.The wind cried loud in gusts, then low again.Three pines strained darkly, runners in a raceUnseen by any. Toward the further woodsA dim harsh noise of voices rose and ceased.-- We were most silent in those solitudes --Then, sudden as a flame, the black-robed priest,The clotted earth piled roughly up aboutThe hacked red oblong of the new-made thing,Short words in swordlike Latin -- and a routOf dreams most impotent, unwearying.Then, like a blind door shut on a carouse,The terrible bareness of the soul's last house.
Stephen Vincent Benét
Adieu!
"Adieu, my love, adieu!Be constant and be trueAs the daisies gemmed with dew,Bonny maid."The cows their thirst were slaking,Trees the playful winds were shaking;Sweet songs the birds were makingIn the shade.The moss upon the treeWas as green as green could be,The clover on the leaRuddy glowed;Leaves were silver with the dew,Where the tall sowthistles grew,And I bade the maid adieuOn the road.Then I took myself to sea,While the little chiming beeSung his ballad on the lea,Humming sweet;And the red-winged butterflyWas sailing through the sky,Skimming up and bouncing byNear my feet.I left the little birds,And sweet lowing of the herds,And couldn't find out words,Do...
John Clare
Revealment.
At moonset when ghost speaks with ghost,And spirits meet where once they sinned,Between the bournes of found and lost,My soul met her soul on the wind,My late-lost Evalind.I kissed her mouth. Her face was wild.Two burning shadows were her eyes,Wherefrom the maiden love, that smiledA heartbreak smile of severed ties,Gazed with a wan surprise.Then suddenly I seemed to seeNo more her shape where beauty bloomed ...My own sad self gazed up at meMy sorrow, that had so assumedThe form of her entombed.
Madison Julius Cawein
James Lionel Michael
Be his rest the rest he sought:Calm and deep.Let no wayward word or thoughtVex his sleep.Peace the peace that no man knowsNow remainsWhere the wasted woodwind blows,Wakes and wanes.Latter leaves, in Autumns breath,White and sere,Sanctify the scholars death,Lying here.Soft surprises of the sunSwift, sereneOer the mute grave-grasses run,Cold and green.Wet and cold the hillwinds moan;Let them rave!Love that takes a tender toneLights his grave.He who knew the friendless faceSorrows shew,Often sought this quiet placeYears ago.One, too apt to faint and fail,Loved to strayHere where water-shallows wailDay by day.Care that lays her heavy...
Henry Kendall
Fragment: Rain.
The fitful alternations of the rain,When the chill wind, languid as with painOf its own heavy moisture, here and thereDrives through the gray and beamless atmosphere.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXVII.
Lasciato hai, Morte, senza sole il mondo.HER TRUE WORTH WAS KNOWN ONLY TO HIM AND TO HEAVEN. Death, thou the world, since that dire arrow sped,Sunless and cold hast left; Love weak and blind;Beauty and grace their brilliance have resign'd,And from my heavy heart all joy is fled;Honour is sunk, and softness banishèd.I weep alone the woes which all my kindShould weep--for virtue's fairest flower has pinedBeneath thy touch: what second blooms instead?Let earth, sea, air, with common wail bemoanMan's hapless race; which now, since Laura died,A flowerless mead, a gemless ring appears.The world possess'd, nor knew her worth, till flown!I knew it well, who here in grief abide;And heaven too knows, which decks its forehead with my...
Francesco Petrarca
Native Scenes.
O Native scenes, nought to my heart clings nearerThan you, ye Edens of my youthful hours;Nought in this world warms my affections dearerThan you, ye plains of white and yellow flowers;Ye hawthorn hedge-rows, and ye woodbine bowers,Where youth has rov'd, and still where manhood rovesThe pasture-pathway 'neath the willow groves.Ah, as my eye looks o'er those lovely scenes,All the delights of former life beholding;Spite of the pain, the care that intervenes,--When lov'd remembrance is her bliss unfolding,Picking her childish posies on your greens,--My soul can pause o'er its distress awhile,And Sorrow's cheek find leisure for a smile.
Forever
I had not known beforeForever was so long a word.The slow stroke of the clock of timeI had not heard.'Tis hard to learn so late;It seems no sad heart really learns,But hopes and trusts and doubts and fears,And bleeds and burns.The night is not all dark,Nor is the day all it seems,But each may bring me this relief--My dreams and dreams.I had not known beforeThat Never was so sad a word,So wrap me in forgetfulness--I have not heard.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Daniel Henry Deniehy
Take the harp, but very softly for our brother touch the strings:Wind and wood shall help to wail him, waves and mournful mountain-springs.Take the harp, but very softly, for the friend who grew so oldThrough the hours we would not hear of nights we would not fain behold!Other voices, sweeter voices, shall lament him year by year,Though the morning finds us lonely, though we sit and marvel here:Marvel much while Summer cometh, trammelled with November wheat,Gold about her forehead gleaming, green and gold about her feet;Yea, and while the land is dark with plover, gull, and gloomy glede,Where the cold, swift songs of Winter fill the interlucent reed.Yet, my harp and oh, my fathers! never look for Sorrows lay,Making life a mighty darkness in the patient noon of day;
Song of the Mystic
I walk down the Valley of Silence --Down the dim, voiceless valley -- alone!And I hear not the fall of a footstepAround me, save God's and my own;And the hush of my heart is as holyAs hovers where angels have flown!Long ago was I weary of voicesWhose music my heart could not win;Long ago was I weary of noisesThat fretted my soul with their din;Long ago was I weary of placesWhere I met but the human -- and sin.I walked in the world with the worldly;I craved what the world never gave;And I said: "In the world each Ideal,That shines like a star on life's wave,Is wrecked on the shores of the Real,And sleeps like a dream in a grave."And still did I pine for the Perfect,And still found the False with the True;
Abram Joseph Ryan
Lotus Hurt By The Cold
How many times, like lotus lilies risenUpon the surface of a river, thereHave risen floating on my blood the rareSoft glimmers of my hope escaped from prison.So I am clothed all over with the lightAnd sensitive beautiful blossoming of passion;Till naked for her in the finest fashionThe flowers of all my mud swim into sight.And then I offer all myself untoThis woman who likes to love me: but she turnsA look of hate upon the flower that burnsTo break and pour her out its precious dew.And slowly all the blossom shuts in pain,And all the lotus buds of love sink overTo die unopened: when my moon-faced lover,Kind on the weight of suffering, smiles again.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Ruth
When Ruth was left half desolate,Her Father took another Mate;And Ruth, not seven years old,A slighted child, at her own willWent wandering over dale and hill,In thoughtless freedom, bold.And she had made a pipe of straw,And music from that pipe could drawLike sounds of winds and floods;Had built a bower upon the green,As if she from her birth had beenAn infant of the woods.Beneath her father's roof, aloneShe seemed to live; her thoughts her own;Herself her own delight;Pleased with herself, nor sad, nor gay;And, passing thus the live-long day,She grew to woman's height.There came a Youth from Georgia's shoreA military casque he wore,With splendid feathers drest;He brought them from the Cherokees;<...
William Wordsworth
A Wish
Great dignity ever attends great grief,And silently walks beside it;And I always know when I see such woeThat Invisible Helpers guide it.And I know deep sorrow is like a tide,It cannot ever be flowing;The high-water mark in the night and the dark -Then dawn, and the outward going.But the people who pull at my heart-strings hardAre the ones whom destiny hurriesThrough commonplace ways to the end of their days,And pesters with paltry worries.The peddlers who trudge with a budget of waresTo the door that is slammed unkindly;The vendor who stands with his shop in his handsWhere the hastening hosts pass blindly;The woman who holds in her poor flat purseThe price of her rent-room only,While her starved eye feeds on the comfort...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Under the Figtree
Like drifts of balm from cedared glens, those darling memories come,With soft low songs, and dear old tales, familiar to our home.Then breathe again that faint refrain, so tender, sad, and true,My soul turns round with listening eyes unto the harp and you!The fragments of a broken Past are floating down the tide,And she comes gleaming through the dark, my love, my life, my bride!Oh! sit and sing I know her well, that phantom deadly fairWith large surprise, and sudden sighs, and streaming midnight hair!I know her well, for face to face we stood amongst the sheaves,Our voices mingling with a mist of music in the leaves!I know her well, for hand in hand we walked beside the sea,And heard the huddling waters boom beneath this old Figtree.God help the man that goes a...
In Memoriam. - Mrs. Georgiana Ives Comstock,
Died at Hartford, April 30th, 1861, aged 22.I saw a brilliant bridal. All that cheersAnd charms the leaping heart of youth was there;And she, the central object of the group,The cherished song-bird of her father's house,Array'd in beauty, was the loved of all.Would I could tell you what a world of flowersWere concentrated there--how they o'erflow'dIn wreaths and clusters--how they climb'd and sweptFrom vase to ceiling, with their gay festoonsWhispering each other in their mystic loreOf fragrance, and consulting how to swell,As best they might, the tide of happiness.A few brief moons departed and I soughtThe same abode. There was a gather'd throngBeyond the threshold stone. A few white flowersCrept o'er...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
The Penalty
Once in life I watched a Star;But I whistled, "Let her go!There are others, fairer far,Which my favouring skies shall showHere I lied, and herein IStood to pay the penalty.Marvellous the Planets shoneAs I ranged from coast to coast,But beyond comparisonRode the Star that I had lost.I had lied, and only IDid not guess the penalty!...When my Heavens were turned to blood,When the dark had filled my day,Furthest, but most faithful, stoodThat lone Star I cast away.I had loved myself, and IHave not lived and dare not die!
Rudyard
Longing.
When rathe wind-flowers many peer All rain filled at blue April skies, As on one smiles one's lady dear With the big tear-drops in her eyes; When budded May-apples, I wis, Be hidden by lone greenwood creeks, Be bashful as her cheeks we kiss, Be waxen as her dimpled cheeks; Then do I pine for happier skies, Shy wild-flowers fair by hill and burn; As one for one's sweet lady's eyes, And her white cheeks might pine and yearn.
To A Shade
If you have revisited the town, thin Shade,Whether to look upon your monument(I wonder if the builder has been paid)Or happier thoughted when the day is spentTo drink of that salt breath out of the seaWhen grey gulls flit about instead of men,And the gaunt houses put on majesty:Let these content you and be gone again;For they are at their old tricks yet.A manOf your own passionate serving kind who had broughtIn his full hands what, had they only known,Had given their childrens children loftier thought,Sweeter emotion, working in their veinsLike gentle blood, has been driven from the place,And insult heaped upon him for his painsAnd for his open-handedness, disgrace;An old foul mouth that slandered you had setThe pack upon him.
William Butler Yeats