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Farewell
Farewell, Aziz, it was not mine to fold you Against my heart for any length of days.I had no loveliness, alas, to hold you, No siren voice, no charm that lovers praise.Yet, in the midst of grief and desolation, Solace I my despairing soul with this:Once, for my life's eternal consolation, You lent my lips your loveliness to kiss.Ah, that one night! I think Love's very essence Distilled itself from out my joy and pain,Like tropical trees, whose fervid inflorescence Glows, gleams, and dies, never to bloom again.Often I marvel how I met the morning With living eyes after that night with you,Ah, how I cursed the wan, white light for dawning, And mourned the paling stars, as each withdrew!Yet I, eve...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
From Hafiz
I said to heaven that glowed above,O hide yon sun-filled zone,Hide all the stars you boast;For, in the world of loveAnd estimation true,The heaped-up harvest of the moonIs worth one barley-corn at most,The Pleiads' sheaf but two.If my darling should depart,And search the skies for prouder friends,God forbid my angry heartIn other love should seek amends.When the blue horizon's hoopMe a little pinches here,Instant to my grave I stoop,And go find thee in the sphere.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ojira, to Her Lover
I am waiting in the desert, looking out towards the sunset,And counting every moment till we meet.I am waiting by the marshes and I tremble and I listenTill the soft sands thrill beneath your coming feet.Till I see you, tall and slender, standing clear against the skylineA graceful shade across the lingering red,While your hair the breezes ruffle, turns to silver in the twilight,And makes a fair faint aureole round your head.Far away towards the sunset I can see a narrow river,That unwinds itself in red tranquillity;I can hear its rippled meeting, and the gurgle of its greeting,As it mingles with the loved and long sought sea.In the purple sky above me showing dark against the starlight,Long wavering flights of homeward birds fly low,They...
Chalkey Hall
How bland and sweet the greeting of this breezeTo him who fliesFrom crowded street and red wall's weary gleam,Till far behind him like a hideous dreamThe close dark city liesHere, while the market murmurs, while men throngThe marble floorOf Mammon's altar, from the crush and dinOf the world's madness let me gather inMy better thoughts once more.Oh, once again revive, while on my earThe cry of GainAnd low hoarse hum of Traffic die away,Ye blessed memories of my early dayLike sere grass wet with rain!Once more let God's green earth and sunset airOld feelings waken;Through weary years of toil and strife and ill,Oh, let me feel that my good angel stillHath not his trust forsaken.And well do time and p...
John Greenleaf Whittier
I Know I Love Thee.
I shall never forget the day, Annie,When I bid thee a fond adieu;With a careless good bye I left thee,For my cares and my fears were few.True that thine eyes seemed brightest; -True that none had so fair a brow, -I thought that I loved thee then, Annie,But I knew that I love thee now.I had neither wealth nor beauty,Whilst thou owned of both a share,I bad only a honest purposeAnd the courage the Fates to dare.To all others my heart preferred thee,And 'twas hard to part I know;For I thought that I loved thee then, Annie,But I know that I love thee now.Oh! what would I give to-night, love,Could I clasp thee once again,To my heart that is aching with loving, -To my heart where my love does r...
John Hartley
Madonna Mia
Under green apple-boughsThat never a storm will rouse,My lady hath her houseBetween two bowers;In either of the twainRed roses full of rain;She hath for bondwomenAll kind of flowers.She hath no handmaid fairTo draw her curled gold hairThrough rings of gold that bearHer whole hairs weight;She hath no maids to standGold-clothed on either hand;In all the great green landNone is so great.She hath no more to wearBut one white hood of vairDrawn over eyes and hair,Wrought with strange gold,Made for some great queens head,Some fair great queen since dead;And one strait gown of redAgainst the cold.Beneath her eyelids deepLove lying seems asleep,Love, swift to wake, to weep,<...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
To the Hills!
'T is eight miles out and eight miles in, Just at the break of morn.'T is ice without and flame within, To gain a kiss at dawn!Far, where the Lilac Hills arise Soft from the misty plain,A lone enchanted hollow lies Where I at last drew rein.Midwinter grips this lonely land, This stony, treeless waste,Where East, due East, across the sand, We fly in fevered haste.Pull up! the East will soon be red, The wild duck westward fly,And make above my anxious head, Triangles in the sky.Like wind we go; we both are still So young; all thanks to Fate!(It cuts like knives, this air so chill,) Dear God! if I am late!Behind us, wrapped in mist and sleep The Ruined Cit...
The Disciples
A great king made a feast for Love,And golden was the board and goldThe hundred, wondrous gauds thereof;Soft lights like roses fell aboveRare dishes exquisite and fine;In jeweled goblets shone the wine--A great king made a feast for Love.Yet Love as gladly and full-fed hath faredUpon a broken crust that two have shared;And from scant wine as glorious dreams drawn upSeeing two lovers kissed above the cup.A great king made for Love's delightA temple wonderful whereinServed jeweled priest and acolyte;There fell no darkness day or nightSince there his highest altar shoneWith flaming gems as some white sun,A temple made for Love's delight.Yet Love hath found a temple as complete<...
Theodosia Garrison
Scene A Garden,
Margaret. Faust.MARGARET.DOST thou believe in God?FAUST. Doth mortal liveWho dares to say that he believes in God?Go, bid the priest a truthful answer give,Go, ask the wisest who on earth e'er trod,Their answer will appear to beGiven alone in mockery.MARGARET.Then thou dost not believe? This sayest thou?FAUST.Sweet love, mistake not what I utter now!Who knows His name?Who dares proclaim:Him I believe?Who so can feelHis heart to steelTo sari believe Him not?The All-Embracer,The All-Sustained,Holds and sustains He notThee, me, Himself?Hang not the heavens their arch overhead?Lies not the earth beneath us, firm?<...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - January.
1. LORD, what I once had done with youthful might, Had I been from the first true to the truth, Grant me, now old, to do--with better sight, And humbler heart, if not the brain of youth; So wilt thou, in thy gentleness and ruth, Lead back thy old soul, by the path of pain, Round to his best--young eyes and heart and brain. 2. A dim aurora rises in my east, Beyond the line of jagged questions hoar, As if the head of our intombed High Priest Began to glow behind the unopened door: Sure the gold wings will soon rise from the gray!-- They rise not. Up I rise, press on the more, To meet the slow coming of the Master's day.
George MacDonald
Hope.
See through yon cloud that rolls in wrath,One little star benignant peep,To light along their trackless pathThe wanderers of the stormy deep.And thus, oh Hope! thy lovely formIn sorrow's gloomy night shall beThe sun that looks through cloud and stormUpon a dark and moonless sea.When heaven is all serene and fair,Full many a brighter gem we meet;'Tis when the tempest hovers there,Thy beam is most divinely sweet.The rainbow, when the sun declines,Like faithless friend will disappear;Thy light, dear star! more brightly shinesWhen all is wail and weeping here.And though Aurora's stealing beamMay wake a morning of delight,'Tis only thy consoling beamWill smile amid affliction's night.
Joseph Rodman Drake
On Music
Many love music but for musics sake;Many because her touches can awakeThoughts that repose within the breast half dead,And rise to follow where she loves to lead.What various feelings come from days gone by!What tears from far-off sources dim the eye!Few, when light fingers with sweet voices play,And melodies swell, pause, and melt away,Mind how at every touch, at every tone,A spark of life hath glistend and hath gone.
Walter Savage Landor
Holidays
The holiest of all holidays are those Kept by ourselves in silence and apart; The secret anniversaries of the heart, When the full river of feeling overflows;--The happy days unclouded to their close; The sudden joys that out of darkness start As flames from ashes; swift desires that dart Like swallows singing down each wind that blows!White as the gleam of a receding sail, White as a cloud that floats and fades in air, White as the whitest lily on a stream,These tender memories are;--a Fairy Tale Of some enchanted land we know not where, But lovely as a landscape in a dream.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
To Mary Boyle
I.Spring-flowers! While you still delay to takeYour leave of town,Our elm-trees ruddy-hearted blossom-flakeIs fluttering down.II.Be truer to your promise. There! I heardOur cuckoo call.Be needle to the magnet of your word,Nor wait, till allIII.Our vernal bloom from every vale and plainAnd garden pass,And all the gold from each laburnum chainDrop to the grass.IV.Is memory with your Marian gone to rest,Dead with the dead?For ere she left us, when we met, you prestMy hand, and saidV.I come with your spring-flowers. You came not, my friend;My birds would sing,You heard not. Take then this spring-flower...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Shepherdess Of The Arno.
'Tis no wild and wond'rous legend, but a simple pious taleOf a gentle shepherd maiden, dwelling in Italian vale,Near where Arno's glittering waters like the sunbeams flash and playAs they mirror back the vineyards through which they take their way.She was in the rosy dawning of girlhood fair and bright,And, like morning's smiles and blushes, was she lovely to the sight;Soft cheeks like sea-shells tinted and radiant hazel eyes;But on changing earthly lover were not lavished smiles or sighs.Still, that gentle heart was swelling with a love unbounded, true,Such as worldly breast, earth harden'd, passion-wearied, never knew;And each day she sought the chapel of Our Lady in the dell,There to seek an hour's communing with the Friend she loved so well.Often...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Canzone XVI.
Italia mia, benchè 'l parlar sia indarno.TO THE PRINCES OF ITALY, EXHORTING THEM TO SET HER FREE. O my own Italy! though words are vainThe mortal wounds to close,Unnumber'd, that thy beauteous bosom stain,Yet may it soothe my painTo sigh forth Tyber's woes,And Arno's wrongs, as on Po's sadden'd shoreSorrowing I wander, and my numbers pour.Ruler of heaven! By the all-pitying loveThat could thy Godhead moveTo dwell a lowly sojourner on earth,Turn, Lord! on this thy chosen land thine eye:See, God of Charity!From what light cause this cruel war has birth;And the hard hearts by savage discord steel'd,Thou, Father! from on high,Touch by my humble voice, that stubborn wrath may yield!Ye, to whose sovereign...
Francesco Petrarca
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXI.
S' onesto amor può meritar mercede.HE PRAYS THAT, IN REWARD FOR HIS LONG AND VIRTUOUS ATTACHMENT, SHE WILL VISIT HIM IN DEATH. If Mercy e'er rewardeth virtuous love,If Pity still can do, as she has done,I shall have rest, for clearer than the sunMy lady and the world my faith approve.Who fear'd me once, now knows, yet scarce believesI am the same who wont her love to seek,Who seek it still; where she but heard me speak,Or saw my face, she now my soul perceives.Wherefore I hope that e'en in heaven she mournsMy heavy anguish, and on me the whileHer sweet face eloquent of pity turns,And that when shuffled off this mortal coil,Her way to me with that fair band she'll wend,True follower of Christ and virtue's friend.
Boyhood
O Days that hold us; and years that mold us!And dreams and mem'ries no time destroys!Where lie the islands, the morning islands,And where the highlands we knew when boys?Oh, tell us, whether the happy heatherStill purples ways we used to roam;And mid its roses, its oldtime roses,The place reposes we knew as home.Oh, could we find him, that boy, and bind him,The boy we were that never grew,By whom we're haunted, our hearts are haunted,What else were wanted by me and you?Again to see it! Again to knee it!The pond we waded, the brook we swum;That held more pleasures, more priceless pleasures,Than all the treasures to which we come.Again to follow through wood and hollowA cowbell's tinkle, a bird's wild call,To w...
Madison Julius Cawein