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Mater Dolorosa.
The nuns sing, "ora pro nobis,"The lancets glitter above;And the beautiful Virgin whose robe isWoven of infinite love,Infinite love and sorrow,Prays for them there on high;Who has most need of her prayers, to-morrowShall tell them, they or I?Up in the hills togetherWe loved, where the world seemed true;Our world of the whin and heather,Our skies of a nearer blue,A blue from which one borrowsA faith that helps one dieO Mother, sweet Mother of Sorrows,None needs such more than I!We lived, we loved unweddedLove's sin and its shame that slays!No ill of the year we dreaded,No day of its coming days;Its coming days, their manyTrials by morn and night,And I know no land, not any,Where love's...
Madison Julius Cawein
Egeria's Silence
Her thought that, like a brook beside the way, Sang to my steps through all the wandering year, Has ceased from melody--O Love, allay My sudden fear! She cannot fail--the beauty of that brow Could never flower above a desert heart-- Somewhere beneath, the well-spring even now Lives, though apart. Some day, when winter has renewed her fount With cold, white-folded snows and quiet rain, O Love, O Love, her stream again will mount And sing again!
Henry John Newbolt
Maid Quiet
Where has Maid Quiet gone to,Nodding her russet hood?The winds that awakened the starsAre blowing through my blood.O how could I be so calmWhen she rose up to depart?Now words that called up the lightningAre hurtling through my heart.
William Butler Yeats
For Class Meeting
It is a pity and a shame - alas! alas! I know it is,To tread the trodden grapes again, but so it has been, so it is;The purple vintage long is past, with ripened clusters bursting soThey filled the wine-vats to the brim,-'t is strange you will be thirsting so!Too well our faithful memory tells what might be rhymed or sung about,For all have sighed and some have wept since last year's snows were flung about;The beacon flame that fired the sky, the modest ray that gladdened us,A little breath has quenched their light, and deepening shades have saddened us.No more our brother's life is ours for cheering or for grieving us,One only sadness they bequeathed, the sorrow of their leaving us;Farewell! Farewell! - I turn the leaf I read my chiming measure in;Who knows but...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Monk Maelanfaid
Maelanfaid saw a tiny birdA-grieving on the ground,And O, the sad lament he heard,That sorrow's self might sound:He could not read a note or wordThe song of grief inwound.Maelanfaid went within his cellTo keep a fast and pray,To listen to a voice would tellThe mystery away:What was the red long pain befellThe bird of grief all day?"Maelanfaid," airy voices call,"MacOcha Molv is dead,Who killed no creature great or small,Who helped all life instead:Now griefs of bird and blossom fallAround his funeral bed."
Michael Earls
A Lament.
I.White moons may come, white moons may go,She sleeps where wild wood blossoms blow,Nor knows she of the rosy June,Star-silver flowers o'er her strewn,The pearly paleness of the moon, - Alas! how should she know! II.The downy moth at evening comesTo suck thin honey from wet blooms;Long, lazy clouds that swimming highBrood white about the western sky,Grow red as molten iron and lie Above the fragrant glooms. III.Rare odors of the weed and fern,Dry whisp'rings of dim leaves that turn,A sound of hidden waters loneFrothed bubbling down the streaming stone,And now a wood-dove's plaintive moan Drift from the bushy burne. IV....
A Song
I am as weary as a childThat weeps upon its mother's breastFor joy of comforting. But IHave no such place to rest.I am as weary as a birdBlown by wild winds far out to seaWhen it regains its nest. But, Oh,There waits no nest for me.What think you may sustain the birdThat finds no housing after flight?And what the little child consoleWho weeps alone at night?
Theodosia Garrison
A Niëllo
IIt is not early spring and yetOf bloodroot blooms along the stream,And blotted banks of violet,My heart will dream.Is it because the windflower apesThe beauty that was once her brow,That the white memory of it shapesThe April now?Because the wild-rose wears the blushThat once made sweet her maidenhood,Its thought makes June of barren bushAnd empty wood?And then I think how young she died -Straight, barren Death stalks down the trees,The hard-eyed Hours by his side,That kill and freeze.IIWhen orchards are in bloom againMy heart will bound, my blood will beat,To hear the redbird so repeat,On boughs of rosy stain,His blithe, loud song, - like some far strainFrom out the...
Threnody
The South-wind bringsLife, sunshine and desire,And on every mount and meadowBreathes aromatic fire;But over the dead he has no power,The lost, the lost, he cannot restore;And, looking over the hills, I mournThe darling who shall not return.I see my empty house,I see my trees repair their boughs;And he, the wondrous child,Whose silver warble wildOutvalued every pulsing soundWithin the air's cerulean round,--The hyacinthine boy, for whomMorn well might break and April bloom,The gracious boy, who did adornThe world whereinto he was born,And by his countenance repayThe favor of the loving Day,--Has disappeared from the Day's eye;Far and wide she cannot find him;My hopes pursue, they cannot bind him.Re...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Fragment. Trionfo Della Morte.
Now since nor grief nor fear was longer there,Each thought on her fair face was clear to see,Composed into the calmness of despair -Not like a flame extinguished violently,But one consuming of its proper light.Even so, in peace, serene of soul, passed she.Even as a lamp, so lucid, softly-bright,Whose sustenance doth fail by slow degrees,Wearing unto the end, its wonted plight.Not pale, but whiter than the snow one seesFlaking a hillside through the windless air.Like one o'erwearied, she reposed in peaceAs 't were a sweet sleep filled each lovely eye,The soul already having fled from there.And this is what dull fools have named to die.Upon her fair face death itself seemed fair.
Emma Lazarus
John Day. - A Pathetic Ballad.
"A Day after the Fair." - Old Proverb.John Day he was the biggest manOf all the coachman kind,With back too broad to be conceivedBy any narrow mind.The very horses knew his weight,When he was in the rear,And wished his box a Christmas box,To come but once a year.Alas! against the shafts of love,What armor can avail?Soon Cupid sent an arrow throughHis scarlet coat of mail.The barmaid of the Crown he loved,From whom he never ranged,For though he changed his horses there,His love he never changed.He thought her fairest of all fares,So fondly love prefers;And often, among twelve outsides,Deemed no outside like hers!One day, as she was sitting downBeside the porter-...
Thomas Hood
Under Saturn
Do not because this day I have grown saturnineImagine that lost love, inseparable from my thoughtBecause I have no other youth, can make me pine;For how should I forget the wisdom that you brought,The comfort that you made? Although my wits have goneOn a fantastic ride, my horse's flanks are spurredBy childish memories of an old cross Pollexfen,And of a Middleton, whose name you never heard,And of a red-haired Yeats whose looks, although he diedBefore my time, seem like a vivid memory.You heard that labouring man who had served mypeople. He saidUpon the open road, near to the Sligo quay --No, no, not said, but cried it out -- "You have come again,And surely after twenty years it was time to come."I am thinking of a child's vow sworn in vainNeve...
Rose In The Garden.
Thirty years have come and gone,Melting away like Southern Snows,Since, in the light of a summer's night,I went to the garden to seek my Rose.Mine! Do you hear it, silver moon,Flooding my heart with your mellow shine?Mine! Be witness, ye distant stars,Looking on me with eyes divine!Tell me, tell me, wandering winds,Whisper it, if you may not speak--Did you ever, in all your round,Fan a lovelier brow or cheek?Long I nursed in my heart the love,Love which felt, but dared not tell,Till, I scarcely know how or when--It found wild words,- and all was well!I can hear her sweet voice even now--It makes my pulses leap and thrill--"I owe you more than I well can pay;You may take me, Robert, if you will!"
Horatio Alger, Jr.
Summer Is Ended.
To think that this meaningless thing was ever a roseScentless, colorless, this!Will it ever be thus (who knows?)Thus with our bliss,If we wait till the close?Though we care not to wait for the end, there comes the endSooner, later, at last,Which nothing can mar, nothing mend:An end locked fast,Bent we cannot re-bend.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
A Mother's Grave.
I.The years have passed in ceaseless round Since first they laid her here to restIn dreamless sleep beneath the silent mound, With folded hands upon her gentle breast.II.The ivy twines about the crumbling stone, And Springtime's scented blossoms flingTheir incense o'er the peaceful home That knows no more of suffering.III.Full many a Summer's sun has shed Its brightest smile upon the hallowed spot,And sobered Autumn and wild Winter spread Their garments here--she heeds them not!IV.The feathered wildlings of the wood and field Their untaught melody around it make,But she who sleeps with eyes so softly sealed Their gladsome songs can never more a...
George W. Doneghy
Fragment: 'When Soft Winds And Sunny Skies'.
When soft winds and sunny skiesWith the green earth harmonize,And the young and dewy dawn,Bold as an unhunted fawn,Up the windless heaven is gone, -Laugh - for ambushed in the day, -Clouds and whirlwinds watch their prey.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Sonnet To Byron
Byron! how sweetly sad thy melody!Attuning still the soul to tenderness,As if soft Pity, with unusual stress,Had touch'd her plaintive lute, and thou, being by,Hadst caught the tones, nor suffer'd them to die.O'ershadowing sorrow doth not make thee lessDelightful: thou thy griefs dost dressWith a bright halo, shining beamily,As when a cloud the golden moon doth veil,Its sides are ting'd with a resplendent glow,Through the dark robe oft amber rays prevail,And like fair veins in sable marble flow;Still warble, dying swan! still tell the tale,The enchanting tale, the tale of pleasing woe.
John Keats
To Them That Mourn
Lift up your heads: in life, in death,God knoweth his head was high.Quit we the coward's broken breathWho watched a strong man die.If we must say, 'No more his peerCometh; the flag is furled.'Stand not too near him, lest he hearThat slander on the world.The good green earth he loved and trodIs still, with many a scar,Writ in the chronicles of God,A giant-bearing star.He fell: but Britain's banner swingsAbove his sunken crown.Black death shall have his toll of kingsBefore that cross goes down.Once more shall move with mighty thingsHis house of ancient tale,Where kings whose hands were kissed of kingsWent in: and came out pale.O young ones of a darker day,In art's wan colours clad,...
Gilbert Keith Chesterton