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Miss Blanche Says
And you are the poet, and so you wantSomething what is it? a theme, a fancy?Something or other the Muse wont grantTo your old poetical necromancy;Why, one half you poets you cant denyDont know the Muse when you chance to meet her,But sit in your attics and mope and sighFor a faineant goddess to drop from the sky,When flesh and blood may be standing byQuite at your service, should you but greet her.What if I told you my own romance?Women are poets, if you so take them,One third poet, the rest what chanceOf man and marriage may choose to make them.Give me ten minutes before you go,Here at the window well sit together,Watching the currents that ebb and flow;Watching the world as it drifts belowUp the hot Avenues dusty glow:<...
Bret Harte
When Twilight Dews.
When twilight dews are falling soft Upon the rosy sea, love,I watch the star, whose beam so oft Has lighted me to thee, love.And thou too, on that orb so dear, Dost often gaze at even,And think, tho' lost for ever here, Thou'lt yet be mine in heaven.There's not a garden walk I tread, There's not a flower I see, love,But brings to mind some hope that's fled, Some joy that's gone with thee, Love.And still I wish that hour was near, When, friends and foes forgiven,The pains, the ills we've wept thro' here May turn to smiles in heaven.
Thomas Moore
Life
A baby played with the surplice sleeveOf a gentle priest; while in accents low,The sponsors murmured the grand "I believe,"And the priest bade the mystic waters to flowIn the name of the Father, and the Son,And Holy Spirit -- Three in One.Spotless as a lily's leaf,Whiter than the Christmas snow;Not a sign of sin or grief,And the babe laughed, sweet and low.A smile flitted over the baby's face:Or was it the gleam of its angel's wingJust passing then, and leaving a traceOf its presence as it soared to sing?A hymn when words and waters winTo grace and life a child of sin.Not an outward sign or token,That a child was saved from woe;But the bonds of sin were broken,And the babe laughed, sweet and low.A...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Crazy Jane On The Day Of Judgment
'Love is allUnsatisfiedThat cannot take the wholeBody and soul';And that is what Jane said.'Take the sourIf you take meI can scoff and lourAnd scold for an hour.'"That's certainly the case,' said he.'Naked I lay,The grass my bed;Naked and hidden away,That black day';And that is what Jane said.'What can be shown?What true love be?All could be known or shownIf Time were but gone.''That's certainly the case,' said he.
William Butler Yeats
Union Square
With the man I love who loves me not,I walked in the street-lamps' flare;We watched the world go home that nightIn a flood through Union Square.I leaned to catch the words he saidThat were light as a snowflake falling;Ah well that he never leaned to hearThe words my heart was calling.And on we walked and on we walkedPast the fiery lights of the picture showsWhere the girls with thirsty eyes go byOn the errand each man knows.And on we walked and on we walked,At the door at last we said good-bye;I knew by his smile he had not heardMy heart's unuttered cry.With the man I love who loves me notI walked in the street-lamps' flareBut oh, the girls who can ask for loveIn the lights of Union Square.
Sara Teasdale
Libido
How should I know? The enormous wheels of willDrove me cold-eyed on tired and sleepless feet.Night was void arms and you a phantom still,And day your far light swaying down the street.As never fool for love, I starved for you;My throat was dry and my eyes hot to see.Your mouth so lying was most heaven in view,And your remembered smell most agony.Love wakens love! I felt your hot wrist shiverAnd suddenly the mad victory I plannedFlashed real, in your burning bending head. . . .My conqueror's blood was cool as a deep riverIn shadow; and my heart beneath your handQuieter than a dead man on a bed.
Rupert Brooke
After Long Grief And Pain.
There is a place hung o'er with summer boughsAnd drowsy skies wherein the gray hawk sleeps;Where waters flow, within whose lazy deeps,Like silvery prisms that the winds arouse,The minnows twinkle; where the bells of cowsTinkle the stillness, and the bob-white keepsCalling from meadows where the reaper reaps,And children's laughter haunts an old-time house;A place where life wears ever an honest smellOf hay and honey, sun and elder-bloom -Like some dear, modest girl - within her hair:Where, with our love for comrade, we may dwellFar from the city's strife whose cares consume -Oh, take my hand and let me lead you there.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Lost Soul
Look! look there!Send your eyes across the grayBy my finger-point awayThrough the vaporous, fumy air.Beyond the air, you see the dark?Beyond the dark, the dawning day?On its horizon, pray you, markSomething like a ruined heapOf worlds half-uncreated, that go back:Down all the grades through which they roseUp to harmonious life and law's repose,Back, slow, to the awful deepOf nothingness, mere being's lack:On its surface, lone and bare,Shapeless as a dumb despair,Formless, nameless, something lies:Can the vision in your eyesIts idea recognize? 'Tis a poor lost soul, alack!--Half he lived some ages back;But, with hardly opened eyes,Thinking him already wise,Down he sat and wrote a book;Drew h...
George MacDonald
Fragments Of Ancient Poetry, Fragment III
Evening is grey on the hills. Thenorth wind resounds through thewoods. White clouds rise on the sky: thetrembling snow descends. The river howlsafar, along its winding course. Sad,by a hollow rock, the grey-hair'd Carrylsat. Dry fern waves over his head; hisseat is in an aged birch. Clear to theroaring winds he lifts his voice of woe.Tossed on the wavy ocean is He,the hope of the isles; Malcolm, thesupport of the poor; foe to the proudin arms! Why hast thou left us behind?why live we to mourn thy fate? Wemight have heard, with thee, the voiceof the deep; have seen the oozy rock.Sad on the sea-beat shore thy spouselooketh for thy return. The time ofthy promise is come; the night is gatheringaround. But no white sail...
James Macpherson
From The Old To The New. Lines For The New Year
I hear the beat of the unresting tide On either shore as swiftly on I glide With eager haste the narrow channel o'er, Which links the floods behind with those before. I hear behind me as I onward glide, Faint, farewell voices blending with the tide, While from beyond, now near, now far away, Come stronger voices chiding each delay; And drowning, oft, with wild, discordant burst, The melancholy minor of the first"Farewell! farewell! - ye leave us far behind you!" - Tis thus the bright-winged Hours sigh from the Past -"Ye leave us, and the coming ones will find you Still vainly dreaming they will ever last, -Still trifling with the gifts all fresh and glowing, Each in its turn will scatter in your way, ...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Beatrice
Send out the singers,let the room be still;They have not eased my pain nor brought me sleep.Close out the sun, for I would have it darkThat I may feel how black the grave will be.The sun is setting, for the light is red,And you are outlined in a golden fire,Like Ursula upon an altar-screen.Come, leave the light and sit beside my bed,For I have had enough of saints and prayers.Strange broken thoughts are beating in my brain,They come and vanish and again they come.It is the fever driving out my soul,And Death stands waiting by the arras there.Ornella, I will speak, for soon my lipsShall keep a silence till the end of time.You have a mouth for loving,listen then:Keep tryst with Love before Death comes to tryst;For I, who die, could wi...
Songs Set To Music: 26.
Some kind angel, gently flying,Moved with pity at my pain,Tell Corinna I am dyingTill with joy we meet again.Tell Corinna, since we partedI have never known delight,And shall soon be broken-heartedIf I longer want her sight.Tell her how her lover, mourning,Thinks each lazy day a year,Cursing every morn returning,Since Corinna is not here.Tell her, too, not distant places,Will she be but true and kind,Join'd with time and change of faces,E'er shall shake my constant mind.
Matthew Prior
The Solitary.
1.Dar'st thou amid the varied multitudeTo live alone, an isolated thing?To see the busy beings round thee spring,And care for none; in thy calm solitude,A flower that scarce breathes in the desert rudeTo Zephyr's passing wing?2.Not the swart Pariah in some Indian grove,Lone, lean, and hunted by his brother's hate,Hath drunk so deep the cup of bitter fateAs that poor wretch who cannot, cannot love:He bears a load which nothing can remove,A killing, withering weight.3.He smiles - 'tis sorrow's deadliest mockery;He speaks - the cold words flow not from his soul;He acts like others, drains the genial bowl, -Yet, yet he longs - although he fears - to die;He pants to reach what yet he seems to fly,Dull life's extre...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
To Youth
Where art thou gone, light-ankled Youth?With wing at either shoulder,And smile that never left thy mouthUntil the Hours grew colder:Then somewhat seemd to whisper nearThat thou and I must part;I doubted it; I felt no fear,No weight upon the heart.If aught befell it, Love was byAnd rolld it off again;So, if there ever was a sigh,T was not a sigh of pain.I may not call thee back; but thouReturnest when the handOf gentle Sleep waves oer my browHis poppy-crested wand;Then smiling eyes bend over mine,Then lips once pressd invite;But sleep hath given a silent sign,And both, alas! take flight.
Walter Savage Landor
Hauntings
In the grey tumult of these after yearsOft silence falls; the incessant wranglers part;And less-than-echoes of remembered tearsHush all the loud confusion of the heart;And a shade, through the toss'd ranks of mirth and cryingHungers, and pains, and each dull passionate mood,Quite lost, and all but all forgot, undying,Comes back the ecstasy of your quietude.So a poor ghost, beside his misty streams,Is haunted by strange doubts, evasive dreams,Hints of a pre-Lethean life, of men,Stars, rocks, and flesh, things unintelligible,And light on waving grass, he knows not when,And feet that ran, but where, he cannot tell.
The Sea Of Death. - A Fragment.
- - Methought I sawLife swiftly treading over endless space;And, at her foot-print, but a bygone pace,The ocean-past, which, with increasing wave,Swallow'd her steps like a pursuing grave.Sad were my thoughts that anchor'd silentlyOn the dead waters of that passionless sea,Unstirr'd by any touch of living breath:Silence hung over it, and drowsy Death,Like a gorged sea-bird, slept with folded wingsOn crowded carcases - sad passive thingsThat wore the thin gray surface, like a veilOver the calmness of their features pale.And there were spring-faced cherubs that did sleepLike water-lilies on that motionless deep,How beautiful! with bright unruffled hairOn sleek unfretted brows, and eyes that wereBuried in marble tombs,...
Thomas Hood
Quatrains.
The Sky Line.Like black fangs in a cruel ogre's jaw The grim piles lift against the sunset sky;Down drops the night, and shuts the horrid maw-- I listen, breathless, but there comes no cry.Defeat.He sits and looks into the west Where twilight gathers, wan and gray,A knight who quit the Golden Quest, And flung Excalibur away.To an Amazon.O! twain in spirit, we shall know Thy like no more, so fierce, so mild,One breast shorn clean to rest the bow, One milk-full for thy warrior child.The Old Mother.Life is like an old mother whom trouble and toilHave sufficed the best part of her nature to spoil,Whom her children, the Passions, so ...
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
The False Knight's Tragedy
A false knight wooed a maiden poor, And his high halls left he To stoop in at her cottage door, When night left none to see. And, well-a-day, it is a tale For pity too severe-- A tale would melt the sternest eye, And wake the deafest ear. He stole her heart, he stole her love, 'T was all the wealth she had; Her truth and fame likewise stole he, * * * * And they rode on, and they rode on; Far on this pair did ride, Till the maiden's heart with fear and love Beat quick against her side. And on they rode till rocks grew high. "Sir Knight, what have we here?" "Unsaddle, maid, for here we stop:" And death's tongue smote her ear.
John Clare