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Peggy Band
O it was a lorn and a dismal night, And the storm beat loud and high; Not a friendly light to guide me right Was there shining in the sky, When a lonely hut my wanderings met, Lost in a foreign land, And I found the dearest friend as yet In my lovely Peggy Band. "O, father, here's a soldier lad, And weary he seems to be." "Then welcome in," the old man said, And she gave her seat to me. The fire she trimmed, and my clothes she dried With her own sweet lily hand, And o'er the soldier's lot she sighed, While I blest my Peggy Band. When I told the tale of my wandering years, And the nights unknown to sleep, She made excuse to hide her tears, And she stole aw...
John Clare
Under The Violets
Her hands are cold; her face is white;No more her pulses come and go;Her eyes are shut to life and light; -Fold the white vesture, snow on snow,And lay her where the violets blow.But not beneath a graven stone,To plead for tears with alien eyes;A slender cross of wood aloneShall say, that here a maiden liesIn peace beneath the peaceful skies.And gray old trees of hugest limbShall wheel their circling shadows roundTo make the scorching sunlight dimThat drinks the greenness from the ground,And drop their dead leaves on her mound.When o'er their boughs the squirrels run,And through their leaves the robins call,And, ripening in the autumn sun,The acorns and the chestnuts fall,Doubt not that she will heed them all...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Taste For Nothingness
Dull soul, to whom the battle once was sweet,Hope, who had spurred your ardour and your fameWill no more ride you! Lie down without shameOld horse, who makes his way on stumbling feet.Give up, my heart, and sleep your stolid sleep.For you old rover, spirit sadly spent,Love is no longer fair, nor is dispute;Farewell to brass alarms, sighs of the flute!Pleasures, give up a heart grown impotent!The Spring, once wonderful, has lost its scent!And Time engulfs me in its steady tide,As blizzards cover corpses with their snow;And poised on high I watch the world below,No longer looking for a place to hide.Avalanche, sweep me off within your slide!
Charles Baudelaire
To A False Friend.
Our hands have met, but not our hearts;Our hands will never meet again.Friends, if we have ever been,Friends we cannot now remain:I only know I loved you once,I only know I loved in vain;Our hands have met, but not our hearts;Our hands will never meet again!Then farewell to heart and hand!I would our hands had never met:Even the outward form of loveMust be resign'd with some regret.Friends, we still might seem to be,If I my wrong could e'er forget;Our hands have join'd but not our hearts:I would our hands had never met!
Thomas Hood
The Voice Of The Thorn
IWhen the thorn on the downQuivers naked and cold,And the mid-aged and oldPace the path there to town,In these words dry and drearIt seems to them sighing:"O winter is tryingTo sojourners here!"IIWhen it stands fully tressedOn a hot summer day,And the ewes there astrayFind its shade a sweet rest,By the breath of the breezeIt inquires of each farer:"Who would not be sharerOf shadow with these?"IIIBut by day or by night,And in winter or summer,Should I be the comerAlong that lone height,In its voicing to meOnly one speech is spoken:"Here once was nigh brokenA heart, and by thee."
Thomas Hardy
Tears.
The tears of saints more sweet by farThan all the songs of sinners are.
Robert Herrick
Wrinkles
When Helen first saw wrinkles in her face(T was when some fifty long had settled thereAnd intermarried and branchd off awide)She threw herself upon her couch and wept:On this side hung her head, and over that Listlessly she let fall the faithless brassThat made the men as faithless.But when youFound them, or fancied them, and would not hearThat they were only vestiges of smiles, Or the impression of some amorous hairAstray from cloisterd curls and roseate band,Which had been lying there all night perhapsUpon a skin so soft, No, no, you said,Sure, they are coming, yes, are come, are here: Well, and what matters it, while thou art too!
Walter Savage Landor
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XLII.
Zefiro torna, e 'l bel tempo rimena.RETURNING SPRING BRINGS TO HIM ONLY INCREASE OF GRIEF. Zephyr returns; and in his jocund trainBrings verdure, flowers, and days serenely clear;Brings Progne's twitter, Philomel's lorn strain,With every bloom that paints the vernal year;Cloudless the skies, and smiling every plain;With joyance flush'd, Jove views his daughter dear;Love's genial power pervades earth, air, and main;All beings join'd in fond accord appear.But nought to me returns save sorrowing sighs,Forced from my inmost heart by her who boreThose keys which govern'd it unto the skies:The blossom'd meads, the choristers of air,Sweet courteous damsels can delight no more;Each face looks savage, and each prospect drear....
Francesco Petrarca
Home
Rest, rest - there is no rest,Until the quiet graveComes with its narrow archThe heart to saveFrom life's long cankering rust,From torpor, cold and still -The loveless, saddened dust,The jaded will.And yet, be far the hourWhose haven calls me home;Long be the arduous dayTill evening come;What sureness now remainsBut that through livelong strifeOnly the loser gainsAn end to life?Then in the soundless deepOf even the shallowest graveChildhood and love he'll keep,And his soul save;All vext desire, all vainCries of a conflict doneFallen to rest again;Death's refuge won.
Walter De La Mare
The Broken Oar
Once upon Iceland's solitary strand A poet wandered with his book and pen, Seeking some final word, some sweet Amen, Wherewith to close the volume in his hand.The billows rolled and plunged upon the sand, The circling sea-gulls swept beyond his ken, And from the parting cloud-rack now and then Flashed the red sunset over sea and land.Then by the billows at his feet was tossed A broken oar; and carved thereon he read, "Oft was I weary, when I toiled at thee";And like a man, who findeth what was lost, He wrote the words, then lifted up his head, And flung his useless pen into the sea.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Memorials Of A Tour In Scotland 1814 I. Suggested By A Beautiful Ruin Upon One Of The Islands Of Loch Lomond
ITo barren heath, bleak moor, and quaking fen,Or depth of labyrinthine glen;Or into trackless forest setWith trees, whose lofty umbrage met;World-wearied Men withdrew of yore;(Penance their trust, and prayer their storeAnd in the wilderness were boundTo such apartments as they found,Or with a new ambition raised;That God might suitably be praised.IIHigh lodged the 'Warrior', like a bird of prey;Or where broad waters round him lay:But this wild Ruin is no ghostOf his devices buried, lost!Within this little lonely isleThere stood a consecrated Pile;Where tapers burned, and mass was sung,For them whose timid Spirits clungTo mortal succour, though the tombHad fixed, for ever fixed, their doom!
William Wordsworth
On The Brink.
I watch'd her as she stoop'd to pluckA wildflower in her hair to twine;And wish'd that it had been my luckTo call her mine.Anon I heard her rate with madMad words her babe within its cot;And felt particularly gladThat it had not.I knew (such subtle brains have men)That she was uttering what she shouldn't;And thought that I would chide, and thenI thought I wouldn't:Who could have gazed upon that face,Those pouting coral lips, and chided?A Rhadamanthus, in my place,Had done as I did:For ire wherewith our bosoms glowIs chain'd there oft by Beauty's spell;And, more than that, I did not knowThe widow well.So the harsh phrase pass'd unreproved.Still mute - (O brothers, was it sin?) -I ...
Charles Stuart Calverley
Slumber Songs
ISleep, little eyesThat brim with childish tears amid thy play,Be comforted!No grief of night can weighAgainst the joys that throng thy coming day.Sleep, little heart!There is no place in Slumberland for tears:Life soon enough will bring its chilling fearsAnd sorrows that will dim the after years.Sleep, little heart!IIAh, little eyesDead blossoms of a springtime long ago,That life's storm crushed and left to lie belowThe benediction of the falling snow!Sleep, little heartThat ceased so long ago its frantic beat!The years that come and go with silent feetHave naught to tell save this, that rest is sweet.Dear little heart.
John McCrae
The Children
These were our children who died for our lands: they were dear in our sight.We have only the memory left of their hometreasured sayings and laughter.The price of our loss shall be paid to our hands, not another's hereafter.Neither the Alien nor Priest shall decide on it. That is our right.But who shall return us the children?At the hour the Barbarian chose to disclose his pretences,And raged against Man, they engaged, on the breasts that they bared for us,The first felon-stroke of the sword he had longtime prepared for us,Their bodies were all our defence while we wrought our defences.They bought us anew with their blood, forbearing to blame us,Those hours which we had not made good when the Judgment o'ercame us.They believed us and perished for it. Our statecraft, ou...
Rudyard
To A Mountain Daisy, On Turning One Down With The Plough In April, 1786.
Wee, modest, crimson-tipped flow'r, Thou's met me in an evil hour; For I maun crush amang the stoure Thy slender stem: To spare thee now is past my pow'r, Thou bonnie gem. Alas! it's no thy neebor sweet, The bonnie lark, companion meet! Bending thee 'mang the dewy weet, Wi' spreckl'd breast, When upward-springing, blythe, to greet The purpling east. Cauld blew the bitter-biting north Upon thy early, humble birth; Yet cheerfully thou glinted forth Amid the storm, Scarce rear'd above the parent earth Thy tender form. The flaunting flowers our gardens yield, High shelt'ring woods and wa's maun shield But thou, beneath t...
Robert Burns
Lovers At The Lake Side.
I.'And you brought him home.' 'I did, ay Ronald, it rested with me.''Love!' 'Yes.' 'I would fain you were not so calm.' 'I cannot weep. No.''What is he like, your poor father?' 'He is - like - this fallen treeProne at our feet, by the still lake taking on rose from the glow,II.Now scarlet, O look! overcoming the blue both lake and sky,While the waterfalls waver like smoke, then leap in and are not.And shining snow-points of high sierras cast down, there they lie.''O Laura - I cannot bear it. Laura! as if I forgot.'III.'No, you remember, and I remember that evening - like thisWhen we come forth from the gloomy Canyon, lo, a sinking sun.And, Ronald, you gave to me your troth ring, I gave my troth kiss.''Give me anoth...
Jean Ingelow
Anacreontic.
"She never looked so kind before-- "Yet why the wanton's smile recall?"I've seen this witchery o'er and o'er, "'Tis hollow, vain, and heartless all!"Thus I said and, sighing drained The cup which she so late had tasted;Upon whose rim still fresh remained The breath, so oft in falsehood wasted.I took the harp and would have sung As if 'twere not of her I sang;But still the notes on Lamia hung-- On whom but Lamia could they hang?Those eyes of hers, that floating shine, Like diamonds in some eastern river;That kiss, for which, if worlds were mine, A world for every kiss I'd give her.That frame so delicate, yet warmed With flushes of love's genial hue;A mould transparent, as if f...
Thomas Moore
Mary's Ghost. - A Pathetic Ballad.
'Twas in the middle of the night,To sleep young William tried,When Mary's ghost came stealing in,And stood at his bedside.O William dear! O William dear!My rest eternal ceases;Alas! my everlasting peaceIs broken into pieces.I thought the last of all my caresWould end with my last minute;But though I went to my long home,I didn't stay long in it.The body-snatchers they have come,And made a snatch at me;It's very hard them kind of menWon't let a body be!You thought that I was buried deep,Quite decent-like and chary,But from her grave in Mary-bone,They've come and boned your Mary.The arm that used to take your armIs took to Dr. Vyse;And both my legs are gone to walkThe hospita...