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In my Garden of Roses.
Oh! Come to me, darling! My Sweet!Here where the sunlight reposes;Pink petals lie thick at my feet,Here in my garden of rose's.Oh! come to my bower! My Queen!Sweet with the breath of the flow'rs;Shaded with curtains of green; -Here let us dream through the hours.The sky is unfleck'd overhead, -Trees languish in Sol's fervid ray, -The earth to the heavens is wed,And robin is piping his lay.Lost is their sweetness upon me;Vainly their beauties displaying; -Cheerless I wander, and lonely, -Hoping and longing and praying.Oh! come to me, Queenliest flower!Reign in my garden of roses;Humbly we bow to thy power,Loving the sway thou imposes.Hark! 'Tis her tinkling footfall!Robin desist from th...
John Hartley
The Sunshine Of Thine Eyes.
The sunshine of thine eyes, (Oh still, celestial beam!)Whatever it touches it fills With the life of its lambent gleam.The sunshine of thine eyes, Oh let it fall on me!Though I be but a mote of the air, I could turn to gold for thee!
George Parsons Lathrop
Where Shall The Lover Rest
Where shall the lover restWhom the fates severFrom the true maiden's breast,Parted for ever?Where, through groves deep and high,Sounds the fair billow,Where early violets die,Under the willow.Chorus.Soft shall be his pillow.There, through the summer day,Cool streams are laving;There, while the tempests sway,Scarce are boughs waving;There, thy rest shall thou take,Parted for ever,Never again to wake,Never, O never!Chorus.Never, O never!Where shall the traitor rest,He, the deceiver,Who could win maiden's breast,Ruin and leave her?In the lost battle,Borne down by the flying,Where mingles war's rattleWith groans of the dying.,P>Choru...
Walter Scott
To The Beloved Dead - A Lament
Beloved, thou art like a tune that idle fingers Play on a window-pane.The time is there, the form of music lingers; But O thou sweetest strain,Where is thy soul? Thou liest i' the wind and rain.Even as to him who plays that idle air, It seems a melody,For his own soul is full of it, so, my Fair, Dead, thou dost live in me,And all this lonely soul is full of thee.Thou song of songs!-not music as before Unto the outward ear;My spirit sings thee inly evermore, Thy falls with tear on tear.I fail for thee, thou art too sweet, too dear.Thou silent song, thou ever voiceless rhyme, Is there no pulse to move thee,At windy dawn, with a wild heart beating time, And falling tears above thee,O musi...
Alice Meynell
A Modern Courtship.
Why turn from me thus with such petulant pride,When I ask thee, sweet Edith, to be my bride;When I offer the gift of heart fond and true,And with loyalty seek thy young love to woo?With patience I've waited from week unto week,And at length I must openly, candidly speak.But why dost thou watch me in doubting surprise,Why thus dost thou raise thy dark, deep, melting eyes?Can'st thou wonder I love thee, when for the last yearWe have whispered and flirted - told each hope and fear;When I've lavished on thee presents costly and gay,And kissed thy fair hands at least six times each day?What! Do I hear right? So those long sunny hoursSpent wand'ring in woods or whispering in bowers,Our love-making ardent in prose and in rhyme,Was just only a me...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
From The Mountain.
If I, dearest Lily, did not love thee,How this prospect would enchant my sight!And yet if I, Lily, did not love thee,Could I find, or here, or there, delight?
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Stanzas To Miss Wylie
O come Georgiana! the rose is full blown,The riches of Flora are lavishly strown,The air is all softness, and crystal the streams,The West is resplendently clothed in beams.O come! let us haste to the freshening shades,The quaintly carv'd seats, and the opening glades;Where the faeries are chanting their evening hymns,And in the last sun-beam the sylph lightly swims.And when thou art weary I'll find thee a bed,Of mosses and flowers to pillow thy head:And there Georgiana I'll sit at thy feet,While my story of love I enraptur'd repeat.So fondly I'll breathe, and so softly I'll sigh,Thou wilt think that some amorous Zephyr is nigh:Yet no, as I breathe I will press thy fair knee,And then thou wilt know that the sigh co...
John Keats
The Old Stoic.
Riches I hold in light esteem,And Love I laugh to scorn;And lust of fame was but a dream,That vanished with the morn:And if I pray, the only prayerThat moves my lips for meIs, "Leave the heart that now I bear,And give me liberty!"Yes, as my swift days near their goal:'Tis all that I implore;In life and death a chainless soul,With courage to endure.
Emily Bronte
Sonnet XLIV.
Rapt CONTEMPLATION, bring thy waking dreams To this umbrageous vale at noon-tide hour, While full of thee seems every bending flower, Whose petals tremble o'er the shadow'd streams!Give thou HONORA's image, when her beams, Youth, beauty, kindness, shone; - what time she wore That smile, of gentle, yet resistless power To sooth each painful Passion's wild extremes.Here shall no empty, vain Intruder chase, With idle converse, thy enchantment warm, That brings, in all its interest, all its grace,The dear, persuasive, visionary Form. Can real Life a rival blessing boast When thou canst thus restore HONORA early lost?
Anna Seward
Apple-Blossoms.
Underneath an apple-treeSat a maiden and her lover;And the thoughts within her heYearned, in silence, to discover.Round them danced the sunbeams bright,Green the grass-lawn stretched before them;While the apple-blossoms whiteHung in rich profusion o'er them.Naught within her eyes he readThat would tell her mind unto him;Though their light, he after said,Quivered swiftly through and through him;Till at last his heart burst freeFrom the prayer with which 'twas laden,And he said, "When wilt thou beMine for evermore, fair maiden?""When," said she, "the breeze of MayWith white flakes our heads shall cover,I will be thy brideling gay -Thou shall be my husband-lover.""How," said he, in sorrow bowed,"Can I hope...
William McKendree Carleton
Alciphron: A Fragment. Letter I.
FROM ALCIPHRON AT ALEXANDRIA TO CLEON AT ATHENS.Well may you wonder at my flight From those fair Gardens in whose bowersLingers whate'er of wise and bright,Of Beauty's smile or Wisdom's light, Is left to grace this world of ours.Well may my comrades as they roam On such sweet eyes as this inquireWhy I have left that happy home Where all is found that all desire, And Time hath wings that never tire:Where bliss in all the countless shapes That Fancy's self to bliss hath givenComes clustering round like roadside grapes That woo the traveller's lip at even;Where Wisdom flings not joy away--As Pallas in the stream they sayOnce flung her flute--but smiling ownsThat woman's lip can send forth tonesWor...
Thomas Moore
The Poet To His Wife.
("À toi, toujours à toi.")[XXXIX., 1823]To thee, all time to thee,My lyre a voice shall be!Above all earthly fashion, Above mere mundane rage,Your mind made it my passion To write for noblest stage.Whoe'er you be, send blessings to her - sheWas sister of my soul immortal, free!My pride, my hope, my shelter, my resource,When green hoped not to gray to run its course;She was enthronèd Virtue under heaven's dome,My idol in the shrine of curtained home.
Victor-Marie Hugo
Love Among The Ruins
I.Where the quiet-coloured end of evening smiles,Miles and milesOn the solitary pastures where our sheepHalf-asleepTinkle homeward thro the twilight, stray or stopAs they crop.II.Was the site once of a city great and gay,(So they say)Of our countrys very capital, its princeAges sinceHeld his court in, gathered councils, wielding farPeace or war.III.Now, the country does not even boast a tree,As you see,To distinguish slopes of verdure, certain rillsFrom the hillsIntersect and give a name to, (else they runInto one)IV.Where the domed and daring palace shot its spiresUp like firesOer the hundred-gated circuit of a wallBounding allMade of marbl...
Robert Browning
August Moonrise
The sun was gone, and the moon was comingOver the blue Connecticut hills;The west was rosy, the east was flushed,And over my head the swallows rushedThis way and that, with changeful wills.I heard them twitter and watched them dartNow together and now apartLike dark petals blown from a tree;The maples stamped against the westWere black and stately and full of rest,And the hazy orange moon grew upAnd slowly changed to yellow goldWhile the hills were darkened, fold on foldTo a deeper blue than a flower could hold.Down the hill I went, and thenI forgot the ways of men,For night-scents, heady, and damp and coolWakened ecstasy in meOn the brink of a shining pool.O Beauty, out of many a cupYou have made...
Sara Teasdale
Charity.
("Je suis la Charité.")[February, 1837.]"Lo! I am Charity," she cries,"Who waketh up before the day;While yet asleep all nature lies,God bids me rise and go my way."How fair her glorious features shine,Whereon the hand of God hath setAn angel's attributes divine,With all a woman's sweetness met.Above the old man's couch of woeShe bows her forehead, pure and even.There's nothing fairer here below,There's nothing grander up in heaven,Than when caressingly she stands(The cold hearts wakening 'gain their beat),And holds within her holy handsThe little children's naked feet.To every den of want and toilShe goes, and leaves the poorest fed;Leaves wine and bread, and genial oil,<...
The Beginning
Some day I shall rise and leave my friendsAnd seek you again through the world's far ends,You whom I found so fair(Touch of your hands and smell of your hair!),My only god in the days that were.My eager feet shall find you again,Though the sullen years and the mark of painHave changed you wholly; for I shall know(How could I forget having loved you so?),In the sad half-light of evening,The face that was all my sunrising.So then at the ends of the earth I'll standAnd hold you fiercely by either hand,And seeing your age and ashen hairI'll curse the thing that once you were,Because it is changed and pale and old(Lips that were scarlet, hair that was gold!),And I loved you before you were old and wise,When the flame of youth was strong ...
Rupert Brooke
To The Unattainable: Lament Of Mahomed Akram
I would have taken Golden Stars from the sky for your necklace,I would have shaken rose-leaves for your rest from all the rose-trees.But you had no need; the short sweet grass sufficed for your slumber,And you took no heed of such trifles as gold or a necklace.There is an hour, at twilight, too heavy with memory.There is a flower that I fear, for your hair had its fragrance.I would have squandered Youth for you, and its hope and its promise,Before you wandered, careless, away from my useless passion.But what is the use of my speech, since I know of no words to recall you?I am praying that Time may teach, you, your Cruelty, me, Forgetfulness.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
For My Niece Angeline.
In the morning of life, when all things appear bright,And far in the distance the shadows of night,With kind parents still spared thee, and health to enjoy,What period more fitting thy powers to employIn the service of him, who his own life has givenTo procure thee a crown and a mansion in Heaven.As a dream that is gone at the breaking of day,And a tale that's soon told, so our years pass away."Then count that day lost, whose low setting sunCan see from thy hand no worthy act done."Midst the roses of life many thorns thou wilt find,"But the cloud that is darkest, with silver is lined."As the children of Israel were led on their wayBy the bright cloud at night, and the dark cloud by day,So the Christian is led through the straight narrow roadThat brin...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow