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Love In Youth And Age. First Reading.
Tornami al tempo.Bring back the time when blind desire ran free, With bit and rein too loose to curb his flight; Give back the buried face, once angel-bright, That hides in earth all comely things from me;Bring back those journeys ta'en so toilsomely, So toilsome-slow to one whose hairs are white; Those tears and flames that in one breast unite; If thou wilt once more take thy fill of me!Yet Love! Suppose it true that thou dost thrive Only on bitter honey-dews of tears. Small profit hast thou of a weak old man.My soul that toward the other shore doth strive, Wards off thy darts with shafts of holier fears; And fire feeds ill on brands no breath can fan.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
Footsteps Of Angels.
When the hours of Day are numbered, And the voices of the NightWake the better soul, that slumbered, To a holy, calm delight;Ere the evening lamps are lighted, And, like phantoms grim and tall,Shadows from the fitful firelight Dance upon the parlour wall;Then the forms of the departed Enter at the open door;The beloved, the true-hearted, Come to visit me once more;He, the young and strong, who cherished Noble longings for the strife,By the road-side fell and perished, Weary with the march of life!They, the holy ones and weakly, Who the cross of suffering bore,Folded their pale hands so meekly, Spake with us on earth no more!And with them the Being Beauteous,
William Henry Giles Kingston
Maid Of The Wilderness
Maid of the wilderness,Sweet in thy rural dress,Fond thy rich lips I pressUnder this tree.Morning her health bestows,Sprinkles dews on the rose,That by the bramble grows:Maid happy be.Womanhood round thee glows,Wander with me.The restharrow blooming,The sun just a-coming,Grass and bushes illuming,And the spreading oak tree;Come hither, sweet Nelly,* * *The morning is loosingIts incense for thee.The pea-leaf has dews on;Love wander with me.We'll walk by the river,And love more than ever;There's nought shall disseverMy fondness from thee.Soft ripples the water,Flags rustle like laughter,And fish follow after;Leaves drop from the tree.Nelly, Beaut...
John Clare
To----.
In vain, sweet Maid! for me you bringThe first-blown blossoms of the spring;My tearful cheek you wipe in vain,And bid its pale rose bloom again.In vain! unconscious, did I say?Oh! you alone these tears can stay;Alone, the pale rose can renew,Whose sunshine is a smile from you.Yet not in friendship's smile it lives;Too cold the gifts that friendship gives:The beam that warms a winter's day,Plays coldly in the lap of May.You bid my sad heart cease to swell,But will you, if its tale I tell,Nor turn away, nor frown the while,But smile, as you were wont to smile?Then bring me not the blossoms young,That erst on Flora's forehead hung;But round thy radiant temples twine,The flowers whose flaunting mocks at min...
Thomas Gent
How Does Love Speak?
How does Love speak?In the faint flush upon the tell-tale cheek,And in the pallor that succeeds it; byThe quivering lid of an averted eye -The smile that proves the parent of a sigh: Thus doth Love speak. How does Love speak?By the uneven heart-throbs, and the freakOf bounding pulses that stand still and acheWhile new emotions, like strange barges, makeAlong vein-channels their disturbing course,Still as the dawn, and with the dawn's swift force: Thus doth Love speak. How does Love speak?In the avoidance of that which we seekThe sudden silence and reserve when near;The eye that glistens with an unshed tear;The joy that seems the counterpart of fear,As the alarmed heart leads in the breast,And knows,...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
In The Metropolitan Museum
Within the tiny PantheonWe stood together silently,Leaving the restless crowd awhileAs ships find shelter from the sea.The ancient centuries came backTo cover us a moments space,And thro the dome the light was gladBecause it shone upon your face.Ah, not from Rome but farther still,Beyond sun-smitten Salamis,The moment took us, till you stoopedTo find the present with a kiss.
Sara Teasdale
Sonnet VI
Oh, you are more desirable to meThan all I staked in an impulsive hour,Making my youth the sport of chance, to beBlighted or torn in its most perfect flower;For I think less of what that chance may bringThan how, before returning into fire,To make my dearest memory of the thingThat is but now my ultimate desire.And in old times I should have prayed to herWhose haunt the groves of windy Cyprus were,To prosper me and crown with good successMy will to make of you the rose-twined bowlFrom whose inebriating brim my soulShall drink its last of earthly happiness.
Alan Seeger
Stars.
Ah! why, because the dazzling sunRestored our Earth to joy,Have you departed, every one,And left a desert sky?All through the night, your glorious eyesWere gazing down in mine,And, with a full heart's thankful sighs,I blessed that watch divine.I was at peace, and drank your beamsAs they were life to me;And revelled in my changeful dreams,Like petrel on the sea.Thought followed thought, star followed star,Through boundless regions, on;While one sweet influence, near and far,Thrilled through, and proved us one!Why did the morning dawn to breakSo great, so pure, a spell;And scorch with fire the tranquil cheek,Where your cool radiance fell?Blood-red, he rose, and, arrow-straight,His fierce...
Emily Bronte
To ----
Between two common days this day was hung When Love went to the ending that was his; His seamless robe was rent, his brow was wrung, He took at last the sponge's bitter kiss. A simple day the dawn had watched unfold Before the night had borne the death of love; You took the bread I blessed, and love was sold Upon your lips, and paid the price thereof. I changed then, as when soul from body slips, And casts its passion and its pain aside; I pledged you with most spiritual lips, And gave you hands that you had crucified. You who betrayed, kissed, crucified, forgot, You walked with Christ, poor fool, and knew it not!
Muriel Stuart
Her Nails
She is as wise as Hippocrates,As beautiful as Joseph,As sweet-voiced as David,As pure as Mary.I am as sad as Jacob,As lonely as Jonah,As patient as Job,As unfortunate as Adam.When I met her againAnd saw her nailsPrettily purpled,I reproached her for making upWhen I was not there.She told me gentlyThat she was no coquette,But had wept tears of bloodBecause I was not there,And maybe she had dried her eyesWith her little hands.I would like to have wept before she wept;But she wept firstAnd has the better love.Her eyes are long eyes,And her brows are the bows of subtle strong men.From the Arabic of Yazid Ebn Moauia (seventh century).
Edward Powys Mathers
The Summons
A sterner errand to the silken troopHas quenched the uneasy blush that warmed my cheek;I am commissioned in my day of joyTo leave my woods and streams and the sweet slothOf prayer and song that were my dear delight,To leave the rudeness of my woodland life,Sweet twilight walks and midnight solitudeAnd kind acquaintance with the morning starsAnd the glad hey-day of my household hours,The innocent mirth which sweetens daily bread,Railing in love to those who rail again,By mind's industry sharpening the love of life--Books, Muses, Study, fireside, friends and love,I loved ye with true love, so fare ye well!I was a boy; boyhood slid gayly byAnd the impatient years that trod on itTaught me new lessons in the lore of life.I've learned the...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
She Is Coming, My Own, My Sweet
She is coming, my own, my sweet;Were it ever so airy a tread,My heart would hear and beat,Were it earth in an earthy bed,My dust would hear her and beat,Had I lain for a century dead,Would start and tremble under her feet,And blossom in purple and red.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
To A Sister
A fresh young voice that sings to meSo often many a simple thing,Should surely not unanswered beBy all that I can sing.Dear voice, be happy every wayA thousand changing tones among,From little child's unfinished layTo angel's perfect song.In dewy woods--fair, soft, and greenLike morning woods are childhood's bower--Be like the voice of brook unseenAmong the stones and flowers;A joyful voice though born so low,And making all its neighbours glad;Sweet, hidden, constant in its flowEven when the winds are sad.So, strengthen in a peaceful home,And daily deeper meanings bear;And when life's wildernesses comeBe brave and faithful there.Try all the glorious magic range,Worship, forgive, consol...
George MacDonald
Madala Goes By The Orphanage.
Unaware of its terror, And but half aware Of the world's beauty near her - Of sunlight on the stones, And trembling birds in the square, Lightly went Madala - A rose blown suddenly From Spring's gay mouth; part of the Spring was she. Warmed to her delicate bones, Cool in its linen her skin, Her hair up-combed and curled, Lightly she flowered on the sin And pain of the Spring-struck world. Down the street went crazy men, The winter misery of their blood Budding in new pain While beggars whined beside her, While the streets' daughters eyed her, - Poor flowers that kept midsummer With desperate bloom, and thrust Stale rose at each newcomer, And crime a...
Glad Sight Wherever New With Old
Glad sight wherever new with oldIs joined through some dear homeborn tie;The life of all that we beholdDepends upon that mystery.Vain is the glory of the sky,The beauty vain of field and grove,Unless, while with admiring eyeWe gaze, we also learn to love.
William Wordsworth
The Words Of Wisdom. from Proverbial Philosophy
Few and precious are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter:To what shall then' rarity be likened? What price shall count their worth?Perfect and much to be desired, and giving joy with riches.No lovely tiling on earth can picture all their beauty.They be chance pearls, flung among the rocks by the sullen waters of Oblivion,Which Diligence loveth to gather, and hang around the neck of Memory;They be white-winged seeds of happiness, wafted from the islands of the blessed.Which Thought carefully tendeth, in the kindly garden of the heart;They be sproutings of an harvest for eternity, bursting through the tilth of time,Green promise of the golden wheat, that yieldeth angels' food;They be drops of the crystal dew, which the wings of seraphs scatter,When on some brighter...
Martin Farquhar Tupper
The Blessed Virgin compared to the Air we Breathe
Wild air, world-mothering air,Nestling me everywhere,That each eyelash or hairGirdles; goes home betwixtThe fleeciest, frailest-flixedSnowflake; that's fairly mixedWith, riddles, and is rifeIn every least thing's life;This needful, never spent,And nursing element;My more than meat and drink,My meal at every wink;This air, which, by life's law,My lung must draw and drawNow but to breathe its praise,Minds me in many waysOf her who not onlyGave God's infinityDwindled to infancyWelcome in womb and breast,Birth, milk, and all the restBut mothers each new graceThat does now reach our race -Mary Immaculate,Merely a woman, yetWhose presence, power isGreat as no goddess'sWas deemèd, dream...
Gerard Manley Hopkins
To Hilda
ON HER SEVENTEENTH BIRTHDAY.Now has rich time brought you a gift of gold -A long sweet year which you can shape at will,And deck with roses warm, or with the chillAnd heartless lilies - GOD gives strength to mouldOur days, and lives, with fingers firm and bold,And make them noble, straight and clean from ill,Though few are willing, and their years they fillWith dross which they regret when they are old.What splendid hours of your life are theseWhen youth and childhood wander hand in hand,And give you freely all which best can please -Laughter and friends and dreams of Fairyland!Mourn not the seasons past with useless tears,But greet the pleasure of the coming years!FRANCE, 1917.
Paul Bewsher