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Joy Speaks
One with the Heaven aboveAm I its bliss:Part of its truth and love,And what God is.I heal the soul and mind:I work their cures:Not Grief, that rends Mankind,But Joy endures.
Madison Julius Cawein
Sonnet: - XI.
Oh, that I were the spirit of these wilds!I'd make the zephyrs dance for my delight,And lead a life as happy as a child's.Echo should tremble with unfeigned affright,And mock its own weird answers. I would kissEliza's cheek, and touch her lips with dewStol'n from the scented rose. And Carrie's laughShould be a portion of the silver rills'Sweet music, breathed mellifluously throughThe hearts of generations. She should quaffThe nectar of inspired song, and thrillsOf sweet remembrances of her should strewThe woodland air, as sand-grains strew the shore;And these two hearts should be my joy for evermore.
Charles Sangster
Comfortable Light
Most comfortable Light,Light of the small lamp burning up the night,With dawn enleagued against the beaten dark;Pure golden perfect spark;Or sudden wind-bright flame,That but the strong-handed wind can urge or tame;Chill loveliest light the kneeling clouds between,Silverly serene;Comfort of happy light,That mouse-like leaps amid brown leaves, cheating sight;Clear naked stars, burning with swift intenseEarthward intelligence;--Sensitive, singlePoints in the dark inane that purely tingleWith eager fire, pouring night's circles throughTheir living blue;Dark light still waters hold;Broad silver moonpath trodden into gold:Candle-flame glittering through the traveller's night--Most comfortable light.......
John Frederick Freeman
Acon And Rhodope
The Year's twelve daughters had in turn gone by,Of measured pace tho' varying mien all twelve,Some froward, some sedater, some adorn'dFor festival, some reckless of attire.The snow had left the mountain-top; fresh flowersHad withered in the meadow; fig and pruneHung wrinkling; the last apple glow'd amidIts freckled leaves; and weary oxen blinktBetween the trodden corn and twisted vine,Under whose bunches stood the empty crate,To creak ere long beneath them carried home.This was the season when twelve months before,O gentle Hamadryad, true to love!Thy mansion, thy dim mansion in the woodWas blasted and laid desolate: but noneDared violate its precincts, none dared pluckThe moss beneath it, which alone remain'dOf what was thine....
Walter Savage Landor
A Song of the Flowers.
"Why are you weeping, ye gentle flowers?Are ye not blest in your sunny bowers?Have you startling dreams that make ye weep,When waking up from your holy sleep?"Ah, knowest thou not, we fold at night,The tears earth drops from her eyelids bright,Like a loving mother her griefs are born,Lest her tender nurslings should die ere morn,And the sweet dew falls in each open cup,Till the eyes of morn are lifted up;We unfold our leaves to the sun's bright face,And close them up at the night's embrace.Dost thou ask if grief comes creeping across,From the poplar bough to the dark green moss?No, round us the sunbeams smile and glow,Round us the streamlets dance and flow,And the zephyr comes with its gentle breeze,To sigh out its life in the...
Harriet Annie Wilkins
From "Myrtis"
Friends, whom she lookd at blandly from her couchAnd her white wrist above it, gem-bedewd,Were arguing with Pentheusa: she had heardReport of Creons death, whom years beforeShe listend to, well-pleasd; and sighs arose; For sighs full often fondle with reproofsAnd will be fondled by them. When I cameAfter the rest to visit her, she said,"Myrtis! how kind! Who better knows than thouThe pangs of love? and my first love was he!" Tell me (if ever, Eros! are revealdThy secrets to the earth) have they been trueTo any love who speak about the first?What! shall these holier lights, like twinkling starsIn the few hours assignd them, change their place, And, when comes ampler splendor, disappear?Idler I am, and pard...
Amour 48
Who list to praise the dayes delicious lyght,Let him compare it to her heauenly eye,The sun-beames to the lustre of her sight;So may the learned like the similie.The mornings Crimson to her lyps alike,The sweet of Eden to her breathes perfume,The fayre Elizia to her fayrer cheeke,Vnto her veynes the onely Phoenix plume.The Angels tresses to her tressed hayre,The Galixia to her more then white.Praysing the fayrest, compare it to my faire,Still naming her in naming all delight. So may he grace all these in her alone, Superlatiue in all comparison.
Michael Drayton
Monday Night May 11th 1846 - Domestic Peace
Why should such gloomy silence reign;And why is all the house so drear,When neither danger, sickness, pain,Nor death, nor want have entered here?We are as many as we wereThat other night, when all were gay,And full of hope, and free from care;Yet, is there something gone away.The moon without as pure and calmIs shining as that night she shone;but now, to us she brings no balm,For something from our hearts is gone.Something whose absence leaves a void,A cheerless want in every heart.Each feels the bliss of all destroyedAnd mourns the change - but each apart.The fire is burning in the grateAs redly as it used to burn,But still the hearth is desolateTill Mirth and Love with Peace return.'Twas P...
Anne Bronte
The Old Church Choir
I am slowly treading the mazy trackThat leadeth, through sunshine and shadows, back -Through freshest meads where the dews yet clingAs erst they did to each lowly thing,Where flowers bloom and where streamlets flowWith the tender music of long ago -To the far-off past that, through mists of tears,In its spring time loveliness still appears,And wooes me back to the gleaming shoreOf sunny years that return no more. And to night, all weary, and sad, and lone,I return in thought to those bright years flown,Whose lingering sweetness, e'en yet, I feelLike the breath of flower-scents over me stealI am treading o'er mounds where the dead repose, -I am stirring the dust of life's perished rose, -I am rustling the withered leaves that lie
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Lines on His Twenty-Third Birthday
Last evening's huge lax clouds of turbid whiteGrew dark and louring, burthened with the rainWhich that long wind monotonous all nightSwept clashing loud through Dreamland's still domain,Until my spirit in fatigue's despiteWas driven to weary wakefulness again:With such wild dirge and ceaseless streaming tearsDied out the last of all my ill-used years.The morn his risen pure and fresh and keen;Its perfect vault of bright blue heaven spreads bareAbove the earth's wide laughter twinkling green.The sun, long climbing up with lurid glareAthwart the storm-rack's rent and hurrying screen,Leapt forth at dawn to breathe this stainless air;The strong west wind still streams on full and high,Inspiring fresher life through earth and sky.Y...
James Thomson
Femmes Damnées
Like pensive cattle, lying on the sands,they turn their eyes towards the seas far hills,and, feet searching each others, touching hands,know sweet languor and the bitterest thrills.Some, where the stream babbles, deep in the woods,their hearts enamoured of long intimacies,go spelling out the loves of their own girlhoods,and carving the green bark of young trees.Others, like Sisters, walk, gravely and slow,among the rocks, full of apparitions,where Saint Anthony saw, like lava flows,the bared crimson breasts of his temptations.There are those, in the melting candles glimmer,who in mute hollows of caves still pagan,call on you to relieve their groaning fever,O Bacchus, to soothe the remorse of the ancients!<...
Charles Baudelaire
A Sunset Fantasy
Spellbound by a sweet fantasyAt evenglow I standBeside an opaline strange seaThat rings a sunset land.The rich lights fade out one by one,And, like a peonyDrowning in wine, the crimson sunSinks down in that strange sea.His wake across the ocean-floorIn a long glory lies,Like a gold wave-way to the shoreOf some sea paradise.My dream flies after him, and IAm in another land;The sun sets in another sky,And we sit hand in hand.Gray eyes look into mine; such eyesI think the angels are,Soft as the soft light in the skiesWhen shines the morning star,And tremulous as morn, when thinGold lights begin to glow,Revealing the bright soul withinAs dawn the sun below.So, hand...
Victor James Daley
The Fire That Filled My Heart of Old
The fire that filled my heart of oldGave luster while it burned;Now only ashes gray and coldAre in its silence urned.Ah! better was the furious flame,The splendor with the smart;I never cared for the singer's fameBut, oh! for the singer's heartOnce more--The burning fulgent heart!No love, no hate, no hope, no fear,No anguish and no mirth;Thus life extends from year to year,A flat of sullen dearth.Ah! life's blood creepeth cold and tame,Life's thought plays no new part;I never cared for the singer's fame,But, oh! for the singer's heartOnce more--The bleeding passionate heart!
Hebe.
Life's chalice is empty--pour in! pour in!What?--Pour in Strength!Strength for the struggle through good and ill;Through good--that the soul may be upright still,Unspoil'd by riches, unswerving in will,To walk by the light of unvarnish'd truth,Up the flower-border'd path of youth;--Through ill--that the soul may stoutly holdIts faith, its freedom through hunger and cold,Steadfast and pure as the true men of old.Strength for the sunshine, strength for the gloom,Strength for the conflict, strength for the tomb;Let not the heart feel a craven fear--Draw from the fountain deep and clear;Brim up Life's chalice--pour in! pour in!Pour in Strength!Life's chalice is empty--pour in! pour in!What--Pour in Truth!Drink! till the mists that...
Walter R. Cassels
My Butterfly
Thine emulous fond flowers are dead, too,And the daft sun-assaulter, heThat frightened thee so oft, is fled or dead:Save only me(Nor is it sad to thee!)Save only meThere is none left to mourn thee in the fields.The gray grass is scarce dappled with the snow;Its two banks have not shut upon the river;But it is long ago,It seems forever,Since first I saw thee glance,With all thy dazzling other ones,In airy dalliance,Precipitate in love,Tossed, tangled, whirled and whirled above,Like a linp rose-wreath in a fairy dance.When that was, the soft mistOf my regret hung not on all the land,And I was glad for thee,And glad for me, I wist.Thou didst not know, who tottered, wandering on high,That fate h...
Robert Lee Frost
Canticle Of The Race
Song Of MenHow beautiful are the bodies of men -The agonists!Their hearts beat deep as a brazen gongFor their strength's behests.Their arms are lithe as a seasoned thongIn games or testsWhen they run or box or swim the longSea-waves crestsWith their slender legs, and their hips so strong,And their rounded chests.I know a youth who raises his armsOver his head.He laughs and stretches and flouts alarmsOf flood or fire.He springs renewed from a lusty bedTo his youth's desire.He drowses, for April flames outspreadIn his soul's attire.The strength of men is for husbandryOf woman's flesh:Worker, soldier, magistrateOf city or realm;Artist, builder, wrestling FateLest it overwhelmT...
Edgar Lee Masters
Evening
Tis evening; the black snail has got on his track,And gone to its nest is the wren,And the packman snail, too, with his home on his back,Clings to the bowed bents like a wen.The shepherd has made a rude mark with his footWhere his shadow reached when he first came,And it just touched the tree where his secret love cutTwo letters that stand for loves name.The evening comes in with the wishes of love,And the shepherd he looks on the flowers,And thinks who would praise the soft song of the dove,And meet joy in these dew-falling hours.For Nature is love, and finds haunts for true love,Where nothing can hear or intrude;It hides from the eagle and joins with the dove,In beautiful green solitude.
John Clare
Love
In peace, Love tunes the shepherds reed;In war, he mounts the warriors steed;In halls, in gay attire is seen;In hamlets, dances on the green.Love rules the court, the camp, the grove,And men below and saints above;For love is heaven, and heaven is love.
Walter Scott