Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 171 of 189
Previous
Next
Odes Of Anacreon - Ode XXIX.
Yes--loving is a painful thrill,And not to love more painful stillBut oh, it is the worst of pain,To love and not be loved again!Affection now has fled from earth,Nor fire of genius, noble birth,Nor heavenly virtue, can beguile,From beauty's cheek one favoring smile.Gold is the woman's only theme,Gold is the woman's only dream.Oh! never be that wretch forgiven--Forgive him not, indignant heaven!Whose grovelling eyes could first adore,Whose heart could pant for sordid ore.Since that devoted thirst began,Man has forgot to feel for man;The pulse of social life is dead,And all its fonder feelings fled!War too has sullied Nature's charms,For gold provokes the world to arms;And oh! the worst of all its arts,It renders as...
Thomas Moore
Remember - Sonnet
Remember me when I am gone away, Gone far away into the silent land; When you can no more hold me by the hand,Nor I half turn to go yet turning stay.Remember me when no more day by day You tell me of our future that you planned: Only remember me; you understandIt will be late to counsel then or pray.Yet if you should forget me for a while And afterwards remember, do not grieve: For if the darkness and corruption leave A vestige of the thoughts that once I had,Better by far you should forget and smile Than that you should remember and be sad.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Teak Forest
Whether I loved you who shall say?Whether I drifted down your wayIn the endless River of Chance and Change,And you woke the strangeUnknown longings that have no names,But burn us all in their hidden flames, Who shall say?Life is a strange and a wayward thing:We heard the bells of the Temples ring,The married children, in passing, sing.The month of marriage, the month of spring,Was full of the breath of sunburnt flowersThat bloom in a fiercer light than ours,And, under a sky more fiercely blue, I came to you!You told me tales of your vivid lifeWhere death was cruel and danger rife -Of deep dark forests, of poisoned trees,Of pains and passions that scorch and freeze,Of southern noontides and eastern nights,
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
The Over-Heart
Above, below, in sky and sod,In leaf and spar, in star and man,Well might the wise Athenian scanThe geometric signs of God,The measured order of His plan.And India's mystics sang arightOf the One Life pervading all,One Being's tidal rise and fallIn soul and form, in sound and sight,Eternal outflow and recall.God is: and man in guilt and fearThe central fact of Nature owns;Kneels, trembling, by his altar-stones,And darkly dreams the ghastly smearOf blood appeases and atones.Guilt shapes the Terror: deep withinThe human heart the secret liesOf all the hideous deities;And, painted on a ground of sin,The fabled gods of torment rise!And what is He? The ripe grain nods,The sweet dews fall, the swe...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Adieux à Marie Stuart
I.Queen, for whose house my fathers fought,With hopes that rose and fell,Red star of boyhoods fiery thought,FarewellThey gave their lives, and I, my queen,Have given you of my life,Seeing your brave star burn high betweenMens strife.The strife that lightened round their spearsLong since fell still: so longHardly may hope to last in yearsMy song.But still through strife of time and thoughtYour light on me too fell:Queen, in whose name we sang or fought,Farewell.II.There beats no heart on either borderWherethrough the north blasts blowBut keeps your memory as a warderHis beacon-fire aglow.Long since it fired with love and wonderMine, for whose April ageBli...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Minute Before Meeting
The grey gaunt days dividing us in twainSeemed hopeless hills my strength must faint to climb,But they are gone; and now I would detainThe few clock-beats that part us; rein back Time,And live in close expectance never closedIn change for far expectance closed at last,So harshly has expectance been imposedOn my long need while these slow blank months passed.And knowing that what is now about to beWill all HAVE BEEN in O, so short a space!I read beyond it my despondencyWhen more dividing months shall take its place,Thereby denying to this hour of graceA full-up measure of felicity.1871.
Thomas Hardy
Lament XIV
Where are those gates through which so long agoOrpheus descended to the realms belowTo seek his lost one? Little daughter, IWould find that path and pass that ford wherebyThe grim-faced boatman ferries pallid shadesAnd drives them forth to joyless cypress glades.But do thou not desert me, lovely lute!Be thou the furtherance of my mournful suitBefore dread Pluto, till he shall give earTo our complaints and render up my dear.To his dim dwelling all men must repair,And so must she, her father's joy and heir;But let him grant the fruit now scarce in flowerTo fill and ripen till the harvest hour!Yet if that god doth bear a heart withinSo hard that one in grief can nothing win,What can I but renounce this upper airAnd lose my soul, but also los...
Jan Kochanowski
Eyes: A Fragment.
How eloquent are eyes!Not the rapt poet's frenzied layWhen the soul's wildest feelings strayCan speak so well as they.How eloquent are eyes!Not music's most impassioned noteOn which Love's warmest fervours floatLike them bids rapture rise.Love, look thus again, -That your look may light a waste of years,Darting the beam that conquers caresThrough the cold shower of tears.Love, look thus again!
Percy Bysshe Shelley
With A Copy Of "In Memoriam."
TO E.M. II.Dear friend, you love the poet's song, And here is one for your regard. You know the "melancholy bard,"Whose grief is wise as well as strong;Already something understand For whom he mourns and what he sings, And how he wakes with golden stringsThe echoes of "the silent land;"How, restless, faint, and worn with grief, Yet loving all and hoping all, He gazes where the shadows fall,And finds in darkness some relief;And how he sends his cries across, His cries for him that comes no more, Till one might think that silent shoreFull of the burden of his loss;And how there comes sublimer cheer-- Not darkness solacing sad eyes, Not the wild joy of mournf...
George MacDonald
A Story Of The Caracas Valley.
High-perch'd upon the rocky way,Stands a Posada stern and grey;Which from the valley, seems as if,A condor there had paus'd to 'lightAnd rest upon that lonely cliff,From some stupendous flight;But when the road you gain at length,It seems a ruin'd hold of strength,With archway dark, and bridge of stone,By waving shrubs all overgrown,Which clings 'round that ruin'd gate,Making it look less desolate;For here and there, a wild flower's bloomWith brilliant hue relieves the gloom,Which clings 'round that Posada's wall -A sort of misty funeral pall.The gulf spann'd by that olden archMight stop an army's onward march,For dark and dim - far down below -'Tis lost amid a torrent's flow;And blending with the eagle's scream
James Barron Hope
Irreparableness
I have been in the meadows all the dayAnd gathered there the nosegay that you seeSinging within myself as bird or beeWhen such do field-work on a morn of May.But, now I look upon my flowers, decayHas met them in my hands more fatallyBecause more warmly clasped, and sobs are freeTo come instead of songs. What do you say,Sweet counsellors, dear friends? that I should goBack straightway to the fields and gather more?Another, sooth, may do it, but not I!My heart is very tired, my strength is low,My hands are full of blossoms plucked before,Held dead within them till myself shall die.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Faded Flowers.
My love she sent a flower to meOf tender hue and fragrance rare,And with it came across the seaA letter kind as she was fair;But when her letter met mine eyes,The flower, the little flower, was dead:And ere I touched the tender prizeThe hues were dim, the fragrance fled.I sent my love a letter too,In happy hope no more to roam;I bade her bless the vessel trueWhose gallant sails should waft me home.But ere my letter reach'd her hand,My love, my little love, was dead,And when the vessel touch'd the land,Fair hope for evermore had fled.
Juliana Horatia Ewing
Orpheus.
A:Not far from hence. From yonder pointed hill,Crowned with a ring of oaks, you may beholdA dark and barren field, through which there flows,Sluggish and black, a deep but narrow stream,Which the wind ripples not, and the fair moonGazes in vain, and finds no mirror there.Follow the herbless banks of that strange brookUntil you pause beside a darksome pond,The fountain of this rivulet, whose gushCannot be seen, hid by a rayless nightThat lives beneath the overhanging rockThat shades the pool - an endless spring of gloom,Upon whose edge hovers the tender light,Trembling to mingle with its paramour, -But, as Syrinx fled Pan, so night flies day,Or, with most sullen and regardless hate,Refuses stern her heaven-born embrace.On one side of...
Sonnet LXX.
La bella donna che cotanto amavi.TO HIS BROTHER GERARDO, ON THE DEATH OF A LADY TO WHOM HE WAS ATTACHED. The beauteous lady thou didst love so wellToo soon hath from our regions wing'd her flight,To find, I ween, a home 'mid realms of light;So much in virtue did she here excelThy heart's twin key of joy and woe can dwellNo more with her--then re-assume thy might,Pursue her by the path most swift and right,Nor let aught earthly stay thee by its spell.Thus from thy heaviest burthen being freed,Each other thou canst easier dispel,And an unfreighted pilgrim seek thy sky;Too well, thou seest, how much the soul hath need,(Ere yet it tempt the shadowy vale) to quellEach earthly hope, since all that lives must die.WOLL...
Francesco Petrarca
The Geate A-vallen To
In the zunsheen of our zummersWi the hay time now a-come,How busy wer we out a-vieldWi vew a-left at hwome,When waggons rumbled out ov yardRed wheeled, wi body blue,And back behind em loudly slammdThe geate avallen to.Drough daysheen ov how many yearsThe geate ha now a-swungBehind the veet o vull-grown menAnd vootsteps of the young.Drough years o days it swung to usBehind each little shoe,As we tripped lightly on avoreThe geate a-vallen to.In evenen time o starry nightHow mother zot at hwome,And kept her bleazen vier brightTill father should ha? come,An how she quickend up and smiledAn stirred her vier anew,To hear the trampen hoses stepsAn geate a-vallen to.There...
William Barnes
The Consolation
I Had this thought awhile ago,My darling cannot understandWhat I have done, or what would doIn this blind bitter land.And I grew weary of the sunUntil my thoughts cleared up again,Remembering that the best I have doneWas done to make it plain;That every year I have cried, At lengthMy darling understands it all,Because I have come into my strength,And words obey my call.That had she done so who can sayWhat would have shaken from the sieve?I might have thrown poor words awayAnd been content to live.
William Butler Yeats
In Absence. (Moods Of Love.)
My love for thee is like a winged seed Blown from the heart of thy rare beauty's flower, And deftly guided by some breezy powerTo fall and rest, where I should never heed,In deepest caves of memory. There, indeed, With virtue rife of many a sunny hoar, - Ev'n making cold neglect and darkness dowerIts roots with life, - swiftly it 'gan to breed,Till now wide-branching tendrils it outspreads Like circling arms, to prison its own prison,Fretting the walls with blooms by myriads, And blazoning in my brain full summer-season:Thy face, whose dearness presence had not taught.In absence multiplies, and fills all thought.
George Parsons Lathrop
The Bittern.
The reeds are idly waving o'er the marshy ground,The rank and ragged herbage rots on many a mound,And desolate pools and marshes deadly lie around.There is no life nor motion, save the winds that flyWith the close-muffled clouds in silence through the sky,There is no sound to stir it, save the Bittern's cry;The Bittern, sitting sadly on the fluted edgesOf pillars once the prop and pride of palace ledges,Now smear'd with damp decay and sunk in slimy sedges;Shatter'd and sunken, with the sculptured architravePeering above the surface of the sluggish wave,Like a gaunt limb thrust fleshless from a shallow grave.The Bittern sitteth sadly on the time-worn stone,Upon life's mouldering relics, fearfully alone,Searing the silence ofttimes wi...
Walter R. Cassels