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Lines To The Memory Of An Amiable Youth, Of Great Promise, Whose Afflicted Parents Received The Intelligence Of His Having Been Drowned, At The Very Time When His Arrival Was Expected From Abroad.
Dire were the horrors of that ruthless storm,That for young Lycid form'd a wat'ry grave;Oh! many wept to see his fainting formUnaided sink beneath th' o'erwhelming wave.Ah! hapless youth! yet, tho' the billowy wasteHas thus, with ruthless fury, snatch'd awayThy various charms, thy genius, wit, and taste,From those who fondly watch'd their rich display, -Their cherish'd, lov'd, impression still shall last;Mem'ry shall ride triumphant o'er the storm,Shall shield thy gen'rous virtues from the blast,And Fancy animate again thy form.Yes, gentle youth! to her, tho' little known,Save by the rich effusions of thy lyre,Th' admiring Muse shall breathe a mournful tone,And sounds of grief shall o'er the floods expire.But, far more g...
John Carr
In Love's Own Time.
S' i' avessi creduto.Had I but earlier known that from the eyes Of that bright soul that fires me like the sun, I might have drawn new strength my race to run, Burning as burns the phoenix ere it dies;Even as the stag or lynx or leopard flies To seek his pleasure and his pain to shun, Each word, each smile of her would I have won, Flying where now sad age all flight denies.Yet why complain? For even now I find In that glad angel's face, so full of rest, Health and content, heart's ease and peace of mindPerchance I might have been less simply blest, Finding her sooner: if 'tis age alone That lets me soar with her to seek God's throne.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
The Flowers.
Ye offspring of the morning sun,Ye flowers that deck the smiling plain,Your lives, in joy and bliss begun,In Nature's love unchanged remain.With hues of bright and godlike splendorSweet Flora graced your forms so tender,And clothed ye in a garb of light;Spring's lovely children weep forever,For living souls she gave ye never,And ye must dwell in endless night?The nightingale and lark still singIn your tranced ears the bliss of love;The toying sylphs, on airy wing,Around your fragrant bosoms rove,Of yore, Dione's daughter [6] twiningIn garlands sweet your cup-so shining,A pillow formed where love might rest!Spring's gentle children, mourn forever,The joys of love she gave ye never,Ne'er let ye know that feeling...
Friedrich Schiller
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXX.
Deh qual pietà, qual angel fu sì presto.HIS PRAYER IS HEARD. What angel of compassion, hovering near,Heard, and to heaven my heart grief instant bore,Whence now I feel descending as of yoreMy lady, in that bearing chaste and dear,My lone and melancholy heart to cheer,So free from pride, of humbleness such store,In fine, so perfect, though at death's own door,I live, and life no more is dull and drear.Blessèd is she who so can others blessWith her fair sight, or with that tender speechTo whose full meaning love alone can reach."Dear friend," she says, "thy pangs my soul distress;But for our good I did thy homage shun"--In sweetest tones which might arrest the sun.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Maiden Speech Of The Aeolian Harp
Soft and softlier hold me, friends!Thanks if your genial careUnbind and give me to the air.Keep your lips or finger-tipsFor flute or spinet's dancing chips;I await a tenderer touch,I ask more or not so much:Give me to the atmosphere,--Where is the wind, my brother,--where?Lift the sash, lay me within,Lend me your ears, and I begin.For gentle harp to gentle heartsThe secret of the world imparts;And not to-day and not to-morrowCan drain its wealth of hope and sorrow;But day by day, to loving earUnlocks new sense and loftier cheer.I've come to live with you, sweet friends,This home my minstrel-journeyings ends.Many and subtle are my lays,The latest better than the first,For I can mend the happiest daysAnd charm ...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ilicet
There is an end of joy and sorrow;Peace all day long, all night, all morrow,But never a time to laugh or weep.The end is come of pleasant places,The end of tender words and faces,The end of all, the poppied sleep.No place for sound within their hearing,No room to hope, no time for fearing,No lips to laugh, no lids for tears.The old years have run out all their measure;No chance of pain, no chance of pleasure,No fragment of the broken years.Outside of all the worlds and ages,There where the fool is as the sage is,There where the slayer is clean of blood,No end, no passage, no beginning,There where the sinner leaves off sinning,There where the good man is not good.There is not one thing with another,But Evil sa...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
A Song Of Cheer
Be of good cheer, and have no fearOf Fortune or Tomorrow:To Hope's low whisper lend an earAnd turn away from Sorrow.Time out of mind the soul is blindTo things God sends as blessings:And Fortune often proves unkindMerely in foolish guessings.Within the soul we bear the wholeOf Hell and also Heaven;And 'twixt the two is set the goalOf dreams our lives have driven.What counts above all deeds is Love,And Friendship, that, remember,In heart-beats keeps Life's record ofIts April and December.To every one come rain and sun,And calm and stormy weather:What helps is not what Life has done,But Life and Love together.Of sun and rain and joy and painThe web of Life is woven;And ever through...
Madison Julius Cawein
A Love Letter To Her Husband
Phoebus make haste, the day's too long, begone,The silent night's the fittest time for moan;But stay this once, unto my suit give ear,And tell my griefs in either Hemisphere:(And if the whirling of thy wheels do n't drown'dThe woful accents of my doleful sound),If in thy swift career thou canst make stay,I crave this boon, this errand by the way:Commend me to the man more lov'd than life,Show him the sorrows of his widow'd wife,My dumpish thoughts, my groans, my brackish tears,My sobs, my longing hopes, my doubting fears,And, if he love, how can he there abide?My interest's more than all the world beside.He that can tell the stars or Ocean sand,Or all the grass that in the meads do stand,The leaves in th' woods, the hail or drops of rain,...
Anne Bradstreet
Nocturne
Night of Mid-June, in heavy vapours dying,Like priestly hands thy holy touch is lyingUpon the world's wide brow;God-like and grand all nature is commandingThe "peace that passes human understanding";I, also, feel it now.What matters it to-night, if one life treasureI covet, is not mine! Am I to measureThe gifts of Heaven's decreeBy my desires? O! life for ever longingFor some far gift, where many gifts are thronging,God wills, it may not be.Am I to learn that longing, lifted higher,Perhaps will catch the gleam of sacred fireThat shows my cross is gold?That underneath this cross - however lowly,A jewel rests, white, beautiful and holy,Whose worth can not be told.Like to a scene I watched one day in wonder: -A ...
Emily Pauline Johnson
Poems.
Poems are holy things. Eternal Truth, Borrowing the robes of song and lovely grown, In them her glory unto man proclaims And fills his longing soul. They softly speak Of Nature's beauty and the secrets old Concealed behind the shadows of the hills, And love on angel fingers borne to men, Naming them over in so sweet a voice That music leads their footsteps in the ways Where God has walked; and with a lofty Harp, As wondrous as the gentle harps of heaven, Uplifts, ennobles, soothes and leads the race Unto its last great ultimate of power, To words of tenderness and goodly deeds.
Freeman Edwin Miller
To-Day You Understand.
You lifted eyes pain-filled to me, Sad, questioning eyes that did demand Why I should thrust back, childishly, The friendship warm you offered me - Ah, sweet, to-day you understand! 'Twas that my heart beat rapturously At word of thine, at touch of hand, At tender glance vouchsafed to me The while I knew it must not be - Ah, sweet, to-day you understand! There's neither pain nor mystery In that far-off and fragrant land To which you journeyed fearlessly; By gates of pearl and jasper sea - Ah, sweet, to-day you understand!
Jean Blewett
A Love Song
I gave her a rose in early June,Fed with the sun and the dew,Each petal I said is a note in the tune,The rose is the whole tune through and through,The tune is the whole red-hearted rose,Flush and form, honey and hue,Lull with the cadence and throb to the close,I love you, I love you, I love you.She gave me a rose in early June,Fed with the sun and the dew,Each petal she said is a mount in the moon,The rose is the whole moon through and through,The moon is the whole pale-hearted rose,Round and radiance, burnish and blue,Break in the flood-tide that murmurs and flows,I love you, I love you, I love you.This is our love in early June,Fed with the sun and the dew,Moonlight and roses hid in a tune,The roses are music th...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Verses Written In Mary's Album.
In your beautiful book, dear Mary, With pages so white and fair,I pause ere I trace the first sentence, And thoughtfully breathe a prayer:--That in the dew of the morning, Ere the shadows begin to fall,You may turn with a child's devotion To the Book that is best of all:--And learn with the gentle Mary, At the Saviour's feet to stay,And to choose that better portion Which shall never be taken away.Ah! lovely and thrice beloved, Sitting at Jesus' feet,In the shady walks of Bethany, And the summer twilight sweet,--With the thrilling palms and the olives, Listening overhead,To that wonderful voice whose music Had power to waken the dead!Even thus through life's gra...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Sonnet: To A Young Lady Who Sent Me A Laurel Crown
Fresh morning gusts have blown away all fearFrom my glad bosom, now from gloominessI mount for ever not an atom lessThan the proud laurel shall content my bier.No! by the eternal stars! or why sit hereIn the Sun's eye, and 'gainst my temples pressApollo's very leaves, woven to blessBy thy white fingers and thy spirit clear.Lo! who dares say, "Do this"? Who dares call downMy will from its high purpose? Who say,"Stand,"Or, "Go"? This mighty moment I would frownOn abject Caesars not the stoutest bandOf mailed heroes should tear off my crown:Yet would I kneel and kiss thy gentle hand!
John Keats
Stanzas
How often we forget all time, when loneAdmiring Nature's universal throne;Her woods, her wilds, her mountains, the intenseReply of Hers to Our intelligence! [BYRON, The Island.]IIn youth have I known one with whom the EarthIn secret communing held, as he with it,In daylight, and in beauty from his birth:Whose fervid, flickering torch of life was litFrom the sun and stars, whence he had drawn forthA passionate light, such for his spirit was fit,And yet that spirit knew not, in the hourOf its own fervor what had o'er it power.IIPerhaps it may be that my mind is wroughtTo a fever by the moonbeam that hangs o'er,But I will half believe that wild light fraughtWith more of sovereignty than ancient loreHath ev...
Edgar Allan Poe
Tribute To The Memory Of The Same Dog
Lie here, without a record of thy worth,Beneath a covering of the common earth!It is not from unwillingness to praise,Or want of love, that here no Stone we raise;More thou deserv'st; but 'this' man gives to man,Brother to brother, 'this' is all we can.Yet they to whom thy virtues made thee dearShall find thee through all changes of the year:This Oak points out thy grave; the silent treeWill gladly stand a monument of thee.We grieved for thee, and wished thy end were past;And willingly have laid thee here at last:For thou hadst lived till everything that cheersIn thee had yielded to the weight of years;Extreme old age had wasted thee away,And left thee but a glimmering of the day;Thy ears were deaf, and feeble were thy knees,I saw thee st...
William Wordsworth
Oreithyia
Oreithyia, by the North Wind carriedTo stormy Thrace from Athens where you tarriedDown by Ilissus all a blowy dayAmong the asphodels, how rapt awayThither, and in what frozen bed wert married?"I was a King's tall daughter still unwed,Slim and desirable my locks to shedFree from the fillet. He my maiden beltUndid with busy fingers hid but felt,And made me wife upon no marriage bed."As idly there I lay alone he cameAnd blew upon my side, and beat a flameInto my cheeks, and kindled both my eyes.I suffered him who took no bodily guise:The light clouds know whether I was to blame."Into my mouth he blew an amorous breath;I panted, but lay still, as quiet as death.The whispering planes and sighing grasses knowWhether it w...
Maurice Henry Hewlett
Love's Ambition.
XI. Love's Ambition. I must invoke thee for my spirit's good, And prove myself un-guilty of the crime Of mere self-seeking, though with this imbued. I sing as sings the mavis in a wood, Content to be alive at harvest time. Had I its wings I should not be withstood! But I will weave my fancies into rhyme, And greet afar the heights I cannot climb. I will invoke thee, Love! though far away, And pay thee homage, as becomes a knight Who longs to keep his true-love in his sight. Yea, I will soar to thee, i...
Eric Mackay