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Touching "Never."
Because you never yet have loved me, dear,Think you you never can nor ever will?Surely while life remains hope lingers still,Hope the last blossom of life's dying year.Because the season and mine age grow sere,Shall never Spring bring forth her daffodil,Shall never sweeter Summer feast her fillOf roses with the nightingales they hear?If you had loved me, I not loving you,If you had urged me with the tender pleaOf what our unknown years to come might do(Eternal years, if Time should count too few),I would have owned the point you pressed on me,Was possible, or probable, or true.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Amour 1
Reade heere (sweet Mayd) the story of my wo,The drery abstracts of my endles cares,With my liues sorow enterlyned so;Smok'd with my sighes, and blotted with my teares:The sad memorials of my miseries,Pend in the griefe of myne afflicted ghost;My liues complaint in doleful Elegies,With so pure loue as tyme could neuer boast.Receaue the incense which I offer heere,By my strong fayth ascending to thy fame,My zeale, my hope, my vowes, my praise, my prayer,My soules oblation to thy sacred name: Which name my Muse to highest heauen shal raise By chast desire, true loue, and vertues praise.
Michael Drayton
Sonnet CCXXIII.
Qual donna attende a gloriosa fama.THE EYES OF LAURA ARE THE SCHOOL OF VIRTUE. Feels any fair the glorious wish to gainOf sense, of worth, of courtesy, the praise?On those bright eyes attentive let her gazeOf her miscall'd my love, but sure my foe.Honour to gain, with love of God to glow,Virtue more bright how native grace displays,May there be learn'd; and by what surest waysTo heaven, that for her coming pants, to go.The converse sweet, beyond what poets write,Is there; the winning silence, and the meekAnd saint-like manners man would paint in vain.The matchless beauty, dazzling to the sight,Can ne'er be learn'd; for bootless 'twere to seekBy art, what by kind chance alone we gain.ANON., OX., 1795.
Francesco Petrarca
A Congratulatory Poem
While my sad Muse the darkest Covert Sought,To give a loose to Melancholy Thought;Opprest, and sighing with the Heavy WeightOf an Unhappy dear Lov'd Monarch's Fate;A lone retreat, on Thames's Brink she found,With Murmering Osiers fring'd, and bending Willows Crown'd,Thro' the thick Shade cou'd dart no Chearful Ray,Nature dwelt here as in disdain of Day:Content, and Pleas'd with Nobler Solitude,No Wood-Gods, Fawns, nor Loves did here Intrude,Nor Nests for wanton Birds, the Glade allows;Scarce the soft Winds were heard amongst the Boughs.While thus She lay resolv'd to tune no moreHer fruitless Songs on Brittains Faithless Shore,All on a suddain thro' the Woods there Rung,Loud Sounds of Joy that Jo Peans Sung.Maria! Blest Maria! was the Thea...
Aphra Behn
Mooni
(Written in the shadow of 1872.)Ah, to be by Mooni now,Where the great dark hills of wonder,Scarred with storm and cleft asunderBy the strong sword of the thunder,Make a night on mornings brow!Just to stand where Natures face isFlushed with power in forest placesWhere of God authentic trace isAh, to be by Mooni now!Just to be by Moonis springs!There to stand, the shining sharerOf that larger life, and rarerBeauty caught from beauty fairerThan the human face of things!Soul of mine from sin abhorrentFain would hide by flashing current,Like a sister of the torrent,Far away by Moonis springs.He that is by Mooni nowSees the water-sapphires gleamingWhere the River Spirit, dreaming,Sleeps by fa...
Henry Kendall
Old Tunes
As the waves of perfume, heliotrope, rose,Float in the garden when no wind blows,Come to us, go from us, whence no one knows;So the old tunes float in my mind,And go from me leaving no trace behind,Like fragrance borne on the hush of the wind.But in the instant the airs remainI know the laughter and the painOf times that will not come again.I try to catch at many a tuneLike petals of light fallen from the moon,Broken and bright on a dark lagoon,But they float away, for who can holdYouth, or perfume or the moon's gold?
Sara Teasdale
I Will Ask
I will ask primrose and violet to spend for youTheir smell and hue,And the bold, trembling anemone awhile to spareHer flowers starry fair;Or the flushed wild apple and yet sweeter thornTheir sweetness to keepLonger than any fire-bosomed flower bornBetween midnight and midnight deep.And I will take celandine, nettle and parsley, whiteIn its own green light,Or milkwort and sorrel, thyme, harebell and meadowsweetLifting at your feet,And ivy blossom beloved of soft bees; I will takeThe loveliest--The seeding grasses that bend with the winds, and shakeThough the winds are at rest."For me?" you will ask. "Yes! surely they wave for youTheir smell and hue,And you away all that is rare were so much lessBy your missed happin...
John Frederick Freeman
Sweet Sister.
("Vous qui ne savez pas combien l'enfance est belle.")Sweet sister, if you knew, like me,The charms of guileless infancy,No more you'd envy riper years,Or smiles, more bitter than your tears.But childhood passes in an hour,As perfume from a faded flower;The joyous voice of early gleeFlies, like the Halcyon, o'er the sea.Enjoy your morn of early Spring;Soon time maturer thoughts must bring;Those hours, like flowers that interclimb,Should not be withered ere their time.Too soon you'll weep, as we do now,O'er faithless friend, or broken vow,And hopeless sorrows, which our prideIn pleasure's whirl would vainly hide.Laugh on! unconscious of thy doom,All innocence and opening bloom;Laugh on...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Evening
'T is 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 love's 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
When Christmas Comes
For thee, my small one - trinkets and new toys,The wine of life and all its keenest joys,When Christmas comes.For me, the broken playthings of the pastThat in my folded hands I still hold fast,When Christmas comes.For thee, fair hopes of all that yet may be,And tender dreams of sweetest mystery,When Christmas comes.For thee, the future in a golden haze,For me, the memory of some bygone days,When Christmas comes.For thee, the things that lightly come and go,For thee, the holly and the mistletoe,When Christmas comes.For me, the smiles that are akin to tears,For me, the frost and snows of many years,When Christmas comes.For thee, the twinkling candles bright and gay,For me, the purple shadows and the grey,...
Virna Sheard
Sonnet.
Lady, whom my beloved loves so well! When on his clasping arm thy head reclineth,When on thy lips his ardent kisses dwell, And the bright flood of burning light, that shinethIn his dark eyes, is poured into thine; When thou shalt lie enfolded to his heart,In all the trusting helplessness of love; If in such joy sorrow can find a part, Oh, give one sigh unto a doom like mine!Which I would have thee pity, but not prove.One cold, calm, careless, wintry look, that fell Haply by chance on me, is all that heE'er gave my love; round that, my wild thoughts dwell In one eternal pang of memory.
Frances Anne Kemble
Blind.
You think it is a sorry thing That I am blind. Your pitying Is welcome to me; yet indeed, I think I have but little need Of it. Though you may marvel much That we, who see by sense of touch And taste and hearing, see things you May never look upon; and true Is it that even in the scent Of blossoms we find something meant No eyes have in their faces read, Or wept to see interpreted. And you might think it strange if now I told you you were smiling. How Do I know that? I hold your hand - Its language I can understand - Give both to me, and I will show You many other things I know. Listen: We never met before Till now? - ...
James Whitcomb Riley
Erin, Mavourneen.
A Prize Poem.I know Canada is fair to see, and pleasant; it is wellOn the banks of its broad river 'neath the maple trees to dwell;But the heart is very wilful, and in sorrow or in mirth,Mine will turn with sore love-longing to the land that gave me birth;And I wish that, oh but once again! my longing eyes might seeThe green island that lies smiling on the bosom of the sea;That is fed with heaven's dew and the fatness of the earth,Fanned by wild Atlantic breezes that sweep over it in mirth.Its green robe is starred with daisies; it is brilliant fresh and fair,With a verdure that no other spot of earth affords to wear.It has banks of pale primroses that like bits of moonlight glow;There are hawthorn hedges blossomed out like drifts of perfumed snow,
Nora Pembroke
When Midst The Gay I Meet.
When midst the gay I meet That gentle smile of thine,Tho' still on me it turns most sweet, I scarce can call it mine:But when to me alone Your secret tears you show,Oh, then I feel those tears my own, And claim them while they flow.Then still with bright looks bless The gay, the cold, the free;Give smiles to those who love you less, But keep your tears for me.The snow on Jura's steep Can smile in many a beam,Yet still in chains of coldness sleep. How bright soe'er it seem.But, when some deep-felt ray Whose touch is fire appears,Oh, then the smile is warmed away, And, melting, turns to tears.Then still with bright looks bless The gay, the cold, the free;Give smiles to tho...
Thomas Moore
The Heart Unseen
So many times the heart can break, So many ways,Yet beat along and beat along So many days.A fluttering thing we never see, And only hearWhen some stern doctor to our side Presses his ear.Strange hidden thing, that beats and beats We know not why,And makes us live, though we indeed Would rather die.Mysterious, fighting, loving thing, So sad, so true -I would my laughing eyes some day Might look on you.
Richard Le Gallienne
Lucy I
Strange fits of passion have I known:And I will dare to tell,But in the lovers ear alone,What once to me befell.When she I loved lookd every dayFresh as a rose in June,I to her cottage bent my way,Beneath an evening moon.Upon the moon I fixd my eye,All over the wide lea;With quickening pace my horse drew nighThose paths so dear to me.And now we reachd the orchard-plot;And, as we climbd the hill,The sinking moon to Lucys cotCame near and nearer still.In one of those sweet dreams I slept,Kind Natures gentlest boon!And all the while my eyes I keptOn the descending moon.My horse moved on; hoof after hoofHe raised, and never stoppd:When down behind the cottage roof,At on...
William Wordsworth
When? (Death)
Some day in Spring,When earth is fair and glad,And sweet birds sing,And fewest hearts are sad -- Shall I die then? Ah! me, no matter when;I know it will be sweet To leave the homes of menAnd rest beneath the sod,To kneel and kiss Thy feetIn Thy home, O my God!Some Summer mornOf splendors and of songs,When roses hide the thornAnd smile -- the spirit's wrongs -- Shall I die then? Ah! me, no matter when;I know I will rejoice To leave the haunts of menAnd lie beneath the sod,To hear Thy tender voiceIn Thy home, O my God!Some Autumn eve,When chill clouds drape the sky,When bright things grieveBecause all fair things die -- Shall I die then? Ah! me, ...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Hope
Within the world of every man's desireTwo things have power to lift the soul above:The first is Work, who dons a mean attire;The other, Love, whose raiment is of fire.Their child is Hope, and we the heirs thereof.
Madison Julius Cawein