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Impenitent Ultima
Before my light goes out for ever if God should give me a choice of graces,I would not reck of length of days, nor crave for things to be;But cry: "One day of the great lost days, one face of all the faces,Grant me to see and touch once more and nothing more to see."For, Lord, I was free of all Thy flowers, but I chose the world's sad roses,And that is why my feet are torn and mine eyes are blind with sweat,But at Thy terrible judgment-seat, when this my tired life closes,I am ready to reap whereof I sowed, and pay my righteous debt."But once before the sand is run and the silver thread is broken,Give me a grace and cast aside the veil of dolorous years,Grant me one hour of all mine hours, and let me see for a tokenHer pure and pitiful eyes shine out, and bathe ...
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Realisation
Hers was a lonely, shadowed lot;Or so the unperceiving thought,Who looked no deeper than her face,Devoid of chiselled lines of grace -No farther than her humble grate,And wondered how she bore her fate.Yet she was neither lone nor sad;So much of love her spirit had,She found an ever-flowing springOf happiness in everything.So near to her was Nature's heartIt seemed a very living partOf her own self; and bud and blade,And heat and cold, and sun and shade,And dawn and sunset, Spring and Fall,Held raptures for her, one and all.The year's four changing seasons broughtTo her own door what thousands soughtIn wandering ways and did not find -Diversion and content of mind.She loved the tasks that filled e...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Brother Jonathan's Lament For Sister Caroline
She has gone, - she has left us in passion and pride, -Our stormy-browed sister, so long at our side!She has torn her own star from our firmament's glow,And turned on her brother the face of a foe!Oh, Caroline, Caroline, child of the sun,We can never forget that our hearts have been one, -Our foreheads both sprinkled in Liberty's name,From the fountain of blood with the finger of flame!You were always too ready to fire at a touch;But we said, "She is hasty, - she does not mean much."We have scowled, when you uttered some turbulent threat;But Friendship still whispered, "Forgive and forget!"Has our love all died out? Have its altars grown cold?Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold?Then Nature must teach us the strength of t...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
My Polly.
My Polly's varry bonny,Her een are black an breet;They shine under her raven locks,Like stars i'th' dark o'th' neet.Her little cheeks are like a peach,'At th' sun has woo'd an missed;Her lips like cherries, red an sweet,Seem moulded to be kissed.Her breast is like a drift o' snow,Her little waist's soa thin,To clasp it wi' a careless armWod ommost be a sin.Her little hands an tiny feet,Wod mak yo think shoo'd beenBrowt up wi' little fairy fowkTo be a fairy queen.An when shoo laffs, it saands as ifA little crystal spring,Wor bubblin up throo silver rocks,Screened by an angel's wing.It saands soa sweet, an yet soa low,One feels it forms a partOv what yo love, an yo can hearIt...
John Hartley
Old Greek Lovers
They put wild olive and acanthus upWith tufts of yellow wool above the doorWhen a man died in Greece and in Greek Islands, Grey stone by the blue sea,Or sage-green trees down to the water's edge. How many clanging years ago I, also withering into death, sat with him, Old man of so white hair who only, Only looked past me into the red fire.At last his words were all a jumble of plum-treesAnd white boys smelling of the sea's green wineAnd practice of his lyre. Suddenly The bleak resurgent mindCalled wonderfully clear: "What mark have I left?" Crying girls with wine and linenWashed the straight old body and wrapped up, And set the doorward feet.Later for me also under Greek sunThe pendant lea...
Edward Powys Mathers
The New Moon.
When, as the garish day is done,Heaven burns with the descended sun,'Tis passing sweet to mark,Amid that flush of crimson light,The new moon's modest bow grow bright,As earth and sky grow dark.Few are the hearts too cold to feelA thrill of gladness o'er them steal,When first the wandering eyeSees faintly, in the evening blaze,That glimmering curve of tender raysJust planted in the sky.The sight of that young crescent bringsThoughts of all fair and youthful thingsThe hopes of early years;And childhood's purity and grace,And joys that like a rainbow chaseThe passing shower of tears.The captive yields him to the dreamOf freedom, when that virgin beamComes out upon the air:And painfully the sick man t...
William Cullen Bryant
To The Same. (Lines Addressed To Miss Theodora Jane Cowper.)
How quick the change from joy to woe,How chequerd is our lot below!Seldom we view the prospect fair;Dark clouds of sorrow, pain, and care(Some pleasing intervals between),Scowl over more than half the scene.Last week with Delia, gentle maid!Far hence in happier fields I strayd.Five suns successive rose and set,And saw no monarch in his state,Wrapt in the blaze of majesty,So free from every care as I.Next day the scene was overcastSuch day till then I never passd,For on that day, relentless fate!Delia and I must separate.Yet ere we lookd our last farewell,From her dear lips this comfort fell,Fear not that time, whereer we rove,Or absence, shall abate my love.
William Cowper
A Request
When I am cold and undesirous and my lids lie dead,Come to watch by the body that loved you and say:This is Rondagui, whom I killed and my heart regrets for ever.From the Persian of Rondagui (tenth century).
Winter Roses
My garden roses long agoHave perished from the leaf-strewn walks;Their pale, fair sisters smile no moreUpon the sweet-brier stalks.Gone with the flower-time of my life,Spring's violets, summer's blooming pride,And Nature's winter and my ownStand, flowerless, side by side.So might I yesterday have sung;To-day, in bleak December's noon,Come sweetest fragrance, shapes, and hues,The rosy wealth of June!Bless the young bands that culled the gift,And bless the hearts that prompted it;If undeserved it comes, at leastIt seems not all unfit.Of old my Quaker ancestorsHad gifts of forty stripes save one;To-day as many roses crownThe gray head of their son.And with them, to my fancy's eye,The fres...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Barbary White
How death will steal, from life, to claim us all,Happy to wrap us in barbary white,By tapping ash tight fingers, the steel laws of fate,Will deaden our faces, wrapping our feelings from earthly sight.
Paul Cameron Brown
Despair
I.Is it you, that preachd in the chapel there looking over the sand?Followd us too that night, and doggd us, and drew me to land?II.What did I feel that night? You are curious. How should I tell?Does it matter so much what I felt? You rescued meyetwas it wellThat you came unwishd for, uncalld, between me and the deep and my doom,Three days since, three more dark days of the Godless gloomOf a life without sun, without health, with out hope, without any delightIn anything here upon earth? but ah God, that night, that nightWhen the rolling eyes of the lighthouse there on the fatal neckOf land running out into rockthey had saved many hundreds from wreckGlared on our way toward death, I remember I thought, as we past,Does it matter how many they saved?...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Touch Of Time
Time, who with soft pale ashes veils the brandOf many a hope that flared against the skyTo plant its heaven-storming banners high,Has touched you with no desecrating hand;Your beauty wins a ripeness sweet and blandAs opulent summer, and your glancing eyeGlows with a deeper lustre, and your sighOf love is still my clamouring hearts command.Yet what if all your fairness were defaced,Wilted by passionate whirlwinds, battle-scarred,Your skin of delicate satin hard and dry?Still you would be the laughing girl who gracedA gloomy manhood, by forebodings marred,In the deep wood where still we love to lie.
John Le Gay Brereton
If, After All ...!
This life I squander, hating the long daysThat will not bring me either Rest or Thee,This health I hack and ravage as with knives,These nerves I fain would shatter, and this heartI fain would break - this heart that, traitor-like,Beats on with foolish and elastic beat:If, after all, this life I waste and killShould still be thine, may still be lived for thee!And this the dreadful trial of my love,This silence and this blank that makes me mad,That I be man to-day of all the daysMy one poor hope of meeting thee again -If Death be Love, and God's great purpose kind!Oh, love, if some day on the heavenly stairA wild ecstatic moment we should stand,And I, all hungry for your eyes and hair,Should meet instead your great accusing gaze,And h...
Richard Le Gallienne
Elegy For A Jet Pilot
The blast skimsover the stringof takeoff lightsandrelinquishingplace and timelofts toseparation:the plume, rosesliver, growsacross thehigh-lit eveningsky: by thisMays Landing creekshot pinecones,skinned huckleberrybush, laurelswaths definean unbelievablyparticular stop.
A. R. Ammons
On Salathiel Pavy
A Child Of Queen Elizabeths ChapelWeep with me, all you that readThis little story;And know, for whom a tear you shedDeaths self is sorry.Twas a child that so did thriveIn grace and feature,As Heaven and Nature seemd to striveWhich ownd the creature.Years he numberd scarce thirteenWhen Fates turnd cruel,Yet three filld zodiacs had he beenThe stages jewel;And did act (what now we moan)Old men so duly,As sooth the Parcae thought him one,He playd so truly.So, by error, to his fateThey all consented;But, viewing him since, alas, too late!They have repented;And have sought, to give new birth,In baths to steep him;But, being so much too good for earth,Heaven vows to keep him.
Ben Jonson
Spring Dirge
A child came singing through the dusty townA song so sweet that all men stayed to hear,Forgetting for a space their ancient fearOf evil days and death and fortunes frown.She sang of Winter dead and Spring new-bornIn the green fields beyond the far hills bound;And how this fair Spring, coming blossom-crowned,Would cross the citys threshold on the morn.And each caged bird in every house anigh,Even as she sang, caught up the glad refrainOf Love and Hope and fair days come again,Till all who heard forgot they had to die.And all the ghosts of buried woes were laidThat heard the song of this sweet sorceress;The Past grew to a dream of old distress,And merry were the hearts of man and maid.So, at the first faint blush of ten...
Victor James Daley
Cenotaph
By vain affections unenthralled,Though resolute when duty calledTo meet the world's broad eye,Pure as the holiest cloistered nunThat ever feared the tempting sun,Did Fermor live and die.This Tablet, hallowed by her name,One heart-relieving tear may claim;But if the pensive gloomOf fond regret be still thy choice,Exalt thy spirit, hear the voiceOf Jesus from her tomb!"I Am The Way, The Truth, And The Life"
William Wordsworth
Rome - The Vatican - Sala Delle Muse
I sat in the Muses' Hall at the mid of the day,And it seemed to grow still, and the people to pass away,And the chiselled shapes to combine in a haze of sun,Till beside a Carrara column there gleamed forth One.She was nor this nor that of those beings divine,But each and the whole - an essence of all the Nine;With tentative foot she neared to my halting-place,A pensive smile on her sweet, small, marvellous face."Regarded so long, we render thee sad?" said she."Not you," sighed I, "but my own inconstancy!I worship each and each; in the morning one,And then, alas! another at sink of sun."To-day my soul clasps Form; but where is my trothOf yesternight with Tune: can one cleave to both?"- "Be not perturbed," said she. "Though apart in fame,
Thomas Hardy