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The One Before The Last
I dreamt I was in love againWith the One Before the Last,And smiled to greet the pleasant painOf that innocent young past.But I jumped to feel how sharp had beenThe pain when it did live,How the faded dreams of Nineteen-tenWere Hell in Nineteen-five.The boy's woe was as keen and clear,The boy's love just as true,And the One Before the Last, my dear,Hurt quite as much as you.* * * * *Sickly I pondered how the loverWrongs the unanswering tomb,And sentimentalizes overWhat earned a better doom.Gently he tombs the poor dim last time,Strews pinkish dust above,And sighs, "The dear dead boyish pastime!But THIS, ah, God! is Love!"Better oblivion hide dead true loves,Better the night...
Rupert Brooke
Tears.
Tears most prevail; with tears, too, thou may'st moveRocks to relent, and coyest maids to love.
Robert Herrick
The Star Of Bethlehem
Where Time the measure of his hoursBy changeful bud and blossom keeps,And, like a young bride crowned with flowers,Fair Shiraz in her garden sleeps;Where, to her poet's turban stone,The Spring her gift of flowers imparts,Less sweet than those his thoughts have sownIn the warm soil of Persian hearts:There sat the stranger, where the shadeOf scattered date-trees thinly lay,While in the hot clear heaven delayedThe long and still and weary day.Strange trees and fruits above him hung,Strange odors filled the sultry air,Strange birds upon the branches swung,Strange insect voices murmured there.And strange bright blossoms shone around,Turned sunward from the shadowy bowers,As if the Gheber's soul had foundA fi...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Evening Star.
Hail, pensile gem, that thus can softly gildThe starry coronal of quiet eve!What frost-work fabrics man shall vainly buildEre thou art doomed thy heavenly post to leave!Bright star! thou seem'st to me a blest retreat,The wearied pilgrim's paradise of rest;I love to think long-parted friends shall meet,Blissful reunion! in thy tranquil breast.I saw thee shine when life with me was young,And fresh as fleet-winged time's infantile hour,When Hope her treacherous chaplet 'round me flung,And daily twined a new-created flower.I saw thee shine while yet the sacred smileOf home and kindred round my path would play,But Time, who loves our fairest joys to spoil,Destined this hour of bloom to swift decay.The buds, that then were wre...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
Too Late.
How should I know,That day when first we met,I Would be a dayI never can forget?And yet 'tis so.That clasp of hands that made my heartstrings thrill,Would not die out, but keeps vibrating still?How should I know?How should I know,That those bright eyes of thineWould haunt me yet?And through Grief's dark cloud shine,With that same glow?That thy sweet smile, so full of trust and love,Should, beaming still, a priceless solace prove?How should I know?How should I knowThat one so good and fair,Would condescendTo spare a thought, or care,For one so low?I dared not hope such bliss could be in store; -How dare I who had known no love before?How should I know?But now I know -Too lat...
John Hartley
Gifts
Give a man a horse he can ride,Give a man a boat he can sail;And his rank and wealth, his strength and health,On sea nor shore shall fail.Give a man a pipe he can smoke,Give a man a book he can read:And his home is bright with a calm delight,Though the room be poor indeed.Give a man a girl he can love,As I, O my love, love thee;And his heart is great with the pulse of Fate,At home, on land, on sea.
James Thomson
To H.A.B. on My Forty-Seventh Birthday
When one is forty years and seven,Is seven and forty sad years old,He looks not onward for his Heaven,The future is too blank and cold,Its pale flowers smell of graveyard mould;He looks back to his lifeful past;If age is silver, youth is gold:-Could youth but last, could youth but last!He turns back toward his youthful pastA-throb with life and love and hope,Whose long-dead joys in memory last,Whose shining days had ample scope;He turns and lingers on the slopeWhose dusk leads down to sightless death:-The sun once crowned that darkening cope,And song once thrilled this weary breath.Ali, he plods wearily to death,Adown the gloaming into night,But other lives breathe joyous breathIn morning's boundless golden light;<...
My Valentine.
I.I passed her on the crowded street--This winsome maid, demure and sweet--And envious saw the silken tressesThat seemed to give her cheeks caresses,And rapture felt that thrilled me throughWhen on me glanced those eyes of blueFrom underneath the drooping lashesThat could not hide their azure flashes!And oh, I dreampt of bliss divineIf she would be--my Valentine!II.And visions of as fair a faceAs painter's pencil e'er did traceWould haunt the mind each waking hour,And slumber owned its magic power--Until I found by merest chanceThat belladonna made the glance,And borrowed hair had lent its aidFor silken tresses of this maid--And padding--paint--did all combineTo make for me--my Valentine!
George W. Doneghy
An Hymn To Love.
I will confess With cheerfulness,Love is a thing so likes me, That let her lay On me all day,I'll kiss the hand that strikes me. I will not, I, Now blubb'ring, cry,It, ah! too late repents me, That I did fall To love at all,Since love so much contents me. No, no, I'll be In fetters free:While others they sit wringing Their hands for pain, I'll entertainThe wounds of love with singing. With flowers and wine, And cakes divine,To strike me I will tempt thee: Which done; no more I'll come beforeThee and thine altars empty.
The Wood-Spring To The Poet
Dawn-cool, dew-coolGleams the surface of my poolBird haunted, fern enchanted,Where but tempered spirits rule;Stars do not trace their mystic linesIn my confines;I take a double night within my breastA night of darkened heavens, a night of leaves,And in the two-fold dark I hear the owlPuff at his velvet hornAnd the wolves howl.Even daylight comes with a touch of goldNot overbold,And shows dwarf-cornel and the twin-flowers,Below the balsam bowers,Their tints enamelled in my dew-drop shield.Too small even for a thirsty fawnTo quench upon,I hold my crystal at one levelThere where you see the liquid bevelBreak in silver and go freeSinging to its destiny.Give, Poet, give!Thus only shalt thou live....
Duncan Campbell Scott
On Entering The Sea
Love happened at last,And we entered God's paradise,SlidingUnder the skin of the waterLike fish.We saw the precious pearls of the seaAnd were amazed.Love happened at lastWithout intimidation... with symmetry of wish.So I gave... and you gaveAnd we were fair.It happened with marvelous easeLike writing with jasmine water,Like a spring flowing from the ground.
Nizar Qabbani
The Stray Lamb. A Grandmother's Story.
We had finished our pitiful morsel, And both sat in silence a while;At length we looked up at each other. And I said, with the ghost of a smile, -"Only two little potatoes And a very small crust of bread -And then?" - "God will care for us, Lucy!" John, quietly answering, said."Yes, God will provide for us, Lucy!" He said, after musing a while -I'd been quietly watching his features With a feeble attempt at a smile -"For, 'trust in the Lord, and do good,' Our Father in Heaven has said,'So shalt thou dwell in the land, And verily thou shalt be fed!'"Scarcely the words had he spoken, When a faint, little tap at the doorSurprised us, - for all the long morning The rain had continue...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Sonnet VIII
Oft as by chance, a little while apartThe pall of empty, loveless hours withdrawn,Sweet Beauty, opening on the impoverished heart,Beams like the jewel on the breast of dawn:Not though high heaven should rend would deeper aweFill me than penetrates my spirit thus,Nor all those signs the Patmian prophet sawSeem a new heaven and earth so marvelous;But, clad thenceforth in iridescent dyes,The fair world glistens, and in after daysThe memory of kind lips and laughing eyesLives in my step and lightens all my face, -So they who found the Earthly ParadiseStill breathed, returned, of that sweet, joyful place.
Alan Seeger
In Pearl And Gold
When pearl and gold, o'er deeps of musk,The moon curves, silvering the dusk,As in a garden, dreaming,A lily slips its dewy huskA firefly in its gleaming,I of my garden am a guest;My garden, that, in beauty dressedOf simple shrubs and oldtime flowers,Chats with me of the perished hours,When she companioned me in life,Living remote from care and strife.It says to me:"How sad and slowThe hours of daylight come and go,Until the Night walks here againWith moon and starlight in her train,And she and I with perfumed wordsOf winds and waters, dreaming birds,And flowers and crickets and the moon,For hour on hour, in soul commune.And you, and you,Sit here and listen in the dewFor her, the love, you used to know,<...
Madison Julius Cawein
Dover Beach
The sea is calm tonight.The tide is full, the moon lies fairUpon the straits; on the French coast, the lightGleams and is gone; the cliffs of England stand,Glimmering and vast, out in the tranquil bay.Come to the window, sweet is the night-air!Only, from the long line of sprayWhere the sea meets the moon-blanched land,Listen! you hear the grating roarOf pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling,At their return, up the high strand,Begin, and cease, and then again begin,With tremulous cadence slow, and bringThe eternal note of sadness in.Sophocles long agoHeard it on the Aegean, and it broughtInto his mind the turbid ebb and flowOf human misery; weFind also in the sound a thought,Hearing it by this distant norther...
Matthew Arnold
Parting
We embrace.Rich cloth under my fingersWhile yours touch poor fabric.A quick embraceYou were invited for dinnerWhile the minions of law are after me.We talk about the weather and ourLasting friendship. Anything elseWould be too bitter.
Bertolt Brecht
Mariana In The South
With one black shadow at its feet,The house thro' all the level shines,Close-latticed to the brooding heat,And silent in its dusty vines:A faint-blue ridge upon the right,An empty river-bed before,And shallows on a distant shore,In glaring sand and inlets bright.But "Aye Mary," made she moan,And "Aye Mary," night and morn,And "Ah," she sang, "to be all alone,To live forgotten, and love forlorn."She, as her carol sadder grew,From brow and bosom slowly downThro' rosy taper fingers drewHer streaming curls of deepest brownTo left and right, and made appear,Still-lighted in a secret shrine,Her melancholy eyes divine,The home of woe without a tear.And "Aye Mary," was her moan,"Madonna, sad is night and morn;"...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
In Vita. LXVII.
Since thou and I have proven many a timeThat all our hope betrays us and deceives,To that consummate good which never grievesUplift thy heart, towards a happier clime.This life is like a field of flowering thyme,Amidst the herbs and grass the serpent lives;If aught unto the sight brief pleasure gives,'T is but to snare the soul with treacherous lime.So, wouldst thou keep thy spirit free from cloud,A tranquil habit to thy latest day,Follow the few, and not the vulgar crowd.Yet mayest thou urge, "Brother, the very wayThou showest us, wherefrom thy footsteps proud(And never more than now) so oft did stray."
Emma Lazarus