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An Ode : While Blooming Youth And Gay Delight
While blooming youth and gay delightSit on thy rosy cheeks confess'd,Thou hast, my dear, undoubted rightTo triumph o'er this destined breast.My reason bends to what thy eyes ordain;For I was born to love, and thou to reign.But would you meanly thus relyOn power you know I must obey?Exert a legal tyranny,And do an ill because you may?Still must I thee, as Atheists Heaven, adore;Not see thy mercy, and yet dread thy power?Take heed, my dear: youth flies apace;As well as Cupid, Time is blind:Soon must those glories of thy faceThe fate of vulgar beauty find:The thousand Loves, that arm thy potent eye,Must drop their quivers, flag their wings, and die.Then wilt thou sigh, when in each frownA hateful wrinkle more ap...
Matthew Prior
The Triad
Show me the noblest Youth of present time,Whose trembling fancy would to love give birth;Some God or Hero, from the Olympian climeReturned, to seek a Consort upon earth;Or, in no doubtful prospect, let me seeThe brightest star of ages yet to be,And I will mate and match him blissfully.I will not fetch a Naiad from a floodPure as herself, (song lacks not mightier power)Nor leaf-crowned Dryad from a pathless wood,Nor Sea-nymph glistening from her coral bower;Mere Mortals bodied forth in vision still,Shall with Mount Ida's triple lustre fillThe chaster coverts of a British hill."Appear! obey my lyre's command!Come, like the Graces, hand in hand!For ye, though not by birth allied,Are Sisters in the bond of love;Nor shall the tongue of e...
William Wordsworth
Missed.
Pity the child who never feels A mother's fond caress;That childish smile a void conceals Of aching loneliness.Pity the heart which loves in vain, What balm or mystic spellCan soothe that bosom's secret pain, The pain it may not tell?Pity those missed by Cupid's darts, For 'twas ordained for such,Who love at random, but whose hearts Feel no responsive touch.
Alfred Castner King
Laura
If Laura lady of the flower-soft faceShould light upon these verses, she may takeThe tenderest line, and through its pulses traceWhat man can suffer for a womans sake.For in the nights that burn, the days that break,A thin pale figure stands in Passions place,And peace comes not, nor yet the perished graceOf youth, to keep old faiths and fires awake.Ah! marvellous maid. Life sobs, and sighing saith,She left me, fleeting like a fluttered dove;But I would have a moment of her breath,So I might taste the sweetest sense thereof,And catch from blossoming, honeyed lips of loveSome faint, some fair, some dim, delicious death.
Henry Kendall
Spring On Mattagami
Far in the east the rain-clouds sweep and harry,Down the long haggard hills, formless and low,Far in the west the shell-tints meet and marry,Piled gray and tender blue and roseate snow;East - like a fiend, the bolt-breasted, streamingStorm strikes the world with lightning and with hail;West - like the thought of a seraph that is dreaming,Venus leads the young moon down the vale.Through the lake furrow between the gloom and bright'ningFirm runs our long canoe with a whistling rush,While Potàn the wise and the cunning Silver LightningBreak with their slender blades the long clear hush;Soon shall I pitch my tent amid the birches,Wise Potàn shall gather boughs of balsam fir,While for bark and dry wood Silver Lightning searches;Soon the smoke shall ...
Duncan Campbell Scott
The Parting Word
I must leave thee, lady sweetMonths shall waste before we meet;Winds are fair and sails are spread,Anchors leave their ocean bed;Ere this shining day grow dark,Skies shall gird my shoreless bark.Through thy tears, O lady mine,Read thy lover's parting line.When the first sad sun shall set,Thou shalt tear thy locks of jet;When the morning star shall rise,Thou shalt wake with weeping eyes;When the second sun goes down,Thou more tranquil shalt be grown,Taught too well that wild despairDims thine eyes and spoils thy hair.All the first unquiet weekThou shalt wear a smileless cheek;In the first month's second halfThou shalt once attempt to laugh;Then in Pickwick thou shalt dip,Slightly puckering round the lip,...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Resurrection.
I thought I had forever lost, Alas, though still so young, The tender joys and sorrows all, That unto youth belong; The sufferings sweet, the impulses Our inmost hearts that warm; Whatever gives this life of ours Its value and its charm. What sore laments, what bitter tears O'er my sad state I shed, When first I felt from my cold heart Its gentle pains had fled! Its throbs I felt no more; my love Within me seemed to die; Nor from my frozen, senseless breast Escaped a single sigh! I wept o'er my sad, hapless lot; The life of life seemed lost; The earth an arid wilderness, Locked in eternal frost;
Giacomo Leopardi
Anemones.
If I should wish hereafter that your heartShould beat with one fair memory of me,May Time's hard hand our footsteps guide apart,But lead yours back one spring-time to the Lea.Nodding Anemones,Wind-flowers pale,Bloom with the budding trees,Dancing to every breeze,Mock hopes more fair than these,Love's vows more frail.For then the grass we loved grows green again,And April showers make April woods more fair;But no sun dries the sad salt tears of pain,Or brings back summer lights on faded hair,Nodding Anemones,Wind-flowers pale,Bloom with the budding trees,Dancing to every breeze,Mock hopes more frail than these,Love's vows more frail.
Juliana Horatia Ewing
Dreams.
I love a woman tenderly,But cannot know if she loves me.I press her hand, her lips I kiss,But still love's full assurance miss.Our waking life for ever seemsCleft by a veil of doubt and dreams.But love and night and sleep combineIn dreams to make her wholly mine.A sure love lights her eyes' deep blue,Her hands and lips are warm and true.Always the fact unreal seems,And truth I find alone in dreams.
John Hay
The Presentation
When in the womb of Time our souls' own son Dear Love lay sleeping till his natal hour, Long months I knew not that sweet life begun, Too dimly treasuring thy touch of power; And wandering all those days By far-off ways, Forgot immortal seed must have immortal flower. Only, beloved, since my beloved thou art I do remember, now that memory's vain, How twice or thrice beneath my beating heart Life quickened suddenly with proudest pain. Then dreamed I Love's increase, Yet held my peace Till I might render thee thy own great gift again. For as with bodies, so with souls it is, The greater gives, the lesser doth conceive: That thou hast fathered Love, I tell thee this,
Henry John Newbolt
To A Young Mother On The Birth Of Her First-Born Child.
Young mother! proudly throbs thine heart, and well may it rejoice,Well may'st thou raise to Heaven above in grateful prayer thy voice:A gift hath been bestowed on thee, a gift of priceless worth,Far dearer to thy woman's heart than all the wealth of earth.What store of deep and holy joy is opened to thy thought -Glad, sunny dreams of future days, with bliss and rapture fraught;Of hopes as varied, yet as bright, as beams of April sun,And plans and wishes centred all within thy darling one!While others seek in changing scenes earth's happiness to gain,In fashion's halls to win a joy as dazzling as 'tis vain -A bliss more holy far is thine, far sweeter and more deep,To watch beside thine infant's couch and bend above his sleep.What joy for thee to ling'...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Dedication
Inscribed to a Dear Child:In Memory of Golden Summer HoursAnd Whispers of a Summer SeaGirt with a boyish garb for boyish task,Eager she wields her spade: yet loves as wellRest on a friendly knee, intent to askThe tale he loves to tell.Rude spirits of the seething outer strife,Unmeet to read her pure and simple spright,Deem if you list, such hours a waste of life,Empty of all delight!Chat on, sweet Maid, and rescue from annoyHearts that by wiser talk are unbeguiled.Ah, happy he who owns that tenderest joy,The heart-love of a child!
Lewis Carroll
Love-Doubt.
Yearning upon the faint rose-curves that flitAbout her child-sweet mouth and innocent cheek,And in her eyes watching with eyes all meekThe light and shadow of laughter, I would sitMute, knowing our two souls might never knit;As if a pale proud lily-flower should seekThe love of some red rose, but could not speakOne word of her blithe tongue to tell of it.For oh, my Love was sunny-lipped and stirredWith all swift light and sound and gloom not longRetained; I, with dreams weighed, that ever heardSad burdens echoing through the loudest throngShe, the wild song of some May-merry bird;I, but the listening maker of a song.
Archibald Lampman
The Thorn
The days of these two years like busy antsHave gone, confused and happy and distressed,Rich, yet sad with aching wants,Crowded, yet lonely and unblessed.I stare back as they vanish in a swarm,Seeming how purposeless, how mean and vain,Till creeping joy and brief alarmAre gone and prick me not again.The days are gone, yet still this heart of fireSmouldering, smoulders on with ancient love;And the red embers of desireI would not, oh, nor dare remove!Where is the bosom my head rested on,The arms that caught my boy's head, the soft kiss?Where is the light of your eyes gone?--For now I know what darkness is....It is the loneliness, the loneliness,Since she that brought me here has left me hereWith the sharp need o...
John Frederick Freeman
Eleanore
I.Thy dark eyes opend not,Nor first reveald themselves to English air,For there is nothing hereWhich, from the outward to the inward brought,Moulded thy baby thought.Far off from human neighborhoodThou wert born, on a summer morn,A mile beneath the cedar-wood.Thy bounteous forehead was not fanndWith breezes from our oaken glades,But thou wert nursed in some delicious landOf lavish lights, and floating shades;And flattering thy childish thoughtThe oriental fairy brought,At the moment of thy birth,From old well-heads of haunted rills,And the hearts of purple hills,And shadowd coves on a sunny shore,The choicest wealth of all the earth,Jewel or shell, or starry ore,To deck thy cradle, Eleanore.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Fulfilment
Happy are they whom men and women love,And you were happy as a river that flowsDown between lonely hills, and knowsThe pang and virtue of that loneliness,And moves unresting on until it moveUnder the trees that stoop at the low brinkAnd deepen their cool shade, and drinkAnd sing and hush and sing again,Breathing their music's many-toned caress;While the river with his high clear music speaksSometimes of loneliness, of hills obscure,Sometimes of sunlight dancing on the plain,Or of the night of stars unbared and deepMultiplied in his depths unbared and pure;Sometimes of winds that from the unknown sea creep,Sometimes of morning when most clear it breaksSpilling its brightness on his breast like rain:--And then flows on in loneliness again
Ad Matrem Dolorosam
Think not thy little fountain's rain That in the sunlight rose and flashed, From the bright sky has fallen again, To cold and shadowy silence dashed. The Joy that in her radiance leapt From everlasting hath not slept. The hand that to thy hand was dear, The untroubled eyes that mirrored thine, The voice that gave thy soul to hear A whisper of the Love Divine-- What though the gold was mixed with dust? The gold is thine and cannot rust. Nor fear, because thy darling's heart No longer beats with mortal life, That she has missed the ennobling part Of human growth and human strife. Only she has the eternal peace Wherein to reap the soul's increase.
Love And Reason.
Quand l'homme commence à raissonner, il cesse de sentir.--J. J. ROUSSEAU.'Twas in the summer time so sweet, When hearts and flowers are both in season,That--who, of all the world, should meet, One early dawn, but Love and Reason!Love told his dream of yesternight, While Reason talked about the weather;The morn, in sooth, was fair and bright, And on they took their way together.The boy in many a gambol flew, While Reason, like a Juno, stalked,And from her portly figure threw A lengthened shadow, as she walked.No wonder Love, as on they past, Should find that sunny morning chill,For still the shadow Reason castFell o'er the boy, and cooled him still.In vain...
Thomas Moore