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The Enemy
My youth was nothing but a black stormCrossed now and then by brilliant suns.The thunder and the rain so ravage the shoresNothing's left of the fruit my garden held once.I should employ the rake and the plow,Having reached the autumn of ideas,To restore this inundated groundWhere the deep grooves of water form tombs in the lees.And who knows if the new flowers you dreamedWill find in a soil stripped and cleanedThe mystic nourishment that fortifies?O Sorrow O Sorrow Time consumes Life,And the obscure enemy that gnaws at my heartUses the blood that I lose to play my part.
Charles Baudelaire
The Snow Man.
Poor shape grotesque that careless hands have wrought! Frail wistful thing, left gaping at the sun With empty grin, 'tis well no blood shall runWithin thy frozen veins, no kindling thoughtLight up those eyeless sockets wherein naught But hate could dwell if once they flashed the fire Of being, or the doom-gift of DesireShould curse thy life, unbidden and unsought.Poor snow man with thy tattered hat awry, And broomstick musket toppling from thy hands,'Tis well thou hast no language to decry Thy poor creator or his vain commands;No tear to shed that thou so soon must die, No voice to lift in prayer where no god understands!
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
The Optimist
The fields were bleak and sodden. Not a wingOr note enlivened the depressing wood;A soiled and sullen, stubborn snowdrift stoodBeside the roadway. Winds came mutteringOf storms to be, and brought the chilly sting Of icebergs in their breath. Stalled cattle mooed Forth plaintive pleadings for the earth's green food.No gleam, no hint of hope in anything.The sky was blank and ashen, like the face Of some poor wretch who drains life's cup too fastYet, swaying to and fro, as if to flingAbout chilled Nature its lithe arms of grace, Smiling with promise in the wintry blast,The optimistic Willow spoke of spring.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
An Old Year's Address
"I have twankled the strings of the twinkering rain; I have burnished the meteor's mail; I have bridled the wind When he whinnied and whined With a bunch of stars tied to his tail;But my sky-rocket hopes, hanging over the past,Must fuzzle and fazzle and fizzle at last!"I had waded far out in a drizzling dream, And my fancies had spattered my eyes With a vision of dread, With a number ten head, And a form of diminutive size -That wavered and wagged in a singular wayAs he wound himself up and proceeded to say, -"I have trimmed all my corns with the blade of the moon; I have picked every tooth with a star: And I thrill to recall That I went through it all Like a tu...
James Whitcomb Riley
A Song of the Snow
Oh the snow, - the bright fleecy snow!Isn't it grand when the north breezes blow?Isn't it bracing the ice to skim o'er,With a jovial friend or the one you adore?How the ice crackles, and how the skates ring,How friends flit past you like birds on the wing.How the gay laugh ripples through the clear air,How bloom the roses on cheeks of the fair!Few are the pleasures that life can bestow,To equal the charms of the beautiful snow.Oh, the snow,-the pitiless snow!Cruel and cold, as the shelterless know;Huddled in nooks on the mud or the flags,Wrapp'd in a few scanty, fluttering rags.Gently it rests on the roof and the spire,And filling the streets with its slush and the mire,Freezing the life out of poor, starving souls,Wild whirling and...
John Hartley
To The Generous Reader.
See and not see, and if thou chance t'espySome aberrations in my poetry,Wink at small faults; the greater, ne'ertheless,Hide, and with them their father's nakedness.Let's do our best, our watch and ward to keep;Homer himself, in a long work, may sleep.
Robert Herrick
Menie.
Tune. - "Johnny's grey breeks."I. Again rejoicing nature sees Her robe assume its vernal hues, Her leafy locks wave in the breeze, All freshly steep'd in morning dews. And maun I still on Menie doat, And bear the scorn that's in her e'e? For it's jet, jet black, an' it's like a hawk, An' it winna let a body be.II. In vain to me the cowslips blaw, In vain to me the vi'lets spring; In vain to me, in glen or shaw, The mavis and the lintwhite sing.III. The merry plough-boy cheers his team, Wi' joy the tentie seedsman stalks; But life to me's a weary dream, A dream of ane t...
Robert Burns
The Poets Mind
I.Vex not thou the poets mindWith thy shallow wit;Vex not thou the poets mind,For thou canst not fathom it.Clear and bright it should be ever,Flowing like a crystal river,Bright as light, and clear as wind.II.Dark-browd sophist, come not anear;All the place is holy ground;Hollow smile and frozen sneerCome not here.Holy water will I pourInto every spicy flowerOf the laurel-shrubs that hedge it around.The flowers would faint at your cruel cheer.In your eye there is death,There is frost in your breathWhich would blight the plants.Where you stand you cannot hearFrom the groves withinThe wild-birds din.In the heart of the garden the merry bird chants.It would fall to the gro...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Poet And The Children
Longfellow.With a glory of winter sunshineOver his locks of gray,In the old historic mansionHe sat on his last birthday;With his books and his pleasant pictures,And his household and his kin,While a sound as of myriads singingFrom far and near stole in.It came from his own fair city,From the prairie's boundless plain,From the Golden Gate of sunset,And the cedarn woods of Maine.And his heart grew warm within him,And his moistening eyes grew dim,For he knew that his country's childrenWere singing the songs of him,The lays of his life's glad morning,The psalms of his evening time,Whose echoes shall float foreverOn the winds of every clime.All their beautiful consolation...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The fields were bleak and sodden. Not a wingOr note enlivened the depressing wood,A soiled and sullen, stubborn snowdrift stoodBeside the roadway. Winds came mutteringOf storms to be, and brought the chilly stingOf icebergs in their breath. Stalled cattle mooedForth plaintive pleadings for the earth's green food.No gleam, no hint of hope in anything.The sky was blank and ashen, like the faceOf some poor wretch who drains life's cup too fast.Yet, swaying to and fro, as if to flingAbout chilled Nature its lithe arms of grace,Smiling with promise in the wintry blast,The optimistic Willow spoke of spring.
Luckless Fortune.
O raging fortune's withering blast Has laid my leaf full low, O! O raging fortune's withering blast Has laid my leaf full low, O! My stem was fair, my bud was green, My blossom sweet did blow, O; The dew fell fresh, the sun rose mild, And made my branches grow, O. But luckless fortune's northern storms Laid a' my blossoms low, O; But luckless fortune's northern storms Laid a' my blossoms low, O.
Adieu, Rydalian Laurels! That Have Grown
Adieu, Rydalian Laurels! that have grownAnd spread as if ye knew that days might comeWhen ye would shelter in a happy home,On this fair Mount, a Poet of your own,One who ne'er ventured for a Delphic crownTo sue the God; but, haunting your green shadeAll seasons through, is humbly pleased to braidGround-flowers, beneath your guardianship, self-sown.Farewell! no Minstrels now with harp new-strungFor summer wandering quit their household bowers;Yet not for this wants Poesy a tongueTo cheer the Itinerant on whom she poursHer spirit, while he crosses lonely moors,Or musing sits forsaken halls among.
William Wordsworth
Frost Flowers
It is not long since, here among all these folkin London, I should have held myselfof no account whatever,but should have stood aside and made them waythinking that they, perhaps,had more right than I - for who was I?Now I see them just the same, and watch them.But of what account do I hold them?Especially the young women. I look at themas they dart and flashbefore the shops, like wagtails on the edge of a pool.If I pass them close, or any man,like sharp, slim wagtails they flash a little asidepretending to avoid us; yet all the timecalculating.They think that we adore them - alas, would it were true!Probably they think all men adore them,howsoever they pass by.What is it, that, from their faces f...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Upon The Troublesome Times.
O times most bad,Without the scopeOf hopeOf better to be had!Where shall I go,Or whither runTo shunThis public overthrow?No places are,This I am sure,SecureIn this our wasting war.Some storms we've past,Yet we must allDown fall,And perish at the last.
Autumn
The Autumn skies are flush'd with gold,And fair and bright the rivers run;These are but streams of winter cold,And painted mists that quench the sun.In secret boughs no sweet birds sing,In secret boughs no bird can shroud;These are but leaves that take to wing,And wintry winds that pipe so loud.'Tis not trees' shade, but cloudy gloomsThat on the cheerless valleys fall,The flowers are in their grassy tombs,And tears of dew are on them all.
Thomas Hood
Tennyson
IShakespeare and Milton--what third blazoned nameShall lips of after-ages link to these?His who, beside the wild encircling seas,Was England's voice, her voice with one acclaim,For threescore years; whose word of praise was fame,Whose scorn gave pause to man's iniquities.IIWhat strain was his in that Crimean war?A bugle-call in battle; a low breath,Plaintive and sweet, above the fields of death!So year by year the music rolled afar,From Euxine wastes to flowery Kandahar,Bearing the laurel or the cypress wreath.IIIOthers shall have their little space of time,Their proper niche and bust, then fade awayInto the darkness, poets of a day;But thou, O builder of enduring rhyme,Thou shalt not ...
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
The Cottage
Here in turn succeed and ruleCarter, smith, and village fool,Then again the place is knownAs tavern, shop, and Sunday-school;Now somehow it's come to meTo light the fire and hold the key,Here in Heaven to reign alone.All the walls are white with lime,Big blue periwinkles climbAnd kiss the crumbling window-sill;Snug inside I sit and rhyme,Planning, poem, book, or fable,At my darling beech-wood tableFresh with bluebells from the hill.Through the window I can seeRooks above the cherry-tree,Sparrows in the violet bed,Bramble-bush and bumble-bee,And old red bracken smoulders stillAmong boulders on the hill,Far too bright to seem quite dead.But old Death, who can't forget,Waits his time and watche...
Robert von Ranke Graves
The Pond
And I told the boy next doorWhat Jack Frost had done; and heSaid, "Ah shucks! that's nothing; see?I have seen all that before.You just come along with me;I will show you something more."And he took me to a lotWhere there was a shallow pool;And this pool was frozen; fullOf the slickest ice. I gotOn it, but he said, "You fool!It will break. You'd better not."And right then it broke. O my!In I went above my knees.Thought that I would surely freeze.Old Jack Frost just caught me byBoth my legs; began to squeeze;And then I began to cry.I just helloed, and the boyHelloed too; until a man,With a dinner-pail or can,Heard us, and cried out, "Ahoy!What 've you run into?" Then ranTill he got there, to our joy.
Madison Julius Cawein