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The Daughter Of The Year
Nature, when she made thee, dear,Begged the treasures of the year.For thy cheeks, all pink and white,Spring gave apple blossoms light;Summer, for thy matchless eyes,Gave the azure of her skies;Autumn spun her gold and redIn a mass of silken thread,Gold and red and sunlight rareFor the wonder of thy hair!Surly Winter would impartBut his coldness, for thy heart.Dearest, let the love I bringTurn thy Winter into Spring.What are Summer, Spring and Fall,If thy Winter chills them all?
Ellis Parker Butler
A Week
On Monday night I closed my door,And thought you were not as heretofore,And little cared if we met no more.I seemed on Tuesday night to traceSomething beyond mere commonplaceIn your ideas, and heart, and face.On Wednesday I did not opineYour life would ever be one with mine,Though if it were we should well combine.On Thursday noon I liked you well,And fondly felt that we must dwellNot far apart, whatever befell.On Friday it was with a thrillIn gazing towards your distant villI owned you were my dear one still.I saw you wholly to my mindOn Saturday even one who shrinedAll that was best of womankind.As wing-clipt sea-gull for the seaOn Sunday night I longed for thee,Without whom life wer...
Thomas Hardy
'Tis Spring, My Love, 'Tis Spring
'T is Spring, my love, 'tis Spring,And the birds begin to sing:If 'twas Winter, left alone with you,Your bonny form and faceWould make a Summer place,And be the finest flower that ever grew.'T is Spring, my love, 'tis Spring,And the hazel catkins hing,While the snowdrop has its little blebs of dew;But that's not so white withinAs your bosom's hidden skin--That sweetest of all flowers that ever grew.The sun arose from bed,All strewn with roses red,But the brightest and the loveliest crimson placeIs not so fresh and fair,Or so sweet beyond compare,As thy blushing, ever smiling, happy face.I love Spring's early flowers,And their bloom in its first hours,But they never half so bright or lovely seemAs ...
John Clare
Possession
That which we had we still possess, Though leaves may drop and stars may fall;No circumstance can make it less, Or take it from us, all in all.That which is lost we did not own; We only held it for a day -A leaf by careless breezes blown; No fate could take our own away.I hold it as a changeless law From which no soul can sway or swerve,We have that in us which will draw Whate'er we need or most deserve.Even as the magnet to the steel Our souls are to our best desires;The Fates have hearts and they can feel - They know what each true life requires.We think we lose when we most gain; We call joys ended ere begun;When stars fade out do skies complain, Or glory in the rising s...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Lonely God
So Eden was deserted, and at eveInto the quiet place God came to grieve.His face was sad, His hands hung slackly downAlong his robe; too sorrowful to frownHe paced along the grassy paths and throughThe silent trees, and where the flowers grewTended by Adam. All the birds had goneOut to the world, and singing was not oneTo cheer the lonely God out of His grief,The silence broken only when a leafTapt lightly on a leaf, or when the wind,Slow-handed, swayed the bushes to its mind.And so along the base of a round hill,Rolling in fern, He bent His way untilHe neared the little hut which Adam made,And saw its dusky rooftree overlaidWith greenest leaves. Here Adam and his spouseWere wont to nestle in their little houseSnug at the dew-...
James Stephens
Little Charlie.
A violet grew by the river-side,And gladdened all hearts with its bloom;While over the fields, on the scented air,It breathed a rich perfume.But the clouds grew dark in the angry sky,And its portals were opened wide;And the heavy rain beat down the flowerThat grew by the river-side.Not far away in a pleasant home,There lived a little boy,Whose cheerful face and childish graceFilled every heart with joy.He wandered one day to the river's verge,With no one near to save;And the heart that we loved with a boundless loveWas stilled in the restless wave.The sky grew dark to our tearful eyes,And we bade farewell to joy;For our hearts were bound by a sorrowful tieTo the grave of the little boy.The birds still sing in...
Horatio Alger, Jr.
The Purple Valleys
Far in the purple valleys of illusionI see her waiting, like the soul of music,With deep eyes, lovelier than cerulean pansies,Shadow and fire, yet merciless as poison;With red lips, sweeter than Arabian storax,Yet bitterer than myrrh.--O tears and kisses!O eyes and lips, that haunt my soul forever!Again Spring walks transcendent on the mountains:The woods are hushed: the vales are blue with shadows:Above the heights, steeped in a thousand splendors,Like some vast canvas of the gods, hangs burningThe sunset's wild sciography: and slowlyThe moon treads heaven's proscenium,--night's statelyWhite queen of love and tragedy and madness.Again I know forgotten dreams and longings;Ideals lost; desires dead and buriedBeside the altar sacrific...
Madison Julius Cawein
One Life
Oh, I am hurt to death, my Love;The shafts of Fate have pierced my striving heart,And I am sick and weary ofThe endless pain and smart.My soul is weary of the strife,And chafes at life, and chafes at life.Time mocks me with fair promises;A blooming future grows a barren past,Like rain my fair full-blossomed treesUnburden in the blast.The harvest fails on grain and tree,Nor comes to me, nor comes to me.The stream that bears my hopes abreastTurns ever from my way its pregnant tide.My laden boat, torn from its rest,Drifts to the other side.So all my hopes are set astray,And drift away, and drift away.The lark sings to me at the morn,And near me wings her skyward-soaring flight;But pleasure dies as soon as ...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Another On Love.
Love's of itself too sweet; the best of allIs, when love's honey has a dash of gall.
Robert Herrick
To Miss - -
My friend of days, but not of years,With kindly heart these lines I trace,To tell you of a kindly wish,Which I upon this page would place.It is that thou thro' future yearsMay meet with very much of joy,And just a little grief, becauseContinued happiness will cloy.And when, in future years, you readWhat I to you just now have sung,Let others praise or blame, do thouThink pleasantly of T. F. Young.
Thomas Frederick Young
Heartsease
There is a flower I wish to wear,But not until first worn by you,Heartsease of all earths flowers most rare;Bring it; and bring enough for two.
Walter Savage Landor
May Song.
Between wheatfield and corn,Between hedgerow and thorn,Between pasture and tree,Where's my sweetheartTell it me!Sweetheart caught INot at home;She's then, thought I.Gone to roam.Fair and lovingBlooms sweet May;Sweetheart's roving,Free and gay.By the rock near the wave,Where her first kiss she gave,On the greensward, to me,Something I see!Is it she?
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Reflections
How shallow is this mere that gleams!Its depth of blue is from the skies;And from a distant sun the dreamsAnd lovely light within your eyes.We deem our love so infiniteBecause the Lord is everywhere,And love awakening is made brightAnd bathed in that diviner air.We go on our enchanted wayAnd deem our hours immortal hours,Who are but shadow kings that playWith mirrored majesties and powers.
George William Russell
To Virginia (on Her Birthday)
Your past is past and never to return,The long bright yesterday of life's first years,Its days are dead -- cold ashes in an urn.Some held for you a chalice for your tears,And other days strewed flowers upon your way.They all are gone beyond your reach,And thus they are beyond my speech.I know them not, so that your first gone timesTo me unknown, lie far beyond my rhymes.But I can bless your soul and aims to-day,And I can ask your future to be sweet,And I can pray that you may never meetWith any cross, you are too weak to bear.Virginia, Virgin name, and may you wearIts virtues and its beauties, fore'er and fore'er.I breathe this blessing, and I pray this prayer.
Abram Joseph Ryan
They May Rail At This Life.
They may rail at this life--from the hour I began it, I found it a life full of kindness and bliss;And, until they can show me some happier planet, More social and bright, I'll content me with this.As long as the world has such lips and such eyes, As before me this moment enraptured I see,They may say what they will of their orbs in the skies, But this earth is the planet for you, love, and me.In Mercury's star, where each moment can bring them New sunshine and wit from the fountain on high,Tho' the nymphs may have livelier poets to sing them, They've none, even there, more enamored than I.And as long as this harp can be wakened to love, And that eye its divine inspiration shall be,They may talk as they will of their Edens above,...
Thomas Moore
Sonnet. About Jesus. XVII
The highest marble Sorrow vanishesBefore a weeping child.[2] The one doth seem,The other is. And wherefore do we dream,But that we live? So I rejoice in this,That Thou didst cast Thyself, in all the blissOf conscious strength, into Life's torrent stream,(Thy deeds fresh life-springs that with blessings teem)Acting, not painting rainbows o'er its hiss.Forgive me, Lord, if in these verses lieMean thoughts, and stains of my infirmity;Full well I know that if they were as highIn holy song as prophet's ecstasy,'Tis more to Thee than this, if I, ah me!Speak gently to a child for love of Thee.
George MacDonald
Suspense.
A woman's figure, on a ground of night Inlaid with sallow stars that dimly stare Down in the lonesome eyes, uplifted there As in vague hope some alien lance of light Might pierce their woe. The tears that blind her sight - The salt and bitter blood of her despair - Her hands toss back through torrents of her hair And grip toward God with anguish infinite. And O the carven mouth, with all its great Intensity of longing frozen fast In such a smile as well may designate The slowly-murdered heart, that, to the last, Conceals each newer wound, and back at Fate Throbs Love's eternal lie - "Lo, I can wait!"
James Whitcomb Riley
To Lady Noel Byron
Men sought, ambition's thirst to slake, The lost elixir old Whose magic touch should instant make The meaner metals gold. A nobler alchymy is thine Which love from pain doth press: Gold in thy hand becomes divine, Grows truth and tenderness.