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Till To-Morrow.
Long have I longed, till I am tiredOf longing and desire;Farewell my points in vain desired,My dying fire;Farewell all things that die and fail and tire.Springtide and youth and useless pleasureAnd all my useless scheming,My hopes of unattainable treasure,Dreams not worth dreaming,Glow-worms that gleam but yield no warmth in gleaming,Farewell all shows that fade in showing:My wish and joy stand overUntil to-morrow; Heaven is glowingThrough cloudy cover,Beyond all clouds loves me my Heavenly Lover.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Moonlight
It will not hurt me when I am old,A running tide where moonlight burnedWill not sting me like silver snakes;The years will make me sad and cold,It is the happy heart that breaks.The heart asks more than life can give,When that is learned, then all is learned;The waves break fold on jewelled fold,But beauty itself is fugitive,It will not hurt me when I am old.
Sara Teasdale
On The Power Of Sound
IThy functions are ethereal,As if within thee dwelt a glancing mind,Organ of vision! And a Spirit aerialInforms the cell of Hearing, dark and blind;Intricate labyrinth, more dread for thoughtTo enter than oracular cave;Strict passage, through which sighs are brought,And whispers for the heart, their slave;And shrieks, that revel in abuseOf shivering flesh; and warbled air,Whose piercing sweetness can unlooseThe chains of frenzy, or entice a smileInto the ambush of despair;Hosannas pealing down the long-drawn aisle,And requiems answered by the pulse that beatsDevoutly, in life's last retreats!IIThe headlong streams and fountainsServe Thee, invisible Spirit, with untired powers;Cheering the wakeful tent o...
William Wordsworth
The Assignation. [14]
Hear I the creaking gate unclose?The gleaming latch uplifted?No - 'twas the wind that, whirring, rose,Amidst the poplars drifted!Adorn thyself, thou green leaf-bowering roof,Destined the bright one's presence to receive,For her, a shadowy palace-hall aloofWith holy night, thy boughs familiar weave.And ye sweet flatteries of the delicate air,Awake and sport her rosy cheek around,When their light weight the tender feet shall bear,When beauty comes to passion's trysting-ground.Hush! what amidst the copses crept -So swiftly by me now?No-'twas the startled bird that sweptThe light leaves of the bough!Day, quench thy torch! come, ghostlike, from on high,With thy loved silence, come, thou haunting Eve,Broaden below thy web of purple ...
Friedrich Schiller
Dead Love
God let me listen to your voice,And look upon you for a space,And then he took your voice away,And dropped a veil before your face.God let me look within your eyes,And touch for once your clinging hand,And then he left me all alone,And took you to the Silent Land.I cannot weep, I cannot pray,My heart has very silent grown,I only watch how God gives love,And then leaves lovers all alone.
Son
He hurried away, young heart of joy, under our Devon sky!And I watched him go, my beautiful boy, and a weary woman was I.For my hair is grey, and his was gold; he'd the best of his life to live;And I'd loved him so, and I'm old, I'm old; and he's all I had to give.Ah yes, he was proud and swift and gay, but oh how my eyes were dim!With the sun in his heart he went away, but he took the sun with him.For look! How the leaves are falling now, and the winter won't be long. . . .Oh boy, my boy with the sunny brow, and the lips of love and of song!How we used to sit at the day's sweet end, we two by the firelight's gleam,And we'd drift to the Valley of Let's Pretend, on the beautiful river of Dream.Oh dear little heart! All wealth untold would I gladly, gladly payCoul...
Robert William Service
What aw Want.
Gie me a little humble cot,A bit o' garden graand,Set in some quiet an' sheltered spot,Wi' hills an' trees all raand;An' if besides mi hooam ther flowsA little mumuring rill,At sings sweet music as it gooas,Awst like it better still.Gie me a wife 'at loves me weel,An' childer two or three,Wi' health to sweeten ivery meal,An' hearts brimful o' glee.Gie me a chonce, wi' honest toilMi efforts to engage,Gie me a maister who can smileWhen forkin aght mi wage.Gie me a friend 'at aw can trust,'An tell mi secrets to;One tender-hearted, firm an' just,Who sticks to what is true.Gie me a pipe to smook at neet,A pint o' hooam-brew'd ale,A faithful dog 'at runs to meetMe wi a waggin tai...
John Hartley
Canzone V.
Nella stagion che 'l ciel rapido inchina.NIGHT BRINGS REPOSE TO OTHERS, BUT NOT TO HIM. In that still season, when the rapid sunDrives down the west, and daylight flies to greetNations that haply wait his kindling flame;In some strange land, alone, her weary feetThe time-worn pilgrim finds, with toil fordone,Yet but the more speeds on her languid frame;Her solitude the same,When night has closed around;Yet has the wanderer foundA deep though short forgetfulness at lastOf every woe, and every labour past.But ah! my grief, that with each moment grows,As fast, and yet more fast,Day urges on, is heaviest at its close.When Phoebus rolls his everlasting wheelsTo give night room; and from encircling wood,B...
Francesco Petrarca
Sonnet LVI.
Amor con sue promesse lusingando.LOVE CHAINS ARE STILL DEAR TO HIM. By promise fair and artful flatteryMe Love contrived in prison old to snare,And gave the keys to her my foe in care,Who in self-exile dooms me still to lie.Alas! his wiles I knew not until IWas in their power, so sharp yet sweet to bear,(Man scarce will credit it although I swear)That I regain my freedom with a sigh,And, as true suffering captives ever do,Carry of my sore chains the greater part,And on my brow and eyes so writ my heartThat when she witnesseth my cheek's wan hueA sigh shall own: if right I read his face,Between him and his tomb but small the space!MACGREGOR.
To A Lady Who Presented To The Author A Lock Of Hair Braided With His Own, And Appointed A Night In December To Meet Him In The Garden. [1]
These locks, which fondly thus entwine,In firmer chains our hearts confine,Than all th' unmeaning protestationsWhich swell with nonsense, love orations.Our love is fix'd, I think we've prov'd it;Nor time, nor place, nor art have mov'd it;Then wherefore should we sigh and whine,With groundless jealousy repine;With silly whims, and fancies frantic,Merely to make our love romantic?Why should you weep, like Lydia Languish,And fret with self-created anguish?Or doom the lover you have chosen,On winter nights to sigh half frozen;In leafless shades, to sue for pardon,Only because the scene's a garden?For gardens seem, by one consent,(Since Shakespeare set the precedent;Since Juliet first declar'd her passion)To form the place o...
George Gordon Byron
The Moon
Thy beauty haunts me heart and soul,Oh thou fair Moon, so close and bright;Thy beauty makes me like the childThat cries aloud to own thy light:The little child that lifts each armTo press thee to her bosom warm.Though there are birds that sing this nightWith thy white beams across their throats,Let my deep silence speak for meMore than for them their sweetest notes:Who worships thee till music fails,Is greater than thy nightingales.
William Henry Davies
Life
Hearken, O dear, now strikes the hour we die;We, who in our strange kissHave proved a dream the world's realities,Turned each from other's darkness with a sigh,Need heed no more of life, waste no more breathOn any other journey, but of death.And yet: Oh, know we wellHow each of us must prove Love's infidel;Still out of ecstasy turn trembling backTo earth's same empty trackOf leaden day by day, and hour by hour, and beOf all things lovely the cold mortuary.
Walter De La Mare
Lines Written Among The Euganean Hills.
Many a green isle needs must beIn the deep wide sea of Misery,Or the mariner, worn and wan,Never thus could voyage on -Day and night, and night and day,Drifting on his dreary way,With the solid darkness blackClosing round his vessel's track:Whilst above the sunless sky,Big with clouds, hangs heavily,And behind the tempest fleetHurries on with lightning feet,Riving sail, and cord, and plank,Till the ship has almost drankDeath from the o'er-brimming deep;And sinks down, down, like that sleepWhen the dreamer seems to beWeltering through eternity;And the dim low line beforeOf a dark and distant shoreStill recedes, as ever stillLonging with divided will,But no power to seek or shun,He is ever drifted on
Percy Bysshe Shelley
November Song.
To the great archer not to himTo meet whom flies the sun,And who is wont his features dimWith clouds to overrunBut to the boy be vow'd these rhymes,Who 'mongst the roses plays,Who hear us, and at proper timesTo pierce fair hearts essays.Through him the gloomy winter night,Of yore so cold and drear,Brings many a loved friend to our sight,And many a woman dear.Henceforward shall his image fairStand in yon starry skies,And, ever mild and gracious there,Alternate set and rise.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Altitude
I wonderhow it would be here with you,where the windthat has shaken off its dust in low valleystouches one cleanly,as with a new-washed hand,and painis as the remote hunger of droning things,and angerbut a little silencesinking into the great silence.
Lola Ridge
Love And Marriage.
Eque brevi verbo ferre perenne malum. SECUNDUS, eleg. vii.Still the question I must parry, Still a wayward truant prove:Where I love, I must not marry; Where I marry, can not love.Were she fairest of creation, With the least presuming mind;Learned without affectation; Not deceitful, yet refined;Wise enough, but never rigid; Gay, but not too lightly free;Chaste as snow, and yet not frigid: Fond, yet satisfied with me:Were she all this ten times over, All that heaven to earth allows.I should be too much her lover Ever to become her spouse.Love will never bear enslaving; Summer garments suit him best;Bliss itself is not worth having, ...
Thomas Moore
Sher Afzul
This was the tale Sher Afzul told to me,While the spent camels bubbled on their knees,And ruddy camp-fires twinkled through the gloomSweet with the fragrance from the Sinjib trees.I had a friend who lay, condemned to deathIn gaol for murder, wholly innocent,Yet caught in webs of luckless circumstance; -Thou know'st how lies, of good and ill intent,Cluster like flies around a justice-court,Wheel within wheel, revolving screw on screw; -But from his prison he escaped and fled,Keeping his liberty a night or twoAmong the lonely hills, where, shackled still,He braved a village, seeking for a fileTo loose his irons; alas! he lost his lifeThrough the base sweetness of a woman's smile.Lovely she was, and young, who gave the yout...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Eudaemon
O happiness, I know not what far seas,Blue hills and deep, thy sunny realms surround,That thus in Music's wistful harmoniesAnd concert of sweet soundA rumor steals, from some uncertain shore,Of lovely things outworn or gladness yet in store:Whether thy beams be pitiful and come,Across the sundering of vanished years,From childhood and the happy fields of home,Like eyes instinct with tearsFelt through green brakes of hedge and apple-boughRound haunts delightful once, desert and silent now;Or yet if prescience of unrealized loveStartle the breast with each melodious air,And gifts that gentle hands are donors ofStill wait intact somewhere,Furled up all golden in a perfumed placeWithin the folded petals of forthcoming days.<...
Alan Seeger