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Comfort.
Once through an autumn woodI roamed in tearful mood,By grief dismayed, doubting, and ill at ease;When from a leafless oak,Methought low murmurs broke,Complaining accents, as of words like these:"Incline thy mighty earGreat Mother Earth, and hearHow I, thy child, am sorely vexed and tossed;No one to heed my moan,I shudder here, aloneWith my destroyers, wind and snow, and frost.Then low and unawareThis answer cleaved the air,This tender answer, "Doubting one be still;Oh trust to me, and knowThe wind, the frost, the snow,Are but my servants sent to do my will."For the destroyer frost,His labor is not lost,Rid thee he shall of many noisome things;And thou shalt praise the snowWhen drinking far b...
Marietta Holley
Knowledge.
What is more large than knowledge and more sweet;Knowledge of thoughts and deeds, of rights and wrongs,Of passions and of beauties and of songs;Knowledge of life; to feel its great heart beatThrough all the soul upon her crystal seat;To see, to feel, and evermore to know;To till the old world's wisdom till it growA garden for the wandering of our feet.Oh for a life of leisure and broad hours,To think and dream, to put away small things,This world's perpetual leaguer of dull naughts;To wander like the bee among the flowersTill old age find us weary, feet and wingsGrown heavy with the gold of many thoughts.
Archibald Lampman
Sweet Memory Of Love.
("Toutes les passions s'éloignent avec l'âge.")[XXXIV. ii., October, 183-.]As life wanes on, the passions slow depart,One with his grinning mask, one with his steel;Like to a strolling troupe of Thespian art,Whose pace decreases, winding past the hill.But naught can Love's all charming power efface,That light, our misty tracks suspended o'er,In joy thou'rt ours, more dear thy tearful grace,The young may curse thee, but the old adore.But when the weight of years bow down the head,And man feels all his energies decline,His projects gone, himself tomb'd with the dead,Where virtues lie, nor more illusions shine,When all our lofty thoughts dispersed and o'er,We count within our hearts so near congealed,Each grief that'...
Victor-Marie Hugo
From Eclogue vij
Now fye vpon thee wayward loue,Woe to Venus which did nurse thee,Heauen and earth thy plagues doe proue,Gods and men haue cause to curse thee.What art thou but th' extreamst madnesse,Natures first and only errorThat consum'st our daies in sadnesse,By the minds Continuall terror:Walking in Cymerian blindnesse,In thy courses voy'd of reason.Sharp reproofe thy only kindnesse,In thy trust the highest treason?Both the Nymph and ruder swaine,Vexing with continuall anguish,Which dost make the ould complaineAnd the young to pyne and languishe,Who thee keepes his care doth nurse,That seducest all to folly,Blessing, bitterly doest curse,Tending to destruction wholly:Thus of thee as I began,So againe I make an end,Neith...
Michael Drayton
Life
A crust of bread and a corner to sleep in,A minute to smile and an hour to weep in,A pint of joy to a peck of trouble,And never a laugh but the moans come double; And that is life!A crust and a corner that love makes precious,With a smile to warm and the tears to refresh us;And joy seems sweeter when cares come after,And a moan is the finest of foils for laughter; And that is life!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Garden
O painter of the fruits and flowers,We own wise design,Where these human hands of oursMay share work of Thine!Apart from Thee we plant in vainThe root and sow the seed;Thy early and Thy later rain,Thy sun and dew we need.Our toil is sweet with thankfulness,Our burden is our boon;The curse of Earth's gray morning isThe blessing of its noon.Why search the wide world everywhereFor Eden's unknown ground?That garden of the primal pairMay nevermore be found.But, blest by Thee, our patient toilMay right the ancient wrong,And give to every clime and soilThe beauty lost so long.Our homestead flowers and fruited treesMay Eden's orchard shame;We taste the tempting sweets of theseLike ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Dedication From "Astrophel and Other Poems"
The sea of the years that endure notWhose tide shall endure till we dieAnd know what the seasons assure not,If death be or life be a lie,Sways hither the spirit and thither,A waif in the swing of the seaWhose wrecks are of memories that witherAs leaves of a tree.We hear not and hail not with greetingThe sound of the wings of the years,The storm of the sound of them beating,That none till it pass from him hears:But tempest nor calm can imperilThe treasures that fade not or fly;Change bids them not change and be sterile,Death bids them not die.Hearts plighted in youth to the royalHigh service of hope and of song,Sealed fast for endurance as loyal,And proved of the years as they throng,Conceive not, believe not, and fear no...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
To - - , with a Rose.
I asked my heart to saySome word whose worth my love's devoir might payUpon my Lady's natal day.Then said my heart to me:`Learn from the rhyme that now shall come to theeWhat fits thy Love most lovingly.'This gift that learning shows;For, as a rhyme unto its rhyme-twin goes,I send a rose unto a Rose.Philadelphia, 1876.
Sidney Lanier
The Rosary of My Tears
Some reckon their age by years,Some measure their life by art;But some tell their days by the flow of their tears,And their lives by the moans of their heart.The dials of earth may showThe length, not the depth, of years,Few or many they come, few or many they go,But time is best measured by tears.Ah! not by the silver grayThat creeps thro' the sunny hair,And not by the scenes that we pass on our way,And not by the furrows the fingers of careOn forehead and face have made.Not so do we count our years;Not by the sun of the earth, but the shadeOf our souls, and the fall of our tears.For the young are ofttimes old,Though their brows be bright and fair;While their blood beats warm, their hearts are cold --O...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Sea Dreamings
To-day a bird on wings as white as foam That crests the blue-gray wave,With the vesper light upon its breast, flew home Seaward. The God who gaveTo the birds the virgin-wings of snowSomehow telleth them the ways they go.Unto the Evening went the white-winged bird -- Gray clouds hung round the West --And far away the tempest's tramp was heard. The bird flew for a restAway from the grove, out to the sea --Is it only a bird's mystery?Nay! nay! lone bird! I watched thy wings of white That cleft thy waveward way --Past the evening and swift into the night, Out of the calm, bright day --And thou didst teach me, bird of the sea,More than one human heart's history.Only men's hearts -- tho' God shows each ...
Valentines From A Conchologist
Were I a murm'ring ocean shell Pressed close against your ear,My constant whisperings would tell A story sweet to hear.I'd make the message from the sea Love's tidings on the shore,And I would woo with words so true That you could ask no more.So if some silvern nautilus Lay close beside your cheek,And you should hear a language dear Unto the heart I seek,You'll know within the simple shell That murmurs o'er and o'erI send to you a love more true Than e'er was breathed before.
Arthur Macy
The Garden Of Dreams
Not while I live may I forgetThat garden which my spirit trod!Where dreams were flowers, wild and wet,And beautiful as God.Not while I breathe, awake, adream,Shall live again for me those hours,When, in its mystery and gleam,I met her 'mid the flowers.Eyes, talismanic heliotrope,Beneath mesmeric lashes, whereThe sorceries of love and hopeHad made a shining lair.And daydawn brows, whereover hungThe twilight of dark locks: wild birds,Her lips, that spoke the rose's tongueOf fragrance-voweled words.I will not tell of cheeks and chin,That held me as sweet language holds;Nor of the eloquence withinHer breasts' twin-moonéd molds.Nor of her body's languorousWind-grace, that glanced like starlight throughHer clinging...
Madison Julius Cawein
Honor To Labor
HONOR TO LABOR! - it giveth health;Honor to labor! - it bringeth wealth;Honor to labor! - our glorious landDisplayeth its triumphs on every hand.It has smoothed the plains, laid the forests low,And brightened the vales with the harvest's glow, -Reared cities vast with their marts of trade,Where erst undisturbed lay the woodland shade, -Brought up from the depths of the teeming mine,Its treasured stores in the light to shine, -Sent Commerce forth on his tireless wingsIn search of all precious and goodly things -Forth to the ice-bound Northern seas,And to bright isles fanned by the Southern breeze,Where the Orange deepens its sunset dyes,And the Cocoa ripens 'neath glowing skies, -To the sunny islands of Austral climes, -To lands undreamt o...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Comfort Of The Fields
What would'st thou have for easement after grief,When the rude world hath used thee with despite,And care sits at thine elbow day and night,Filching thy pleasures like a subtle thief?To me, when life besets me in such wise,'Tis sweetest to break forth, to drop the chain,And grasp the freedom of this pleasant earth,To roam in idleness and sober mirth,Through summer airs and summer lands, and drainThe comfort of wide fields unto tired eyes.By hills and waters, farms and solitudes,To wander by the day with wilful feet;Through fielded valleys wide with yellowing wheat;Along gray roads that run between deep woods,Murmurous and cool; through hallowed slopes of pine,Where the long daylight dreams, unpierced, unstirred,And only the rich-throated ...
The Power of the Dog
There is sorrow enough in the natural wayFrom men and women to fill our day;And when we are certain of sorrow in store,Why do we always arrange for more?Brothers and Sisters, I bid you bewareOf giving your heart to a dog to tear.Buy a pup and your money will buyLove unflinching that cannot lie,Perfect passion and worship fedBy a kick in the ribs or a pat on the head.Nevertheless it is hardly fairTo risk your heart for a dog to tear.When the fourteen years which Nature permitsAre closing in asthma, or tumour, or fits,And the vet's unspoken prescription runsTo lethal chambers or loaded guns,Then you will find, it's your own affair,But . . . you've given your heart to a dog to tear.When the body that lived at your sin...
Rudyard
The Brothers
Not far from here, it lies beyondThat low-hilled belt of woods. We'll takeThis unused lane where brambles makeA wall of twilight, and the blondBrier-roses pelt the path and flakeThe margin waters of a pond.This is its fence - or that which wasIts fence once - now, rock rolled from rock,One tangle of the vine and dock,Where bloom the wild petunias;And this its gate, the iron-weeds block,Hot with the insects' dusty buzz.Two wooden posts, wherefrom has peeledThe weather-crumbled paint, still rise;Gaunt things - that groan when someone triesThe gate whose hinges, rust-congealed,Snarl open: - on each post still liesIts carven lion with a shield.We enter; and between great rowsOf locusts winds a grass-grown road;
The Pretty Rose-Tree.
Being weary of love, I flew to the grove,And chose me a tree of the fairest; Saying, "Pretty Rose-tree, "Thou my mistress shall be, "And I'll worship each bud thou bearest. "For the hearts of this world are hollow, "And fickle the smiles we follow; "And 'tis sweet, when all "Their witcheries pall"To have a pure love to fly to: "So, my pretty Rose-tree, "Thou my mistress shalt be,"And the only one now I shall sigh to." When the beautiful hue Of thy cheek thro' the dewOf morning is bashfully peeping, "Sweet tears," I shall say (As I brush them away),...
Thomas Moore
The Wild-Flower Nosegay.
In life's first years as on a mother's breast,When Nature nurs'd me in her flowery pride,I cull'd her bounty, such as seemed best,And made my garlands by some hedge-row side:With pleasing eagerness the mind reclaimsFrom black oblivion's shroud such artless scenes,And cons the calendar of childish namesWith simple joy, when manhood intervenes.From the sweet time that spring's young thrills are born,And golden catkins deck the sallow tree,Till summer's blue-caps blossom mid the corn,And autumn's ragwort yellows o'er the lea,I roam'd the fields about, a happy child,And bound my posies up with rushy ties,And laugh'd and mutter'd o'er my visions wild,Bred in the brain of pleasure's ecstacies.Crimp-frilled daisy, bright bronze buttercup,<...
John Clare