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Winter-Break
All day between high-curded clouds the sunShone down like summer on the steaming planks.The long, bright icicles in dwindling ranksDripped from the murmuring eaves till one by oneThey fell. As if the spring had now begun,The quilted snow, sun-softened to the core,Loosened and shunted with a sudden roarFrom downward roofs. Not even with day doneHad ceased the sound of waters, but all nightI heard it. In my dreams forgetfully brightMethought I wandered in the April woods,Where many a silver-piping sparrow was,By gurgling brooks and spouting solitudes,And stooped, and laughed, and plucked hepaticas.
Archibald Lampman
Kent In War
The pebbly brook is cold to-night,Its water soft as air,A clear, cold, crystal-bodied windShadowless and bare,Leaping and running in this worldWhere dark-horned cattle stare:Where dark-horned cattle stare, hoof-firmOn the dark pavements of the sky,And trees are mummies swathed in sleepAnd small dark hills crowd wearily;Soft multitudes of snow-grey cloudsWithout a sound march by.Down at the bottom of the roadI smell the woody dampOf that cold spirit in the grass,And leave my hill-top camp -Its long gun pointing in the sky -And take the Moon for lamp.I stop beside the bright cold glintOf that thin spirit in the grass,So gay it is, so innocent!I watch its sparkling footsteps passLightly from sm...
W.J. Turner
Gipsies
The snow falls deep; the forest lies alone;The boy goes hasty for his load of brakes,Then thinks upon the fire and hurries back;The gipsy knocks his hands and tucks them up,And seeks his squalid camp, half hid in snow,Beneath the oak which breaks away the wind,And bushes close in snow-like hovel warm;There tainted mutton wastes upon the coals,And the half-wasted dog squats close and rubs,Then feels the heat too strong, and goes aloof;He watches well, but none a bit can spare,And vainly waits the morsel thrown away.Tis thus they live--a picture to the place,A quiet, pilfering, unprotected race.
John Clare
Death And Life.
Apparently with no surpriseTo any happy flower,The frost beheads it at its playIn accidental power.The blond assassin passes on,The sun proceeds unmovedTo measure off another dayFor an approving God.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Change
A late and lonely figure stains the snow,Into the thickening darkness dims and dies.Heavily homeward now the last rooks go,And dull-eyed stars stare from the skies.A whimpering windSounds, then's still and whimpers again.Yet 'twas a morn of oh, such air and light!The early sun ran laughing over the snow,The laden trees held out their arms all whiteAnd whiteness shook on the white below.Lovely the shadows were,Deep purple niches, 'neath a dome of light.And now night's fall'n, the west wind begins to creepAmong the stiff trees, over the frozen snow;An hour--and the world stirs that was asleep,A trickle of water's heard, stealthy and slow,First faintly here and there,And then continual everywhere.And morn will look as...
John Frederick Freeman
Tis He Whose Yester-Evening's High Disdain
'Tis He whose yester-evening's high disdainBeat back the roaring storm, but how subduedHis day-break note, a sad vicissitude!Does the hour's drowsy weight his glee restrain?Or, like the nightingale, her joyous veinPleased to renounce, does this dear Thrush attuneHis voice to suit the temper of yon MoonDoubly depressed, setting, and in her wane?Rise, tardy Sun! and let the Songster prove(The balance trembling between night and mornNo longer) with what ecstasy upborneHe can pour forth his spirit. In heaven above,And earth below, they best can serve true gladnessWho meet most feelingly the calls of sadness.
William Wordsworth
To Mary Boyle
I.Spring-flowers! While you still delay to takeYour leave of town,Our elm-trees ruddy-hearted blossom-flakeIs fluttering down.II.Be truer to your promise. There! I heardOur cuckoo call.Be needle to the magnet of your word,Nor wait, till allIII.Our vernal bloom from every vale and plainAnd garden pass,And all the gold from each laburnum chainDrop to the grass.IV.Is memory with your Marian gone to rest,Dead with the dead?For ere she left us, when we met, you prestMy hand, and saidV.I come with your spring-flowers. You came not, my friend;My birds would sing,You heard not. Take then this spring-flower...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Written on a Bridge
When soft September brings againTo yonder gorse its golden glow,And Snowdon sends its autumn rainTo bid thy current livelier flow;Amid that ashen foliage lightWhen scarlet beads are glistering bright,While alder boughs unchanged are seenIn summer livery of green;When clouds before the cooler breezeAre flying, white and large; with theseReturning, so may I return,And find thee changeless, Pont-y-wern.
Arthur Hugh Clough
A Lovers Quarrel
I.Oh, what a dawn of day!How the March sun feels like May!All is blue againAfter last nights rain,And the South dries the hawthorn-spray.Only, my Loves away!Id as lief that the blue were grey,II.Runnels, which rillets swell,Must be dancing down the dell,With a foaming headOn the beryl bedPaven smooth as a hermits cell;Each with a tale to tell,Could my Love but attend as well.III.Dearest, three months ago!When we lived blocked-up with snow,When the wind would edgeIn and in his wedge,In, as far as the point could go,Not to our ingle, though,Where we loved each the other so!IV.Laughs with so little cause!We devised games out of straws.We...
Robert Browning
Dirge.
"Dr. Birch's young friends will reassemble to-day, Feb. 1st."White is the wold, and ghostlyThe dank and leafless trees;And 'M's and 'N's are mostlyPronounced like 'B's and 'D's:'Neath bleak sheds, ice-encrusted,The sheep stands, mute and stolid:And ducks find out, disgusted,That all the ponds are solid.Many a stout steer's work is(At least in this world) finished;The gross amount of turkiesIs sensibly diminished:The holly-boughs are faded,The painted crackers gone;Would I could write, as Gray did,An Elegy thereon!For Christmas-time is ended:Now is "our youth" regainingThose sweet spots where are "blendedHome-comforts and school-training."Now they're, I dare say, ventingTheir grief in transie...
Charles Stuart Calverley
John Skelton
What could be dafterThan John Skelton's laughter?What sound more tenderlyThan his pretty poetry?So where to rank old Skelton?He was no monstrous Milton,Nor wrote no "Paradise Lost,"So wondered at by most,Phrased so disdainfully,Composed so painfully.He struck what Milton missed,Milling an English gristWith homely turn and twist.He was English through and through,Not Greek, nor French, nor Jew,Though well their tongues he knew,The living and the dead:Learned Erasmus said,Hie 'unum BritannicarumLumen et decus literarum.But oh, Colin Clout!How his pen flies about,Twiddling and turning,Scorching and burning,Thrusting and thrumming!How it hurries with humming,Leaping and running,
Robert von Ranke Graves
Frost In May
March set heel upon the flowers,Trod and trampled them for hours:But when April's bugles rang,Up their starry legions sprang,Radiant in the sun-shot showers.April went her frolic ways,Arm in arm with happy days:Then from hills that rim the west,Bare of head and bare of breast,May, the maiden, showed her face.Then, it seemed, again returnedMarch, the iron-heeled, who turnedFrom his northward path and caughtMay about the waist, who foughtAnd his fierce advances spurned.What her strength and her disdainTo the madness in his brain!He must kiss her though he kill;Then, when he had had his will,Go his roaring way again.Icy grew her finger-tips,And the wild-rose of her lipsPaled with frost: t...
Madison Julius Cawein
A Basket Of Flowers - From Dawn To Dusk
DawnOn skies still and starlitWhite lustres take hold,And grey flushes scarlet,And red flashes gold.And sun-glories coverThe rose shed above her,Like lover and loverThey flame and unfold.- - - - -Still bloom in the gardenGreen grass-plot, fresh lawn,Though pasture lands hardenAnd drought fissures yawn.While leaves not a few fall,Let rose leaves for you fall,Leaves pearl-strung with dew-fall,And gold shot with dawn.Does the grass-plot rememberThe fall of your feetIn autumns red ember,When drought leagues with heat,When the last of the rosesDespairingly closesIn the lull that reposesEre storm winds wax fleet?Loves melodies languish...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The Mountains
Still, and blanched, and cold, and lone,The icy hills far off from meWith frosty ulys overgrownStand in their sculptured secrecy.No path of theirs the chamois fleetTreads, with a nostril to the wind;O'er their ice-marbled glaciers beatNo wings of eagles in my mind -Yea, in my mind these mountains rise,Their perils dyed with evening's rose;And still my ghost sits at my eyesAnd thirsts for their untroubled snows.
Walter De La Mare
To C. C. C.
Oh for the nights when we used to sit In the firelight's glow or flicker,With the gas turned low and our pipes all lit, And the air fast growing thicker;When you, enthroned in the big arm-chair, Would spin for us yarns unending,Your voice and accent and pensive air With the narrative subtly blending!Oh for the bleak and wintry days When we set our blood in motion,Leaping the rocks below the braes And wetting our feet in the ocean,Or shying at marks for moderate sums (A penny a hit, you remember),With aching fingers and purple thumbs, In the merry month of December!There is little doubt we were very daft, And our sports, like the stakes, were trifling;While the air of the room where ...
Robert Fuller Murray
The Schreckhorn
(With thoughts of Leslie Stephen)(June 1897)Aloof, as if a thing of mood and whim;Now that its spare and desolate figure gleamsUpon my nearing vision, less it seemsA looming Alp-height than a guise of himWho scaled its horn with ventured life and limb,Drawn on by vague imaginings, maybe,Of semblance to his personalityIn its quaint glooms, keen lights, and rugged trim.At his last change, when Life's dull coils unwind,Will he, in old love, hitherward escape,And the eternal essence of his mindEnter this silent adamantine shape,And his low voicing haunt its slipping snowsWhen dawn that calls the climber dyes them rose?
Thomas Hardy
On Himself
I'll write no more of love, but now repentOf all those times that I in it have spent.I'll write no more of life, but wish 'twas ended,And that my dust was to the earth commended.
Robert Herrick
A Vision.
As I stood by yon roofless tower, Where the wa'-flower scents the dewy air, Where th' howlet mourns in her ivy bower And tells the midnight moon her care; The winds were laid, the air was still, The Stars they shot along the sky; The fox was howling on the hill, And the distant echoing glens reply. The stream, adown its hazelly path, Was rushing by the ruin'd wa's, Hasting to join the sweeping Nith,[1] Whose distant roaring swells and fa's. The cauld blue north was streaming forth Her lights, wi' hissing eerie din; Athort the lift they start and shift, Like fortune's favours, tint as win. By heedless chance I turn'd mine eyes,<...
Robert Burns