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The Human Music
At evening when the aspens rustled softAnd the last blackbird by the hedge-nest laughed,And through the leaves the moon's unmeaning faceLooked, and then rose in dark-blue leafless space;Watching the trees and moon she could not bearThe silence and the presence everywhere.The blackbird called the silence and it cameClosing and closing round like smoke round flame.Into her heart it crept and the heart was numb,Even wishes died, and all but fear was dumb--Fear and its phantoms. Then the trees were enlarged,And from their roundness unguessed shapes emerged,Or no shape but the image of her fearCreeping forth from her mind and hovering near.If a bat flitted it was an evil thing;Sadder the trees grew with every shadowy wing--Their shape enlarged, thei...
John Frederick Freeman
Love Letters of a Violinist. Letter IV. Yearnings.
Letter IV. Yearnings.I. The earth is glad, I know, when night is spent, For then she wakes the birdlings in the bowers; And, one by one, the rosy-footed hours Start for the race; and from his crimson tent The soldier-sun looks o'er the firmament; And all his path is strewn with festal flowers.II. But what his mission? What the happy quest Of all this toil? He journeys on his way As Cæsar did, unbiass'd by the sway Of maid or man. His goal is in the west. Will he unbuckle there, a...
Eric Mackay
The Nightingale Unheard
Yes, Nightingale, through all the summer-time We followed on, from moon to golden moon; From where Salerno day-dreams in the noon,And the far rose of Pæstum once did climb. All the white way beside the girdling blue,Through sun-shrill vines and campanile chime, We listened;--from the old year to the new. Brown bird, and where were you?You, that Ravello lured not, throned on high And filled with singing out of sun-burned throats! Nor yet Minore of the flame-sailed boats;Nor yet--of all bird-song should glorify-- Assisi, Little Portion of the blest,Assisi, in the bosom of the sky, Where God's own singer thatched his sunward nest; That little, heavenliest!And north and north, to where the hedge-row...
Josephine Preston Peabody
To Mary.
It is not very long since first we met, Thy path and mine lay very far apart;We are not of one nation, dear one, yet Thou hast awakened love within my heart.It is a love that sorrow never tried, And yet, like tested love, it is as trueAs love that stood in dark hours by your side, If hours were ever dark or sad to you.Not for your beauty, though I think you fair, Not for the kind heart or the tender word;But for the kindredship,--because you were One who both knew and loved my gracious Lord.One who had often met with Him alone; One over whom His garment had been laid;Clothed on with beauty that was not your own, Bought with a price no other could have paid,Divided by the ridge of time are we,
Nora Pembroke
To my Daughter on her Birthday.
Darling child, to thee I owe,More than others here will know;Thou hast cheered my weary days,With thy coy and winsome ways.When my heart has been most sad,Smile of thine has made me glad;In return, I wish for thee,Health and sweet felicity.May thy future days be blest,With all things the world deems best.If perchance the day should come,Thou does leave thy childhood's home;Bound by earth's most sacred ties,With responsibilities,In another's life to share,Wedded joys and worldly care;May thy partner worthy prove, -Richest in thy constant love.Strong in faith and honour, just, -With brave heart on which to trust.One, to whom when troubles come,And the days grow burdensome,Thou canst fly, with confidenceIn...
John Hartley
What We All Think
That age was older once than now,In spite of locks untimely shed,Or silvered on the youthful brow;That babes make love and children wed.That sunshine had a heavenly glow,Which faded with those "good old days"When winters came with deeper snow,And autumns with a softer haze.That - mother, sister, wife, or child -The "best of women" each has known.Were school-boys ever half so wild?How young the grandpapas have grown!That but for this our souls were free,And but for that our lives were blest;That in some season yet to beOur cares will leave us time to rest.Whene'er we groan with ache or pain, -Some common ailment of the race, -Though doctors think the matter plain, -That ours is "a peculiar case."
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Armenian Lady's Love
IYou have heard "a Spanish LadyHow she wooed an English man;"Hear now of a fair Armenian,Daughter of the proud Soldan;How she loved a Christian slave, and told her painBy word, look, deed, with hope that he might love again.II"Pluck that rose, it moves my liking,"Said she, lifting up her veil;"Pluck it for me, gentle gardener,Ere it wither and grow pale.""Princess fair, I till the ground, but may not takeFrom twig or bed an humbler flower, even for your sake!"III"Grieved am I, submissive Christian!To behold thy captive state;Women, in your land, may pity(May they not?) the unfortunate.""Yes, kind Lady! otherwise man could not bearLife, which to every one that breathes is full of care."...
William Wordsworth
An Elective Course
Lines Found Among The Papers Of A Harvard UndergraduateThe bloom that lies on Fanny's cheekIs all my Latin, all my Greek;The only sciences I knowAre frowns that gloom and smiles that glow;Siberia and ItalyLie in her sweet geography;No scholarship have I but suchAs teaches me to love her much.Why should I strive to read the skies,Who know the midnight of her eyes?Why should I go so very farTo learn what heavenly bodies are!Not Berenice's starry hairWith Fanny's tresses can compare;Not Venus on a cloudless night,Enslaving Science with her light,Ever reveals so much as whenSHE stares and droops her lids again.If Nature's secrets are forbiddenTo mortals, she may keep them hidden.AEons and aeons we pro...
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
Marianna Alcoforando
The sparrows wake beneath the convent eaves;I think I have not slept the whole night through.But I am old; the aged scarcely knowThe times they wake and sleep, for life burns down;They breathe the calm of death before they die.The long night ends, the day comes creeping in,Showing the sorrows that the darkness hid,The bended head of Christ, the blood, the thorns,The wall's gray stains of damp, the pallet bedWhere little Sister Marta dreams of saints,Waking with arms outstretched imploringlyThat seek to stay a vision's vanishing.I never had a vision, yet for meOur Lady smiled while all the convent sleptOne winter midnight hushed around with snow,I thought she might be kinder than the rest,And so I came to kneel before her feet,Sick with lo...
Sara Teasdale
Friendship
Thou foolish Hafiz! Say, do churlsKnow the worth of Oman's pearls?Give the gem which dims the moonTo the noblest, or to none.Dearest, where thy shadow falls,Beauty sits and Music calls;Where thy form and favor come,All good creatures have their home.On prince or bride no diamond stoneHalf so gracious ever shone,As the light of enterpriseBeaming from a young man's eyes.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
A Lover's Confession
When people tell me they have loved But once in youth,I wonder, are they always moved To speak the truth?Not that they wilfully deceive: They fondly cherishA constancy which they would grieve To think might perish.They cherish it until they think 'Twas always theirs.So, if the truth they sometimes blink, 'Tis unawares.Yet unawares, I must profess, They do deceiveThemselves, and those who questionless Their tale believe.For I have loved, I freely own, A score of times,And woven, out of love alone, A hundred rhymes.Boys will be fickle. Yet, when all Is said and done,I was not one whom you could call A flirt--not oneOf those w...
Robert Fuller Murray
An Idyl Of The May.
In the beautiful May weather, Lapsing soon into June; On a golden, golden day Of the green and golden May, When our hearts were beating tune To the coming feet of June,Walked we in the woods together. Silver fine Gleamed the ash buds through the darkness of the pine,And the waters of the streamGlance and gleam,Like a silver-footed dream-- Beckoning, calling, Flashing, falling,Into shadows dun and brown Slipping down,Calling still--Oh hear! Oh follow! Follow--follow!Down through glen and ferny hollow,Lit with patches of the sky,Shining through the trees so high,Hand in hand we went together,In the golden, golden weather Of the...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Constancy
I first saw Phebe when the show'rsHad just made brighter all the flow'rs; Yet she was fair As any there,And so I loved her hours and hours.Then I met Helen, and her waysSet my untutored heart ablaze. I loved at sight And deemed it rightTo worship her for days and days.Yet when I gazed on Clara's cheeksAnd spoke the language Cupid speaks, O'er all the rest She seemed the best,And so I loved her weeks and weeks.But last of Love's sweet souvenirsWas Delia with her sighs and tears. Of her it seemed I'd always dreamed,And so I loved her years and years.But now again with Phebe met,I love the first one of the set. "Fickle," you s...
Arthur Macy
A Prayer For My Daughter
Once more the storm is howling, and half hidUnder this cradle-hood and coverlidMy child sleeps on. There is no obstacleBut Gregory's wood and one bare hillWhereby the haystack- and roof-levelling wind.Bred on the Atlantic, can be stayed;And for an hour I have walked and prayedBecause of the great gloom that is in my mind.I have walked and prayed for this young child an hourAnd heard the sea-wind scream upon the tower,And-under the arches of the bridge, and screamIn the elms above the flooded stream;Imagining in excited reverieThat the future years had come,Dancing to a frenzied drum,Out of the murderous innocence of the sea.May she be granted beauty and yet notBeauty to make a stranger's eye distraught,Or hers before a looking-glass...
William Butler Yeats
O thou most holy Friendship! wheresoeerThy dwelling befor in the courts of manBut seldom thine all-heavenly voice we hear,Sweetning the moments of our narrow span;And seldom thy bright foot-steps do we scanAlong the weary waste of life unblest,For faithless is its frail and wayward plan,And perfidy is mans eternal guest,With dark suspicion linkd and shameless interest!Tis thine, when life has reachd its final goal,Ere the last sigh that frees the mind be givn,To speak sweet solace to the parting soul,And pave the bitter path that leads to heavn:Tis thine, wheneer the heart is rackd and rivnBy the hot shafts of baleful calumny,When the dark spirit to despair is drivn,To teach its lonely grief to lean on thee,And ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Valentines - II. To A Baby Boy
Who I am I shall not say,But I send you this bouquetWith this query, baby mine:"Will you be my valentine?"See these roses blushing blue,Very like your eyes of hue;While these violets are the redOf your cheeks. It can be saidNe'er before was babe like you.And I think it is quite trueNo one e'er before to-daySent so wondrous a bouquetAs these posies aforesaid--Roses blue and violets red!Sweet, repay me sweets for sweets--'Tis your lover who entreats!Smile upon me, baby mine--Be my little valentine!
Eugene Field
First Love.
("Vous êtes singulier.")[MARION DELORME, Act I., June, 1829, played 1831.]MARION (smiling.) You're strange, and yet I love you thus.DIDIER. You love me?Beware, nor with light lips utter that word.You love me! - know you what it is to loveWith love that is the life-blood in one's veins,The vital air we breathe, a love long-smothered,Smouldering in silence, kindling, burning, blazing,And purifying in its growth the soul.A love that from the heart eats every passionBut its sole self; love without hope or limit,Deep love that will outlast all happiness;Speak, speak; is such the love you bear me?MARION. Truly.DIDIER. Ha! but you do not know how I love you!The day that first I saw you, the dark...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Separation
HEOne decade and a half since first we cameWith hearts aflameInto Love's Paradise, as man and mate;And now we separate.Soon, all too soon,Waned the white splendour of our honeymoon. We saw it fading; but we did not know How bleak the path would be when once its glowWas wholly gone.And yet we two were forced to follow on - Leagues, leagues apart while ever side by side. Darker and darker grew the loveless weather,Darker the way,Until we could not stay Longer together. Now that all anger from our hearts has died,And love has flown far from its ruined nest,To find sweet shelter in another breast, Let us talk calmly of our past mistakes, And of our faults; if only for the sakesOf those wit...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox