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To My First Born.
Fair tiny rosebud! what a tide Of hidden joy, o'erpow'ring, deep,Of grateful love, of woman's pride, Thrills through my heart till I must weepWith bliss to look on thee, my son,My first born child - my darling one!What joy for me to sit and gaze Upon thy gentle, baby face,And, dreaming of far distant days, With mother's weakness strive to traceTokens of future greatness high, On thy smooth brow and lustrous eye.What do I wish thee, darling, say? Is it that lordly mental powerThat o'er thy kind will give thee sway, Unchanging, full, a glorious dowerFor those whose minds may grasp its worth,True rulers and true kings of earth?Or would I ask for thee that fire Of wond'rous genius, great d...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
A Letter To His Friend Isaac. (Translations From The Hebrew Poets Of Medaeval Spain.)
But yesterday the earth drank like a childWith eager thirst the autumn rain.Or like a wistful bride who waits the hourOf love's mysterious bliss and pain.And now the Spring is here with yearning eyes;Midst shimmering golden flower-beds,On meadows carpeted with varied hues,In richest raiment clad, she treads.She weaves a tapestry of bloom o'er all,And myriad eyed young plants upspring,White, green, or red like lips that to the mouthOf the beloved one sweetly cling.Whence come these radiant tints, these blended beams?Here's such a dazzle, such a blaze,As though each stole the splendor of the stars,Fain to eclipse them with her rays.Come! go we to the garden with our wine,Which scatters sparks of hot desire,Within our hand 't is cold, ...
Emma Lazarus
Persuasion
Then I asked: 'Does a firm persuasion that a thing is so, make it so?'He replied: 'All Poets believe that it does, and in ages of imagination this firm persuasion removed mountains; but many are not capable of a firm persuasion of anything.'Blake's 'Marriage of Heaven and Hell'.IAt any moment love unheraldedComes, and is king. Then as, with a fallOf frost, the buds upon the hawthorn spreadAre withered in untimely burial,So love, occasion gone, his crown puts by,And as a beggar walks unfriended ways,With but remembered beauty to defyThe frozen sorrows of unsceptred days.Or in that later travelling he comesUpon a bleak oblivion, and tellsHimself, again, again, forgotten tombsAre all now that love wa...
John Drinkwater
Her Only Pilot The Soft Breeze, The Boat
Her only pilot the soft breeze, the boatLingers, but Fancy is well satisfied;With keen-eyed Hope, with Memory, at her side,And the glad Muse at liberty to noteAll that to each is precious, as we floatGently along; regardless who shall chideIf the heavens smile, and leave us free to glide,Happy Associates breathing air remoteFrom trivial cares. But, Fancy and the Muse,Why have I crowded this small bark with youAnd others of your kind, ideal crew!While here sits One whose brightness owes its huesTo flesh and blood; no Goddess from above,No fleeting Spirit, but my own true love?
William Wordsworth
Recollections.
Ye dear stars of the Bear, I did not think I should again be turning, as I used, To see you over father's garden shine, And from the windows talk with you again Of this old house, where as a child I dwelt, And where I saw the end of all my joys. What charming images, what fables, once, The sight of you created in my thought, And of the lights that bear you company! Silent upon the verdant clod I sat, My evening thus consuming, as I gazed Upon the heavens, and listened to the chant Of frogs that in the distant marshes croaked; While o'er the hedges, ditches, fire-flies roamed, And the green avenues and cypresses In yonder grove were murmuring to the wind; While in the house were heard, at inter...
Giacomo Leopardi
Genieve To Her Lover.
I turn the key in this idle hourOf an ivory box, and looking, lo -See only dust - the dust of a flower;The waters will ebb, the waters will flow,And dreams will come, and dreams will go, Forever.Oh, friend, if you and I should meetBeneath the boughs of the bending lime,Should you in the same low voice repeatThe tender words of the old love rhyme,It could not bring back the same old time, Never.When you laid this rose against my brow,I was quite unused to the ways of men,With my trusting heart; I am wiser now,So I smile, remembering my heart-throbs then,The dust of a rose cannot blossom again, Never.The brow that you praised has colder grown,And hearts will change, I suppose they must,A rose to ...
Marietta Holley
Immortal Love, Forever Full
Immortal love, forever full,Forever flowing free,Forever shared, forever whole,A never ebbing sea!Our outward lips confess the nameAll other names above;Love only knoweth whence it came,And comprehendeth love.Blow, winds of God, awake and blowThe mists of earth away:Shine out, O Light divine, and showHow wide and far we stray.We may not climb the heavenly steepsTo bring the Lord Christ down;In vain we search the lowest deeps,For Him no depths can drown.But warm, sweet, tender, even yet,A present help is He;And faith still has its Olivet,And love its Galilee.The healing of His seamless dressIs by our beds of pain;We touch Him in lifes throng and press,And we are whole again...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Tristram of Lyonesse - I - Prelude: Tristram and Iseult
Love, that is first and last of all things made,The light that has the living world for shade,The spirit that for temporal veil has onThe souls of all men woven in unison,One fiery raiment with all lives inwroughtAnd lights of sunny and starry deed and thought,And alway through new act and passion newShines the divine same body and beauty through,The body spiritual of fire and lightThat is to worldly noon as noon to night;Love, that is flesh upon the spirit of manAnd spirit within the flesh whence breath began;Love, that keeps all the choir of lives in chime;Love, that is blood within the veins of time;That wrought the whole world without stroke of hand,Shaping the breadth of sea, the length of land,And with the pulse and motion of his breath
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Stanzas Addressed To A Lady Coming Of Age.
There are moments we can look to, we can cherish in the past,As the fleeting days that numbered them are dwindling to their last,Like the roses in the autumn that are severed from their stem,Like the dew-bespangled petals when we sit and sigh for them.There were sweetnesses unrivalled in those halcyon days of truth,Yet fairy hopes are budding in the sunset glow of youth,When like the cloudlets o'er the far horizon of the sea,Each fringed with sheeny splendour, are the days of infancy.Yet there are days and moments for enjoyment on before,Tho' the golden skies of youth shall never smile upon us more,When the brow of early womanhood looks forth to pleasures new,And sweeter, lovelier visions are unfolding to the view.O take the gift and when though look...
Lennox Amott
There is no Breeze to Cool the Heat of Love
The listless Palm-trees catch the breeze above The pile-built huts that edge the salt Lagoon,There is no Breeze to cool the heat of love, No wind from land or sea, at night or noon.Perfumed and robed I wait, my Lord, for you, And my heart waits alert, with strained delight,My flowers are loath to close, as though they knew That you will come to me before the night.In the Verandah all the lights are lit, And softly veiled in rose to please your eyes,Between the pillars flying foxes flit, Their wings transparent on the lilac skies.Come soon, my Lord, come soon, I almost fear My heart may fail me in this keen suspense,Break with delight, at last, to know you near. Pleasure is one with Pain, if too intense....
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
To Some Ladies
What though while the wonders of nature exploring,I cannot your light, mazy footsteps attend;Nor listen to accents, that almost adoring,Bless Cynthia's face, the enthusiasts friend:Yet over the steep, whence the mountain stream rushes,With you, kindest friends, in idea I rove;Mark the clear tumbling crystal, its passionate gushes,Its spray that the wild flower kindly bedews.Why linger you so, the wild labyrinth strolling?Why breathless, unable your bliss to declare?Ah! you list to the nightingales tender condoling,Responsive to sylphs, in the moon beamy air.'Tis morn, and the flowers with dew are yet drooping,I see you are treading the verge of the sea:And now! ah, I see it, you just now are stoopingTo pick up the keep-sake intend...
John Keats
The Explorer
IDearest, when I left your side,I stood a moment, hesitating,And plunged. The boiling tideOf darkness took me, and down I wentSwift as a bird with folded wing,And upward sentThe bubbles of my vital breathThat shuddered from my secret deepsTo freedom and light;Then, dimly, on my sightOpened the still abode of living death.Amid the mire,In which invisibly sightless horror creeps,Sat, each intent on his own woe,The host that burns with inward fire,Crowded like monuments of memorial stoneBeneath a pitchy skyWhere even the flash of tempest dare not show,Yet each of them alone;And each was I.IIBreathless I struggled up,As if the gloom had arms to clutch at meAnd drag and hold,Unt...
John Le Gay Brereton
A Lover Since Childhood
Tangled in thought am I,Stumble in speech do I?Do I blunder and blush for the reason why?Wander aloof do I,Lean over gates and sigh,Making friends with the bee and the butterfly?If thus and thus I do,Dazed by the thought of you,Walking my sorrowful way in the early dew,My heart cut through and throughIn this despair of you,Starved for a word or a look will my hope renew:Give then a thought for meWalking so miserably,Wanting relief in the friendship of flower or tree;Do but remember, weOnce could in love agree,Swallow your pride, let us be as we used to be.
Robert von Ranke Graves
A Lover's Universe
When winter comes and takes away the rose,And all the singing of sweet birds is done,The warm and honeyed world lost deep in snows,Still, independent of the summer sun,In vain, with sullen roar,December shakes my door,And sleet upon the paneThreatens my peace in vain,While, seated by the fire upon my knee,My love abides with me.For he who, wise in time, his harvest yieldsReaped into barns, sweet-smelling and secure,Smiles as the rain beats sternly on his fields,For wealth is his no winter can make poor;Safe all his waving goldShut in against the cold,Treasure of summer grass -So sit I with my lass,My harvest sheaves of all her garnered charmsSafe in my happy arms.Still fragrant in the garden of her breast,
Richard Le Gallienne
Do You Remember Once . . .
IDo you remember once, in Paris of glad faces,The night we wandered off under the third moon's raysAnd, leaving far behind bright streets and busy places,Stood where the Seine flowed down between its quiet quais?The city's voice was hushed; the placid, lustrous watersMirrored the walls across where orange windows burned.Out of the starry south provoking rumors brought usFar promise of the spring already northward turned.And breast drew near to breast, and round its soft desireMy arm uncertain stole and clung there unrepelled.I thought that nevermore my heart would hover nigherTo the last flower of bliss that Nature's garden held.There, in your beauty's sweet abandonment to pleasure,The mute, half-open lips and tender, wondering ...
Alan Seeger
Any Wife To Any Husband
IMy love, this is the bitterest, that thouWho art all truth and who dost love me nowAs thine eyes say, as thy voice breaks to sayShouldst love so truly and couldst love me stillA whole long life through, had but love its will,Would death that leads me from thee brook delay!III have but to be by thee, and thy handWould never let mine go, thy heart withstandThe beating of my heart to reach its place.When should I look for thee and feel thee gone?When cry for the old comfort and find none?Never, I know! Thy soul is in thy face.IIIOh, I should fade, tis willed so! might I save,Galdly I would, whatever beauty gaveJoy to thy sense, for that was precious too.It is not to be granted. But the soulWhence t...
Robert Browning
Love's Fashion
Oh, I can jest with Margaret And laugh a gay good-night, But when I take my Helen's hand I dare not clasp it tight. I dare not hold her dear white hand More than a quivering space, And I should bless a breeze that blew Her hair into my face. 'T is Margaret I call sweet names: Helen is too, too dear For me to stammer little words Of love into her ear. So now, good-night, fair Margaret, And kiss me e'er we part! But one dumb touch of Helen's hand, And, oh, my heart, my heart!
John Charles McNeill
Lines To Fanny
What can I do to drive awayRemembrance from my eyes? for they have seen,Aye, an hour ago, my brilliant Queen!Touch has a memory. O say, love, say,What can I do to kill it and be freeIn my old liberty?When every fair one that I saw was fairEnough to catch me in but half a snare,Not keep me there:When, howe'er poor or particolour'd things,My muse had wings,And ever ready was to take her courseWhither I bent her force,Unintellectual, yet divine to me;Divine, I say! What sea-bird o'er the seaIs a philosopher the while he goesWinging along where the great water throes?How shall I doTo get anewThose moulted feathers, and so mount once moreAbove, aboveThe reach of fluttering Love,And make him cower lowly while...