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A Servant When He Reigneth
Three things make earth unquietAnd four she cannot brookThe godly Agur counted themAnd put them in a book,Those Four Tremendous CursesWith which mankind is cursed;But a Servant when He ReignethOld Agur entered first.An Handmaid that is MistressWe need not call upon.A Fool when he is full of MeatWill fall asleep anon.An Odious Woman MarriedMay bear a babe and mend;But a Servant when He ReignethIs Confusion to the end.His feet are swift to tumult,His hands are slow to toil,His ears are deaf to reason,His lips are loud in broil.He knows no use for powerExcept to show his might.He gives no heed to judgmentUnless it prove him right.Because he served a masterBefore his Kingship came,
Rudyard
Stonewall Jackson's Grave.[A]
A simple, sodded mound of earth, Without a line above it;With only daily votive flowers To prove that any love it:The token flag that silently Each breeze's visit numbers,Alone keeps martial ward above The hero's dreamless slumbers.No name? - no record? Ask the world; The world has read his story -If all its annals can unfold A prouder tale of glory: -If ever merely human life Hath taught diviner moral, -If ever round a worthier brow Was twined a purer laurel!A twelvemonth only, since his sword Went flashing through the battle -A twelvemonth only, since his ear Heard war's last deadly rattle -And yet, have countless pilgrim-feet The pilgrim's guerdon paid him,And w...
Margaret J. Preston
Never Mind
Whatever your work and whatever its worth, No matter how strong or clever,Some one will sneer if you pause to hear, And scoff at your best endeavour.For the target art has a broad expanse, And wherever you chance to hit it,Though close be your aim to the bull's-eye fame, There are those who will never admit it.Though the house applauds while the artist plays, And a smiling world adores him,Somebody is there with an ennuied air To say that the acting bores him.For the tower of art has a lofty spire, With many a stair and landing,And those who climb seem small oft-time To one at the bottom standing.So work along in your chosen niche With a steady purpose to nerve you;Let nothing men say who pass ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Looking Forward.
How busily those little fingers softThat within mine own are clasped so oftHave been, throughout this bright summer day,With pebbles and shells and leaves at play.They have sought birds' nests, plucked many a flower,Have decked with mosses the garden bower,Built tiny boats, without helm to steer,Yet floated them safe o'er the lakelet clear.Ah! a time will come, and that ere long,When those soft hands will grow firm and strong;When they'll fling all boyish toys asideIn the dawning strength of manhood's pride;Disdaining the prizes, the treasures gay,That they seize with such eager haste to-day;And parting with youth's joys, hopes and fears,Seek to grasp the aims of manhood's years.Be it, then, thy care, my gentle boy,That new-bo...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Qui Vive?
"Qui vive?" The sentry's musket rings,The channelled bayonet gleams;High o'er him, like a raven's wingsThe broad tricolored banner flingsIts shadow, rustling as it swingsPale in the moonlight beams;Pass on! while steel-clad sentries keepTheir vigil o'er the monarch's sleep,Thy bare, unguarded breastAsks not the unbroken, bristling zoneThat girds yon sceptred trembler's throne; -Pass on, and take thy rest!"Qui vive?" How oft the midnight airThat startling cry has borne!How oft the evening breeze has fannedThe banner of this haughty land,O'er mountain snow and desert sand,Ere yet its folds were torn!Through Jena's carnage flying red,Or tossing o'er Marengo's dead,Or curling on the towersWhere Austria's eagle qu...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Arms And The Man. - The Dead Statesman.
I see his Shape who should have led these ranks -GARFIELD I see whose presence had evokedThe stormy rapture of a Nation's thanks -His chariot stands unyoked!Unyoked and empty, and the CharioteerTo Fame's expanded arms has headlong rushedEnding the glories of a grand career,While all the world stood hushed.The thunder of his wheels is done, but heSustained by patience, fortitude, and grace -A Christian Hero - from the struggle free -Has won the Christian's race!His wheel-tracks stop not in the Valley coldBut upward lead, and on, and up, and higher,Till Hope can realize and Faith beholdHis chariot mount in fire!Therefore, my Countrymen, lift up your hearts!Therefore, my Countrymen, be not cast down!He lives wit...
James Barron Hope
Dead Sea Fruit
All things have power to hold us back.Our very hopes build up a wallOf doubt, whose shadow stretches black O'er all.The dreams, that helped us once, becomeDread disappointments, that opposeDead eyes to ours, and lips made dumb With woes.The thoughts that opened doors beforeWithin the mind's house, hide away;Discouragement hath locked each door For aye.Come, loss, more frequently than gain!And failure than success! untilThe spirit's struggle to attain Is still!
Madison Julius Cawein
Ambition's Trail
If all the end of this continuous striving Were simply to attain,How poor would seem the planning and contrivingThe endless urging and the hurried driving Of body, heart and brain!But ever in the wake of true achieving, There shines this glowing trail -Some other soul will be spurred on, conceiving,New strength and hope, in its own power believing, Because thou didst not fail.Not thine alone the glory, nor the sorrow, If thou doth miss the goal,Undreamed of lives in many a far to-morrowFrom thee their weakness or their force shall borrow - On, on, ambitious soul.
Fragments Of College Exercises.
Nobilitas sola est atque unica virtus.--JUV.Mark those proud boasters of a splendid line,Like gilded ruins, mouldering while they shine,How heavy sits that weight, of alien show,Like martial helm upon an infant's brow;Those borrowed splendors whose contrasting lightThrows back the native shades in deeper night.Ask the proud train who glory's train pursue,Where are the arts by which that glory grew?The genuine virtues with that eagle-gazeSought young Renown in all her orient blaze!Where is the heart by chymic truth refined,The exploring soul whose eye had read mankind?Where are the links that twined, with heavenly art,His country's interest round the patriot's heart? * * * * ...
Thomas Moore
Suspense.
Elysium is as far as toThe very nearest room,If in that room a friend awaitFelicity or doom.What fortitude the soul contains,That it can so endureThe accent of a coming foot,The opening of a door!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
To Charles Parnell.
One thing we praise you for that is past praise - The dauntless eyes that faced the rain and night, The hand that never wearied in the fight,Till, through the dark's despair, the dawn's delays,It rose, that vision of forgotten days, Ireland, a nation in her right and might, As fearless of the lightning as the Light, -Freedom, the noon-tide sun that shines and stays!O brave, O pure, O hater of the wrong, (The wrong that is as one with England's name, Tyranny with cant of liberty, and shameWith boast of righteousness), to you belong Trust for the hate that blinds our foes like flame,Love for the hope that makes our hearts so strong!
Francis William Lauderdale Adams
The Light Of Stars.
The night is come, but not too soon; And sinking silently,All silently, the little moon Drops down behind the sky.There is no light in earth or heaven, But the cold light of stars;And the first watch of night is given To the red planet Mars.Is it the tender star of love? The star of love and dreams?Oh, no! from that blue tent above, A hero's armour gleams.And earnest thoughts within me rise, When I behold afar,Suspended in the evening skies The shield of that red star.O star of strength! I see thee stand And smile upon my pain;Thou beckonest with thy mailed hand, And I am strong again.Within my breast there is no light, But the cold light of stars;
William Henry Giles Kingston
Part Of A Prologue Written And Spoken By The Poet Laberius A Roman Knight, Whom Caesar Forced Upon The Stage
Preserved By Macrobius.What! no way left to shun th' inglorious stage,And save from infamy my sinking age!Scarce half alive, oppress'd with many a year,What in the name of dotage drives me here?A time there was, when glory was my guide,Nor force nor fraud could turn my steps aside;Unaw'd by pow'r, and unappall'd by fear,With honest thrift I held my honour dear;But this vile hour disperses all my store,And all my hoard of honour is no more.For ah! too partial to my life's decline,Caesar persuades, submission must be mine;Him I obey, whom heaven itself obeys,Hopeless of pleasing, yet inclin'd to please.Here then at once, I welcome every shame,And cancel at threescore a life of fame;No more my titles shall my children tell,The ol...
Oliver Goldsmith
Strength To Support Sovereignty.
Let kings and rulers learn this line from me:Where power is weak, unsafe is majesty.
Robert Herrick
Hope And Patience
An unborn bird lies crumpled and curled,A-dreaming of the world.Round it, for castle-wall, a shellIs guarding it well.Hope is the bird with its dim sensations;The shell that keeps it alive is Patience.
George MacDonald
Agamemnon's Tomb.
Uplift the ponderous, golden mask of death, And let the sun shine on him as it didHow many thousand years agone! Beneath This worm-defying, uncorrupted lid,Behold the young, heroic face, round-eyed,Of one who in his full-flowered manhood died; Of nobler frame than creatures of to-day,Swathed in fine linen cerecloths fold on fold,With carven weapons wrought of bronze and gold, Accoutred like a warrior for the fray.We gaze in awe at these huge-modeled limbs, Shrunk in death's narrow house, but hinting yetTheir ancient majesty; these sightless rims Whose living eyes the eyes of Helen met;The speechless lips that ah! what tales might tellOf earth's morning-tide when gods did dwell Amidst a generous-fashioned, god...
Emma Lazarus
Hope.
Hope Was but a timid friend;She sat without the grated den,Watching how my fate would tend,Even as selfish-hearted men.She was cruel in her fear;Through the bars one dreary day,I looked out to see her there,And she turned her face away!Like a false guard, false watch keeping,Still, in strife, she whispered peace;She would sing while I was weeping;If I listened, she would cease.False she was, and unrelenting;When my last joys strewed the ground,Even Sorrow saw, repenting,Those sad relics scattered round;Hope, whose whisper would have givenBalm to all my frenzied pain,Stretched her wings, and soared to heaven,Went, and ne'er returned again!
Emily Bronte
Sacramentum Supremum
MUKDEN, MARCH 6TH, 1905 Ye that with me have fought and failed and fought To the last desperate trench of battle's crest, Not yet to sleep, not yet; our work is nought; On that last trench the fate of all may rest, Draw near, my friends; and let your thoughts be high; Great hearts are glad when it is time to give; Life is no life to him that dares not die, And death no death to him that dares to live. Draw near together; none be last or first; We are no longer names, but one desire; With the same burning of the soul we thirst, And the same wine to-night shall quench our fire. Drink! to our fathers who begot us men, To the dead voices that are never dumb; Then to the ...
Henry John Newbolt