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Frae The Friends And Land I Love.
Air - "Carron Side."I. Frae the friends and land I love, Driv'n by fortune's felly spite, Frae my best belov'd I rove, Never mair to taste delight; Never mair maun hope to find, Ease frae toil, relief frae care: When remembrance wracks the mind, Pleasures but unveil despair.II. Brightest climes shall mirk appear, Desert ilka blooming shore, Till the Fates, nae mair severe, Friendship, love, and peace restore; Till Revenge, wi' laurell'd head, Bring our banish'd hame again; And ilka loyal bonnie lad Cross the seas and win his ain.
Robert Burns
A Spot
In years defaced and lost,Two sat here, transport-tossed,Lit by a living loveThe wilted world knew nothing of:Scared momentlyBy gaingivings,Then hoping thingsThat could not be.Of love and us no traceAbides upon the place;The sun and shadows wheel,Season and season sereward steal;Foul days and fairHere, too, prevail,And gust and galeAs everywhere.But lonely shepherd soulsWho bask amid these knollsMay catch a faery soundOn sleepy noontides from the ground:"O not againTill Earth outwearsShall love like theirsSuffuse this glen!"
Thomas Hardy
From Sunset To Star Rise.
Go from me, summer friends, and tarry not:I am no summer friend, but wintry cold,A silly sheep benighted from the fold,A sluggard with a thorn-choked garden plot.Take counsel, sever from my lot your lot,Dwell in your pleasant places, hoard your gold;Lest you with me should shiver on the wold,Athirst and hungering on a barren spot.For I have hedged me with a thorny hedge,I live alone, I look to die alone:Yet sometimes when a wind sighs through the sedge,Ghosts of my buried years and friends come back,My heart goes sighing after swallows flownOn sometime summer's unreturning track.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Bohemian
Up in my garret bleak and bareI tilted back on my broken chair,And my three old pals were with me there, Hunger and Thirst and Cold;Hunger scowled at his scurvy mate:Cold cowered down by the hollow grate,And I hated them with a deadly hate As old as life is old.So up in my garret that's near the skyI smiled a smile that was thin and dry:"You've roomed with me twenty year," said I, "Hunger and Thirst and Cold;But now, begone down the broken stair!I've suffered enough of your spite . . . so there!"Bang! Bang! I slapped on the table bare A glittering heap of gold."Red flames will jewel my wine to-night;I'll loose my belt that you've lugged so tight;Ha! Ha! Dame Fortune is smiling bright; The stuff of my...
Robert William Service
Love Among The Ruins
I.Where the quiet-coloured end of evening smiles,Miles and milesOn the solitary pastures where our sheepHalf-asleepTinkle homeward thro the twilight, stray or stopAs they crop.II.Was the site once of a city great and gay,(So they say)Of our countrys very capital, its princeAges sinceHeld his court in, gathered councils, wielding farPeace or war.III.Now, the country does not even boast a tree,As you see,To distinguish slopes of verdure, certain rillsFrom the hillsIntersect and give a name to, (else they runInto one)IV.Where the domed and daring palace shot its spiresUp like firesOer the hundred-gated circuit of a wallBounding allMade of marbl...
Robert Browning
Upon Himself Being Buried.
Let me sleep this night away,Till the dawning of the day;Then at th' opening of mine eyesI, and all the world, shall rise.
Robert Herrick
The Widow.
SAPPHICs.Cold was the night wind, drifting fast the snows fell,Wide were the downs and shelterless and naked,When a poor Wanderer struggled on her journey Weary and way-sore.Drear were the downs, more dreary her reflexions;Cold was the night wind, colder was her bosom!She had no home, the world was all before her, She had no shelter.Fast o'er the bleak heath rattling drove a chariot,"Pity me!" feebly cried the poor night wanderer."Pity me Strangers! lest with cold and hunger Here I should perish."Once I had friends,--but they have all forsook me!"Once I had parents,--they are now in Heaven!"I had a home once--I had once a husband-- "Pity me Strangers!"I had a home once--I had once ...
Robert Southey
Decay
O Poesy is on the wane,For Fancy's visions all unfitting;I hardly know her face again,Nature herself seems on the flitting.The fields grow old and common things,The grass, the sky, the winds a-blowing;And spots, where still a beauty clings,Are sighing "going! all a-going!"O Poesy is on the wane,I hardly know her face again.The bank with brambles overspread,And little molehills round about it,Was more to me than laurel shades,With paths of gravel finely clouted;And streaking here and streaking there,Through shaven grass and many a border,With rutty lanes had no compare,And heaths were in a richer order.But Poesy is on the wane,I hardly know her face again.I sat beside the pasture stream,When Beauty's sel...
John Clare
The God Called Poetry.
Now I begin to know at last,These nights when I sit down to rhyme,The form and measure of that vastGod we call Poetry, he who stoopsAnd leaps me through his paper hoopsA little higher every time.Tempts me to think I'll grow a properSinging cricket or grass-hopperMaking prodigious jumps in airWhile shaken crowds about me stareAghast, and I sing, growing bolderTo fly up on my master's shoulderRustling the thick strands of his hair.He is older than the seas,Older than the plains and hills,And older than the light that spillsFrom the sun's hot wheel on these.He wakes the gale that tears your trees,He sings to you from window sills.At you he roars, or he will coo,He shouts and screams when hell is hot,...
Robert von Ranke Graves
Autumn
Syren of sullen moods and fading hues,Yet haply not incapable of joy,Sweet Autumn! I thee hailWith welcome all unfeigned;And oft as morning from her lattice peepsTo beckon up the sun, I seek with theeTo drink the dewy breathOf fields left fragrant then,In solitudes, where no frequented pathsBut what thy own foot makes betray thy home,Stealing obtrusive thereTo meditate thy end:By overshadowed ponds, in woody nooks,With ramping sallows lined, and crowding sedge,Which woo the winds to play,And with them dance for joy;And meadow pools, torn wide by lawless floods,Where water-lilies spread their oily leaves,On which, as wont, the flyOft battens in the sun;Where leans the mossy willow half way oe...
Exchanges
All that I had I brought,Little enough I know;A poor rhyme roughly wrought,A rose to match thy snow:All that I had I brought.Little enough I sought:But a word compassionate,A passing glance, or thought,For me outside the gate:Little enough I sought.Little enough I found:All that you had, perchance!With the dead leaves on the ground,I dance the devil's dance.All that you had I found.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
To Robert Browning
There is delight in singing, tho' none hearBeside the singer; and there is delightIn praising, tho' the praiser sit aloneAnd see the prais'd far off him, far above.Shakspeare is not our poet, but the world's,Therefore on him no speech! and brief for thee,Browning! Since Chaucer was alive and hale,No man hath walkt along our roads with stepSo active, so inquiring eye, or tongueSo varied in discourse. But warmer climesGive brighter plumage, stronger wing: the breezeOf Alpine highths thou playest with, borne onBeyond Sorrento and Amalfi, whereThe Siren waits thee, singing song for song.
Walter Savage Landor
Hoar-Frost
The frail eidolons of all blossoms Spring,Year after year, about the forest tossed,The magic touch of the enchanter, Frost,Back from the Heaven of the Flow'rs doth bring;Each branch and bush in silence visitingWith phantom beauty of its blooms long lost:Each dead weed bends, white-haunted of its ghost,Each dead flower stands ghostly with blossoming.This is the wonder-legend Nature tellsTo the gray moon and mist a winter's night;The fairy-tale, which her weird fancy 'spellsWith all the glamour of her soul's delight:Before the summoning sorcery of her eyesMaking her spirit's dream materialize.
Madison Julius Cawein
In the Garden of God
Within the iron cities One walked unknown for years,In his heart the pity of pities That grew for human tearsWhen love and grief were ended The flower of pity grew;By unseen hands 'twas tended And fed with holy dew.Though in his heart were barred in The blooms of beauty blown;Yet he who grew the garden Could call no flower his own.For by the hands that watered, The blooms that opened fairThrough frost and pain were scattered To sweeten the dull air.--February 15, 1895
George William Russell
The Bough Of Nonsense
An IdyllBack from the Somme two FusiliersLimped painfully home; the elder said,S. "Robert, I've lived three thousand yearsThis Summer, and I'm nine parts dead."R. "But if that's truly so," I cried, "quick, now,Through these great oaks and see the famous bough"Where once a nonsense built her nestWith skulls and flowers and all things queer,In an old boot, with patient breastHatching three eggs; and the next year ..."S. "Foaled thirteen squamous young beneath, and ridWales of drink, melancholy, and psalms, she did."Said he, "Before this quaint mood fails,We'll sit and weave a nonsense hymn,"R. "Hanging it up with monkey tailsIn a deep grove all hushed and dim...."S. "To glorious yellow-bu...
Far West Emigrant.
I.Mine eye is weary of the plains Of verdure vast and wideThat stretch around me - lovely, calm, From morn till even-tide;And I recall with aching heart My childhood's village home;Its cottage roofs and garden plots, Its brooks of silver foam.II.True glowing verdure smiles around, And this rich virgin soilGives stores of wealth in quick return For hours of careless toil;But oh! the reaper's joyous song Ne'er mounts to Heaven's dome,For unknown is the mirth and joy Of the merry "Harvest Home."III.The solemn trackless woods are fair, And bright their summer dress;But their still hush - their whisprings vague, My heart seem to oppress;...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
A Rhyme Of Friends.
(In a Style Skeltonical)Listen now this timeShortly to my rhymeThat herewith startsAbout certain kind heartsIn those stricken partsThat lie behind Calais,Old crones and aged menAnd young children.About the Picardais,Who earned my thousand thanks,Dwellers by the banksOf mournful Somme(God keep me therefromUntil War ends),These, then, are my friends:Madame Averlant Lune,From the town of Bethune;Good Professeur la BruneFrom that town also.He played the piccolo,And left his locks to grow.Dear Madame Hojdes,Sempstress of Saint Fe.With Jules and SusetteAnd Antoinette.Her children, my sweethearts,For whom I made dartsOf paper to throwIn their mimic show,"La guerr...
Life In A Love
Escape me?NeverBeloved!While I am I, and you are you,So long as the world contains us both,Me the loving and you the lothWhile the one eludes, must the other pursue.My life is a fault at last, I fearIt seems too much like a fate, indeed!Though I do my best I shall scarce succeedBut what if I fail of my purpose here?It is but to keep the nerves at strain,To dry ones eyes and laugh at a fall,And, baffled, get up and begin again,So the chace takes up ones life thats all.While, look but once from your farthest boundAt me so deep in the dust and dark,No sooner the old hope goes to groundThan a new one, straight to the self-same mark,I shape meEverRemoved!