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Beyond The Gamut
Softly, softly, Niccolo Amati!What can put such fancies in your head?There, go dream of your blue-skied Cremona,While I ponder something you have said.Something in that last low lovely cadencePiercing the green dusk alone and far,Named a new room in the house of knowledge,Waiting unfrequented, door ajar.While you dream then, let me unmolestedPass in childish wonder through that door,--Breathless, touch and marvel at the beautiesSoon my wiser elders must explore.Ah, my Niccolo, it's no great scienceWe shall ever conquer, you and I.Yet, when you are nestled at my shoulder,Others guess not half that we descry.As all sight is but a finer hearing,And all color but a finer sound,Beauty, but the reach of lyric freed...
Bliss Carman
The Greatness Of The World.
Through the world which the Spirit creative and kindFirst formed out of chaos, I fly like the wind, Until on the strand Of its billows I land,My anchor cast forth where the breeze blows no more,And Creation's last boundary stands on the shore.I saw infant stars into being arise,For thousands of years to roll on through the skies; I saw them in play Seek their goal far away,For a moment my fugitive gaze wandered on,I looked round me, and lo! all those bright stars had flown!Madly yearning to reach the dark kingdom of night.I boldly steer on with the speed of the light; All misty and drear The dim heavens appear,While embryo systems and seas at their sourceAre whirling around the sun-wanderer's course.Whe...
Friedrich Schiller
To E---[1]
Let Folly smile, to view the namesOf thee and me, in Friendship twin'd;Yet Virtue will have greater claimsTo love, than rank with vice combin'd.And though unequal is thy fate,Since title deck'd my higher birth;Yet envy not this gaudy state,Thine is the pride of modest worth.Our souls at least congenial meet,Nor can thy lot my rank disgrace;Our intercourse is not less sweet,Since worth of rank supplies the place.
George Gordon Byron
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry
Flood-tide below me! I watch you face to face;Clouds of the west! sun there half an hour high! I see you also face to face.Crowds of men and women attired in the usual costumes! how curious you are to me!On the ferry-boats, the hundreds and hundreds that cross, returning home, are more curious to me than you suppose;And you that shall cross from shore to shore years hence, are more to me, and more in my meditations, than you might suppose.The impalpable sustenance of me from all things, at all hours of the day;The simple, compact, well-join'd scheme--myself disintegrated, every one disintegrated, yet part of the scheme:The similitudes of the past, and those of the future;The glories strung like beads on my smallest sights and hearings--on the walk in the street, and the pas...
Walt Whitman
Inlet And Shore.
Here is a world of changing glow,Where moods roll swiftly far and wide;Waves sadder than a funeral's pride,Or bluer than the harebell's blow!The sunlight makes the black hulls castA firefly radiance down the deep;The inlet gleams, the long clouds sweep,The sails flit up, the sails drop past.The far sea-line is hushed and still;The nearer sea has life and voice;Each soul may take his fondest choice, -The silence, or the restless thrill.O little children of the deep, -The single sails, the bright, full sails,Gold in the sun, dark when it fails,Now you are smiling, then you weep!O blue of heaven, and bluer sea,And green of wave, and gold of sky,And white of sand that stretches by,Toward east and west, away...
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Carol Of Words
Earth, round, rolling, compact--suns, moons, animals--all these are words to be said;Watery, vegetable, sauroid advances--beings, premonitions, lispings of the future,Behold! these are vast words to be said.Were you thinking that those were the words--those upright lines? those curves, angles, dots?No, those are not the words--the substantial words are in the ground and sea,They are in the air--they are in you.Were you thinking that those were the words--those delicious sounds out of your friends' mouths?No, the real words are more delicious than they.Human bodies are words, myriads of words;In the best poems re-appears the body, man's or woman's, well-shaped, natural, gay,Every part able, active, receptive, without shame or the need of shame.A...
On The Same Subject (To A Painter)
Though I beheld at first with blank surpriseThis Work, I now have gazed on it so longI see its truth with unreluctant eyes;O, my Beloved! I have done thee wrong,Conscious of blessedness, but, whence it sprung,Ever too heedless, as I now perceive:Morn into noon did pass, noon into eve,And the old day was welcome as the young,As welcome and as beautiful, in soothMore beautiful, as being a thing more holy:Thanks to thy virtues, to the eternal youthOf all thy goodness, never melancholy;To thy large heart and humble mind, that castInto one vision, future, present, past.
William Wordsworth
The World's All Right
Be honest, kindly, simple, true; Seek good in all, scorn but pretence; Whatever sorrow come to you, Believe in Life's Beneficence! The World's all right; serene I sit, And cease to puzzle over it. There's much that's mighty strange, no doubt; But Nature knows what she's about; And in a million years or so We'll know more than to-day we know. Old Evolution's under way - What ho! the World's all right, I say. Could things be other than they are? All's in its place, from mote to star. The thistledown that flits and flies Could drift no hair-breadth otherwise. What is, must be; with rhythmic laws All Nature chimes, Effect and Cause. The sand-gra...
Robert William Service
Change
I am that creature and creator whoLoosens and reins the waters of the sea,Forming the rocky marge anon anew.I stir the cold breasts of antiquity,And in the soft stone of the pyramidMove wormlike; and I flutter all those sandsWhereunder lost and soundless time is hid.I shape the hills and valleys with these hands,And darken forests on their naked sides,And call the rivers from the vexing springs,And lead the blind winds into deserts strange.And in firm human bones the ill that hidesIs mine, the fear that cries, the hope that sings.I am that creature and creator, Change.
John Frederick Freeman
The Coming Era
They tell us that the Muse is soon to fly hence,Leaving the bowers of song that once were dear,Her robes bequeathing to her sister, Science,The groves of Pindus for the axe to clear.Optics will claim the wandering eye of fancy,Physics will grasp imagination's wings,Plain fact exorcise fiction's necromancy,The workshop hammer where the minstrel sings,No more with laugher at Thalia's frolicsOur eyes shall twinkle till the tears run down,But in her place the lecturer on hydraulicsSpout forth his watery science to the town.No more our foolish passions and affectionsThe tragic Muse with mimic grief shall try,But, nobler far, a course of vivisectionsTeach what it costs a tortured brute to die.The unearthed monad, long in burie...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Song.
Nature's imperfect child, to whomThe world is wrapt in viewless gloom,Can unresisted still impartThe fondest wishes of his heart.And he, to whose impervious earThe sweetest sounds no charms dispense,Can bid his inmost soul appearIn clear, tho' silent, eloquence.But we, my Julia, not so blest,Are doom'd a diff'rent fate to prove, -To feel each joy and hope supprestThat flow from pure, but hidden, love.
John Carr
Sonnet To The Nile
Son of the old Moon-mountains African!Chief of the Pyramid and Crocodile!We call thee fruitful, and that very whileA desert fills our seeing's inward span:Nurse of swart nations since the world began,Art thou so fruitful? or dost thou beguileSuch men to honour thee, who, worn with toil,Rest for a space 'twixt Cairo and Decan?O may dark fancies err! They surely do;'Tis ignorance that makes a barren wasteOf all beyond itself. Thou dost bedewGreen rushes like our rivers, and dost tasteThe pleasant sunrise. Green isles hast thou too,And to the sea as happily dost haste.
John Keats
A Man Young And Old:- Human Dignity
Like the moon her kindness is,If kindness I may callWhat has no comprehension int,But is the same for allAs though my sorrow were a sceneUpon a painted wall.So like a bit of stone I lieUnder a broken tree.I could recover if I shriekedMy hearts agonyTo passing bird, but I am dumbFrom human dignity.
William Butler Yeats
To My Sister.
O sister, God is very good-- Thou art a woman now:O sister, be thy womanhood A baptism on thy brow!For what?--Do ancient stories lie Of Titans long ago,The children of the lofty sky And mother earth below?Nay, walk not now upon the ground Some sons of heavenly mould?Some daughters of the Holy, found In earthly garments' fold?He said, who did and spoke the truth: "Gods are the sons of God."And so the world's Titanic youth Strives homeward by one road.Then live thou, sister, day and night, An earth-child of the sky,For ever climbing up the height Of thy divinity.Still in thy mother's heart-embrace, Waiting thy hour of birth,Thou growest by the genia...
George MacDonald
The Evening Hour.
Like the herald hope of a fairer clime,The brightest link in the chain of time,The youngest and loveliest child of day,I mingle and soften each glowing ray;Weaving together a tissue brightOf the beams of day and the gems of night.--I pitch my tent in the glowing west,And receive the sun as he sinks to rest;He flings in my lap his ruby crown,And lays at my feet his glory down;But ere his burning eyelids close,His farewell glance the day-king throwsOn Nature's face--till the twilight shroudsThe monarch's brow in a veil of clouds--Oh then, by the light of mine own fair star,I unyoke the steeds from his beamy car.Away they start from the fiery rein,With flashing hoofs, and flying mane,Like meteors speeding on the wind,They lea...
Susanna Moodie
Composed By The Side Of Grasmere Lake 1806
Clouds, lingering yet, extend in solid barsThrough the grey west; and lo! these waters, steeledBy breezeless air to smoothest polish, yieldA vivid repetition of the stars;Jove, Venus, and the ruddy crest of MarsAmid his fellows beauteously revealedAt happy distance from earth's groaning field,Where ruthless mortals wage incessant wars.Is it a mirror? or the nether SphereOpening to view the abyss in which she feeds Her own calm fires? But list! a voice is near;Great Pan himself low-whispering through the reeds,"Be thankful, thou; for, if unholy deedsRavage the world, tranquillity is here!"
Upon Her Eyes
Clear are her eyes,Like purest skies;Discovering from thenceA baby thereThat turns each sphere,Like an Intelligence.
Robert Herrick
Prototypes
Whether it be that we in letters traceThe pure exactness of a wood bird's strain,And name it song; or with the brush attainThe high perfection of a wildflower's face;Or mold in difficult marble all the graceWe know as man; or from the wind and rainCatch elemental rapture of refrainAnd mark in music to due time and place:The aim of Art is Nature; to unfoldHer truth and beauty to the souls of menIn close suggestions; in whose forms is castNothing so new but 'tis long eons old;Nothing so old but 'tis as young as whenThe mind conceived it in the ages past.
Madison Julius Cawein