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The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto XXX
Noon's fervid hour perchance six thousand milesFrom hence is distant; and the shadowy coneAlmost to level on our earth declines;When from the midmost of this blue abyssBy turns some star is to our vision lost.And straightway as the handmaid of the sunPuts forth her radiant brow, all, light by light,Fade, and the spangled firmament shuts in,E'en to the loveliest of the glittering throng.Thus vanish'd gradually from my sightThe triumph, which plays ever round the point,That overcame me, seeming (for it did)Engirt by that it girdeth. Wherefore love,With loss of other object, forc'd me bendMine eyes on Beatrice once again.If all, that hitherto is told of her,Were in one praise concluded, 't were too weakTo furnish out this turn. Mine ey...
Dante Alighieri
A Dream
Thou who hast follow'd far with eyes of loveThe shy and virgin sights of Spring to-day,Sad soul, what dost thou in this happy grove?Hast thou no pipe to touch, no strain to play,Where Nature smiles so fair and seems to ask a lay?Ah! she needs none! she is too beautiful.How should I sing her? for my heart would tire,Seeking a lovelier verse each time to cull,In striving still to pitch my music higher:Lovelier than any muse is she who gives the fire!No impulse I beseech; my strains are vile:To escape thee, Nature, restless here I rove.Look not so sweet on me, avert thy smile!O cease at length this fever'd breast to move!I have loved thee in vain; I cannot speak my love.Here sense with apathy seems gently wed:The gloom is starr'd...
Manmohan Ghose
To A Child
Dear child! how radiant on thy mother's knee,With merry-making eyes and jocund smiles,Thou gazest at the painted tiles,Whose figures grace,With many a grotesque form and face.The ancient chimney of thy nursery!The lady with the gay macaw,The dancing girl, the grave bashawWith bearded lip and chin;And, leaning idly o'er his gate,Beneath the imperial fan of state,The Chinese mandarin.With what a look of proud commandThou shakest in thy little handThe coral rattle with its silver bells,Making a merry tune!Thousands of years in Indian seasThat coral grew, by slow degrees,Until some deadly and wild monsoonDashed it on Coromandel's sand!Those silver bellsReposed of yore,As shapeless ore,Far down in the ...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto XVIII
Now in his word, sole, ruminating, joy'dThat blessed spirit; and I fed on mine,Tempting the sweet with bitter: she meanwhile,Who led me unto God, admonish'd: "MuseOn other thoughts: bethink thee, that near HimI dwell, who recompenseth every wrong."At the sweet sounds of comfort straight I turn'd;And, in the saintly eyes what love was seen,I leave in silence here: nor through distrustOf my words only, but that to such blissThe mind remounts not without aid. Thus muchYet may I speak; that, as I gaz'd on her,Affection found no room for other wish.While the everlasting pleasure, that did fullOn Beatrice shine, with second viewFrom her fair countenance my gladden'd soulContented; vanquishing me with a beamOf her soft smile, she spake: "T...
Wake Me a Song
Out of the silences wake me a song,Beautiful, sad, and soft, and low;Let the loveliest music sound along,And wing each note with a wail of woe: Dim and drear As hope's last tear;Out of the silences wake me a hymn,Whose sounds are like shadows soft and dim.Out of the stillness in your heart --A thousand songs are sleeping there --Wake me a song, thou child of art!The song of a hope in a last despair: Dark and low, A chant of woe;Out of the stillness, tone by tone,Cold as a snowflake, low as a moan.Out of the darkness flash me a song,Brightly dark and darkly bright;Let it sweep as a lone star sweeps alongThe mystical shadows of the night: Sing it sweet;Where nothing is drear, or dark, or di...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - June.
1. FROM thine, as then, the healing virtue goes Into our hearts--that is the Father's plan. From heart to heart it sinks, it steals, it flows, From these that know thee still infecting those. Here is my heart--from thine, Lord, fill it up, That I may offer it as the holy cup Of thy communion to my every man. 2. When thou dost send out whirlwinds on thy seas, Alternatest thy lightning with its roar, Thy night with morning, and thy clouds with stars Or, mightier force unseen in midst of these, Orderest the life in every airy pore; Guidest men's efforts, rul'st mishaps and jars,-- 'Tis only for their hearts, and nothing more...
George MacDonald
New Heaven And Earth
IAnd so I cross into another worldshyly and in homage linger for an invitationfrom this unknown that I would trespass on.I am very glad, and all alone in the world,all alone, and very glad, in a new worldwhere I am disembarked at last.I could cry with joy, because I am in the new world, just ventured in.I could cry with joy, and quite freely, there is nobody to know.And whosoever the unknown people of this un- known world may bethey will never understand my weeping for joy to be adventuring among thembecause it will still be a gesture of the old world I am makingwhich they will not understand, because it is quite, quite foreign to them. III WAS so weary of the worldI was so sick of it...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Visions.
The Poet meets Apollo on the hill, And Pan and Flora and the Paphian Queen, And infant naïads bathing in the rill, And dryad maids that dance upon the green, And fauns and Oreads in the silver sheen They wear in summer, when the air is still. He quaffs the wine of life, and quaffs his fill, And sees Creation through its mask terrene. The dead are wise, for they alone can see As see the bards, - as see, beyond the dust, The eyes of babes. The dead alone are just. There is no comfort in the bitter fee That scholars pay for fame. True sage is he Who doubts all doubt, and takes the soul on trust.
Eric Mackay
Dawn
An angel, robed in spotless white,Bent down and kissed the sleeping Night.Night woke to blush; the sprite was gone.Men saw the blush and called it Dawn.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Young Love VIII - Orbits
Two stars once on their lonely wayMet in the heavenly height,And they dreamed a dream they might shine alwayWith undivided light;Melt into one with a breathless throe,And beam as one in the night.And each forgot in the dream so strangeHow desolately farSwept on each path, for who shall changeThe orbit of a star?Yea, all was a dream, and they still must goAs lonely as they are.
Richard Le Gallienne
His Vision Of Death
I had a vision in my sleep last night between sleeping and waking. A figure standing beside me, thin, miserable, sad and sorrowful; the shadow of night upon his face, the tracks of the tears down his cheeks. His ribs were bending like the bottom of a riddle; his nose thin that it would go through a cambric needle; his shoulders hard and sharp that they would cut tobacco; his head dark and bushy like the top of a hill; and there is nothing I can liken his fingers to. His poor bones without any kind of covering; a withered rod in his hand, and he looking in my face....Death is a robber who heaps together kings, high princes and country lords; he brings with him the great, the young, and the wise, gripping them by the throat before all the people. Look at him who was yesterday swift & strong, who would leap stone wall, ditch ...
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
Fair Eve
Fair Eve, as fair and stillAs fairest thought, climbs the high sheltering hill;As still and fairAs the white cloud asleep in the deep air.As cool, as fair and cool,As starlight swimming in a lonely pool;Subtle and mildAs through her eyes the soul looks of a child.A linnet sings and sings,A shrill swift cleaves the air with blackest wings;White twinkletailsRun frankly in their meadow as day fails.On such a night, a nightThat seems but the full sleep of tired light,I look and waitFor what I know not, looking long and late.Is it for a dream I look,A vision from the Tree of Heaven shook,As sweetness shakenFrom the fresh limes on lonely ways forsaken?A dream of one, maybe,Who comes like sud...
John Frederick Freeman
The Gift Of Harun Al-Rashid
Kusta Ben Luka is my name, I writeTo Abd Al-Rabban; fellow-roysterer once,Now the good Caliph's learned Treasurer,And for no ear but his.Carry this letterThrough the great gallery of the Treasure HouseWhere banners of the Caliphs hang, night-colouredBut brilliant as the night's embroidery,And wait war's music; pass the little gallery;Pass books of learning from ByzantiumWritten in gold upon a purple stain,And pause at last, I was about to say,At the great book of Sappho's song; but no,For should you leave my letter there, a boy'sLove-lorn, indifferent hands might come upon itAnd let it fall unnoticed to the floor.pause at the Treatise of parmenidesAnd hide it there, for Caiphs to world's endMust keep that perfect, as they keep her s...
William Butler Yeats
False Dawn
To-night, God knows what thing shall tide,The Earth is racked and fain,Expectant, sleepless, open-eyed;And we, who from the Earth were made,Thrill with our Mother's pain.
Rudyard
Kiama Revisited
We stood by the window and hearkenedTo the voice of the runnels sea-driven,While, northward, the mountain-heads darkened,Girt round with the clamours of heaven.One peak with the storm at his portalLoomed out to the left of his brothers:Sustained, and sublime, and immortal,A king, and the lord of the others!Beneath him a cry from the surgesRang shrill, like a clarion calling;And about him, the wind of the gorgesWent falling, and rising, and falling.But I, as the roofs of the thunderWere cloven with manifold fires,Turned back from the wail and the wonder,And dreamed of old days and desires.A song that was made, I rememberedA song that was made in the gloamingOf suns which are sunken and numberedWith times that my heart hath no h...
Henry Kendall
The Djinns.
("Murs, ville et port.")[XXVIII., Aug. 28, 1828.] Town, tower, Shore, deep, Where lower Cliff's steep; Waves gray, Where play Winds gay, All sleep.Hark! a sound, Far and slight,Breathes around On the nightHigh and higher,Nigh and nigher,Like a fire, Roaring, bright.Now, on 'tis sweeping With rattling beat,Like dwarf imp leaping In gallop fleetHe flies, he prances,In frolic fancies,On wave-crest dances With pattering feet.Hark, the rising swell, With each new burst!Like the tolling bell Of a convent curst;Like the billowy roarOn a storm-lashed shore, -
Victor-Marie Hugo
Constancy to an Ideal Object
Since all, that beat about in Nature's range,Or veer or vanish; why should'st thou remainThe only constant in a world of change,O yearning THOUGHT! that liv'st but in the brain?Call to the HOURS, that in the distance play,The faery people of the future dayFond THOUGHT! not one of all that shining swarmWill breathe on thee with life-enkindling breath,Till when, like strangers shelt'ring from a storm,Hope and Despair meet in the porch of Death!Yet still thou haunt'st me; and though well I see,She is not thou, and only thou art she,Still, still as though some dear embodied Good,Some living Love before my eyes there stoodWith answering look a ready ear to lend,I mourn to thee and say, `Ah! loveliest Friend!That this the meed of all my toils might b...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Swords And Roses
Some lives have themes. Goldfish that stubbornly die; compatability only with distant lovers - flowers (but no sweet-breads) that wilt to the touch. Waiting. Charcoal-grey cat agreeably on a green linoleum table with light basking in.... a tad playful, paws up, (classic boxer stance) but no one notices. Others oblique in their transparency, are unmindful of even the empty closet and greeting cards that smile hello. In the dark this room shimmers below life-raft status; chairs are buoys bobbing under waves of congealed fright. In the morning the first pigeons rifle over rooftops, mad flutterings like your eyes
Paul Cameron Brown