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Lessons For A Child
I.There breathes not a breath of the summer airBut the spirit of love is moving there;Not a trembling leaf on the shadowy tree,Flutters with hundreds in harmony,But that spirit can part its tone from the rest,And read the life in its beetle's breast.When the sunshiny butterflies come and go,Like flowers paying visits to and fro,Not a single wave of their fanning wingsIs unfelt by the spirit that feeleth all things.The long-mantled moths that sleep at noonAnd rove in the light of the gentler moon;And the myriad gnats that dance like a wall,Or a moving column that will not fall;And the dragon-flies that go burning by,Shot like a glance from a seeking eye--There is one being that loves them all:Not a fly in a spider's web can fal...
George MacDonald
The Misanthrope Reclaimed - ACT III.
Scene I. Near the place of the damned. Enter Werner and Spirit.Werner. What piercing, stunning sounds assail my ear!Wild shrieks and wrathful curses, groans and prayers,A chaos of all cries! making the spaceThrough which they penetrate to flutter likeThe heart of a trapped hare, - are revelling round us. Unlike the gloomy realm we just have quitted,Silent and solemn, all is restless here,All wears the ashy hue of agony.Above us bends a black and starless vault,Which ever echoes back the fearful voicesThat rise from the abodes of wo beneath.Around us grim-browed desolation broods,While, far below, a sea of pale gray clouds,Like to an ocean tempest beaten, boils.Whither shall we direct our journey now?Spirit.
George W. Sands
The "Stay-At-Home's" Plaint.
The Spring has grown to Summer; The sun is fierce and high; The city shrinks, and withers Beneath the burning sky. Ailantus trees are fragrant, And thicker shadows cast, Where berry-girls, with voices shrill, And watering carts go past. In offices like ovens We sit without our coats; Our cuffs are moist and shapeless, No collars binds our throats. We carry huge umbrellas On Broad Street and on Wall, Oh, how thermometers go up! And, oh, how stocks do fall! The nights are full of music, Melodious Teuton troops Beguile us, calmly smoking, ...
George Augustus Baker, Jr.
Knowledge.
Science in God is known to beA substance, not a quality.
Robert Herrick
To A Highland Girl (At Inversneyde, Upon Loch Lomond)
Sweet Highland Girl, a very showerOf beauty is thy earthly dower!Twice seven consenting years have shedTheir utmost bounty on thy head:And these grey rocks; that household lawn;Those trees, a veil just half withdrawn;This fall of water that doth makeA murmur near the silent lake;This little bay; a quiet roadThat holds in shelter thy AbodeIn truth together do ye seemLike something fashioned in a dream;Such Forms as from their covert peepWhen earthly cares are laid asleep!But, O fair Creature! in the lightOf common day, so heavenly bright,I bless Thee, Vision as thou art,I bless thee with a human heart;God shield thee to thy latest years!Thee, neither know I, nor thy peers;And yet my eyes are filled with tears....
William Wordsworth
The Woods.
I love the woods when the magic hand Of Spring, as if sweeping the keysOf a wornout instrument, touches the earth;When beauty and song in the gladness of birthAwaken the heart of the desolate land, And carol its rapture to every breeze.In summer's still solstice my steps are drawn To the shade of the forest trees;To revel with Pan in his secret haunts,To pipe mazourkas while satyrs dance,Or lull to soft slumber some favorite faun And fascinate strange wild birds and bees.I love the woods when autumnal fires Are kindled on every hill;When dead leaves rustle in grove and field,And trees are known by the fruits they yield,And the wild grapes, sweetened by frost, inspire A mildly-desperate, bibulous thrill....
Hattie Howard
The Norsemen
Gift from the cold and silent Past!A relic to the present cast,Left on the ever-changing strandOf shifting and unstable sand,Which wastes beneath the steady chimeAnd beating of the waves of Time!Who from its bed of primal rockFirst wrenched thy dark, unshapely block?Whose hand, of curious skill untaught,Thy rude and savage outline wrought?The waters of my native streamAre glancing in the sun's warm beam;From sail-urged keel and flashing oarThe circles widen to its shore;And cultured field and peopled townSlope to its willowed margin down.Yet, while this morning breeze is bringingThe home-life sound of school-bells ringing,And rolling wheel, and rapid jarOf the fire-winged and steedless car,And voices from the wayside nea...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Picturesque Cottage And Grounds Belonging To J. Lemon, Esq.
Stranger! mark this lovely scene,When the evening sets serene,And starting o'er the silent wood,The last pale sunshine streaks the flood,And the water gushing nearSoothes, with ceaseless drip, thine ear;Then bid each passion sink to rest;Should ev'n one wish rise in thy breast,One tender wish, as now in mine,That some such quiet spot were thine,And thou, recalling seasons fled,Couldst wake the slumbers of the dead,And bring back her you loved, to shareWith thee calm peace and comfort there;Oh, check the thought, but inly prayTo HE, "who gives and takes away,"That many years this fair domainIts varied beauties may retain;So when some wanderer, who has lostHis heart's best treasure, who has crossedIn life bleak hills and p...
William Lisle Bowles
Rhymes On The Road. Extract XVI. Les Charmettes.
A Visit to the house where Rousseau lived with Madame de Warrens.-- Their Menage.--Its Grossness.--Claude Anet.--Reverence with which the spot is now visited.--Absurdity of this blind Devotion to Fame.--Feelings excited by the Beauty and Seclusion of the Scene. Disturbed by its Associations with Rousseau's History.--Impostures of Men of Genius.--Their Power of mimicking all the best Feelings, Love, Independence, etc.Strange power of Genius, that can throwRound all that's vicious, weak, and low,Such magic lights, such rainbows dyesAs dazzle even the steadiest eyes. * * * * *'Tis worse than weak--'tis wrong, 'tis shame,This mean prostration before Fame;This casting down beneath the carOf Idols, whatsoe'...
Thomas Moore
On The Platonic 'Ideal' As It Was Understood By Aristotle.
Ye sister Pow'rs who o'er the sacred grovesPreside, and, Thou, fair mother of them allMnemosyne,[1] and thou, who in thy grotImmense reclined at leisure, hast in chargeThe Archives and the ord'nances of Jove,And dost record the festivals of heav'n,Eternity!--Inform us who is He,That great Original by Nature chos'nTo be the Archetype of Human-kind,Unchangeable, Immortal, with the polesThemselves coaeval, One, yet ev'rywhere,An image of the god, who gave him Being?Twin-brother of the Goddess born from Jove,[2]He dwells not in his Father's mind, but, thoughOf common nature with ourselves, existsApart, and occupies a local home.Whether, companion of the stars, he spendEternal ages, roaming at his willFrom sphere to...
William Cowper
Herse
When grace is given us ever to beholdA child some sweet months old,Love, laying across our lips his finger, saith,Smiling, with bated breath,Hush! for the holiest thing that lives is here,And heavens own heart how near!How dare we, that may gaze not on the sun,Gaze on this verier one?Heart, hold thy peace; eyes, be cast down for shame;Lips, breathe not yet its name.In heaven they know what name to call it; we,How should we know? For, see!The adorable sweet living marvellousStrange light that lightens usWho gaze, desertless of such glorious grace,Full in a babes warm face!All roses that the morning rears are nought,All stars not worth a thought,Set this one star against them, or supposeAs rival this one rose.What price ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Panthea
Nay, let us walk from fire unto fire,From passionate pain to deadlier delight,I am too young to live without desire,Too young art thou to waste this summer nightAsking those idle questions which of oldMan sought of seer and oracle, and no reply was told.For, sweet, to feel is better than to know,And wisdom is a childless heritage,One pulse of passion youth's first fiery glow,Are worth the hoarded proverbs of the sage:Vex not thy soul with dead philosophy,Have we not lips to kiss with, hearts to love and eyes to see!Dost thou not hear the murmuring nightingale,Like water bubbling from a silver jar,So soft she sings the envious moon is pale,That high in heaven she is hung so farShe cannot hear that love-enraptured tune,Mark how ...
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
Love As A Landscape Painter.
On a rocky peak once sat I early,Gazing on the mist with eyes unmoving;Stretch'd out like a pall of greyish texture,All things round, and all above it cover'd.Suddenly a boy appear'd beside me,Saying "Friend, what meanest thou by gazingOn the vacant pall with such composure?Hast thou lost for evermore all pleasureBoth in painting cunningly, and forming?"On the child I gazed, and thought in secret:"Would the boy pretend to be a master?""Wouldst thou be for ever dull and idle,"Said the boy, "no wisdom thou'lt attain to;See, I'll straightway paint for thee a figure,How to paint a beauteous figure, show thee."And he then extended his fore-finger,(Ruddy was it as a youthful rosebud)Tow'rd the broad and far outstretching carpe...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
August.
God in His own right hand doth take each day - Each sun-filled day - each rare and radiant night, And drop it softly on the earth and say: "Touch earth with heaven's own beauty and delight."
Jean Blewett
Passing Events.
Passing events, - tell, what are they I pray?Are they some novelty? - Nay, nay, nay!Ever since the world its course began,Since the breath of life was breathed into man,Still rolling on with the wane of time,Through every nation, in every clime;In every spot where man has his home,Ever they long for events to come.Hours or days or years it may be,Before hopes realization they see;And no sooner it comes than it hastes away,And others rush after no longer to stay.And there scarcely is time to know its in sight,E'er its found to be leaving with marvellous flight,And what had been longed for with eager intent,Is chronicled but as a passing event.Hope's joys are uncertain; - anxiety rules,Expectancy's paradise, peopled by fools;
John Hartley
Nursery Rhyme. DXXXII. Natural History.
Once I saw a little bird, Come hop, hop, hop; So I cried, little bird, Will you stop, stop, stop? And was going to the window, To say how do you do? But he shook his little tail, And far away he flew.
Unknown
Three Years She Grew
Three years she grew in sun and shower,Then Nature said, A lovelier flowerOn earth was never sown;This Child I to myself will take;She shall be mine, and I will makeA Lady of my own.Myself will to my darling beBoth law and impulse: and with meThe Girl, in rock and plain,In earth and heaven, in glade and bower,Shall feel an overseeing powerTo kindle or restrain.She shall be sportive as the fawnThat wild with glee across the lawnOr up the mountain springs;And hers shall be the breathing balm,And hers the silence and the calmOf mute insensate things.The floating clouds their state shall lendTo her; for her the willow bend;Nor shall she fail to seeEven in the motions of the StormGrace that s...
Unanswered
Something compels me, somewhere. Yet I seeNo clear command in Life's long mystery.Oft have I flung myself beside my horse,To drink the water from the roadside mire,And felt the liquid through my being course,Stilling the anguish of my thirst's desire.A simple want; so easily allayed;After the burning march; water and shade.Also I lay against the loved one's heartFinding fulfilment in that resting-place,Feeling my longing, quenched, was but a partOf nature's ceaseless striving for the race.But now, I know not what they would with me;Matter or Force or God, if Gods there be.I wait; I question; Nature heeds me not.She does but urge in answer to my prayer,"Arise and do!" Alas, she adds not what;"Arise and g...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson