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Times Revenges
Ive a Friend, over the sea;I like him, but he loves me;It all grew out of the books I write;They find such favour in his sightThat he slaughters you with savage looksBecause you dont admire my books:He does himself though, and if some veinWere to snap to-night in this heavy brain,To-morrow month, if I lived to try,Round should I just turn quietly,Or out of the bedclothes stretch my handTill I found him, come from his foreign landTo be my nurse in this poor place,And make my broth and wash my face,And light my fire and, all the while,Bear with his old good-humoured smileThat I told him Better have kept awayThan come and kill me, night and day,With, worse than fever throbs and shoots,The creaking of his clumsy boots.
Robert Browning
Sonnet III.
Not to thee Bedford mournful is the tale Of days departed. Time in his career Arraigns not thee that the neglected year Has past unheeded onward. To the vale Of years thou journeyest. May the future road Be pleasant as the past! and on my friend Friendship and Love, best blessings! still attend, 'Till full of days he reach the calm abode Where Nature slumbers. Lovely is the age Of Virtue. With such reverence we behold The silver hairs, as some grey oak grown old That whilome mock'd the rushing tempest's rage Now like the monument of strength decayedWith rarely-sprinkled leaves casting a trembling shade.
Robert Southey
To Wordsworth
Wordsworth I love, his books are like the fields,Not filled with flowers, but works of human kind;The pleasant weed a fragrant pleasure yields,The briar and broomwood shaken by the wind,The thorn and bramble o'er the water shootA finer flower than gardens e'er gave birth,The aged huntsman grubbing up the root--I love them all as tenants of the earth:Where genius is, there often die the seeds;What critics throw away I love the more;I love to stoop and look among the weeds,To find a flower I never knew before;Wordsworth, go on--a greater poet be;Merit will live, though parties disagree!
John Clare
To An English Friend
The seed that wasteful autumn castTo waver on its stormy blast,Long o'er the wintry desert tost,Its living germ has never lost.Dropped by the weary tempest's wing,It feels the kindling ray of spring,And, starting from its dream of death,Pours on the air its perfumed breath.So, parted by the rolling flood,The love that springs from common bloodNeeds but a single sunlit hourOf mingling smiles to bud and flower;Unharmed its slumbering life has flown,From shore to shore, from zone to zone,Where summer's falling roses stainThe tepid waves of Pontchartrain,Or where the lichen creeps belowKatahdin's wreaths of whirling snow.Though fiery sun and stiffening coldMay change the fair ancestral mould,No winter chills, no ...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
O' Lyric Love
O' Lyric Love, half angel and half bird,And all a wonder and a wild desire,Boldest of hearts that ever braved the sun,Took sanctuary within the holier blue,And sang a kindred soul out to his face,Yet human at the red-ripe of the heartWhen the first summons from the darkling earthReached thee amid thy chambers, blanched their blue,And bared them of the glory to drop down,To toil for man, to suffer or to die,This is the same voice: can thy soul know change?Hail then, and hearken from the realms of help!Never may I commence my song, my dueTo God who best taught song by gift of thee,Except with bent head and beseeching handThat still, despite the distance and the dark,What was, again may be; some interchangeOf grace, some splendor once thy ve...
Thaw
Blow through me windAs you blow through apple blossoms....Scatter me in shining petals over the passers-by....Joyously I reunite... sway and gather to myself....Sedately I walk by the dancing feet of children -Not knowing I too dance over the cobbled spring.O, but they laugh back at me,(Eyes like daisies smiling wide open),And we both look askance at the snowed-in peopleThinking me one of them.
Lola Ridge
Under Arcturus
I."I belt the morn with ribboned mist;With baldricked blue I gird the noon,And dusk with purple, crimson-kissed,White-buckled with the hunter's moon."These follow me," the season says:"Mine is the frost-pale hand that packsTheir scrips, and speeds them on their ways,With gipsy gold that weighs their backs."II.A daybreak horn the Autumn blows,As with a sun-tanned band he partsWet boughs whereon the berry glows;And at his feet the red-fox starts.The leafy leash that holds his houndsIs loosed; and all the noonday hushIs startled; and the hillside soundsBehind the fox's bounding brush.When red dusk makes the western skyA fire-lit window through the firs,He stoops to see the red-fox d...
Madison Julius Cawein
Aaron Hatfield
Better than granite, Spoon River, Is the memory-picture you keep of me Standing before the pioneer men and women There at Concord Church on Communion day. Speaking in broken voice of the peasant youth Of Galilee who went to the city And was killed by bankers and lawyers; My voice mingling with the June wind That blew over wheat fields from Atterbury; While the white stones in the burying ground Around the Church shimmered in the summer sun. And there, though my own memories Were too great to bear, were you, O pioneers, With bowed heads breathing forth your sorrow For the sons killed in battle and the daughters And little children who vanished in life's morning, Or at the intolerable hour of no...
Edgar Lee Masters
After Rain
For three whole days across the sky,In sullen packs that loomed and broke,With flying fringes dim as smoke,The columns of the rain went by;At every hour the wind awoke;The darkness passed upon the plain;The great drops rattled at the pane.Now piped the wind, or far aloofFell to a sough remote and dull;And all night long with rush and lullThe rain kept drumming on the roof:I heard till ear and sense were fullThe clash or silence of the leaves,The gurgle in the creaking eaves.But when the fourth day came - at noon,The darkness and the rain were by;The sunward roofs were steaming dry;And all the world was flecked and strewnWith shadows from a fleecy sky.The haymakers were forth and gone,And every rillet laughed ...
Archibald Lampman
Upon A Child. An Epitaph.
But born, and like a short delight,I glided by my parents' sight.That done, the harder fates deniedMy longer stay, and so I died.If, pitying my sad parents' tears,You'll spill a tear or two with theirs,And with some flowers my grave bestrew,Love and they'll thank you for't. Adieu.
Robert Herrick
On William Francis Bartlett
O poor Romancer thou whose printed page,Filled with rude speech and ruder forms of strife,Was given to heroes in whose vulgar rageNo trace appears of gentler ways and life!Thou who wast wont of commoner clay to buildSome rough Achilles or some Ajax tall;Thou whose free brush too oft was wont to gildSome single virtue till it dazzled all;What right hast thou beside this laureled bierWhereon all manhood lies whereon the wreathOf Harvard rests, the civic crown, and hereThe starry flag, and sword and jeweled sheath?Seest thou these hatchments? Knowest thou this bloodNourished the heroes of Colonial daysSent to the dim and savage-haunted woodThose sad-eyed Puritans with hymns of praise?Look round thee! Everywhere is classic g...
Bret Harte
The Oak And The Broom - A Pastoral Poem
IHis simple truths did Andrew gleanBeside the babbling rills;A careful student he had beenAmong the woods and hills.One winter's night, when through the treesThe wind was roaring, on his kneesHis youngest born did Andrew hold:And while the rest, a ruddy quire,Were seated round their blazing fire,This Tale the Shepherd told.II"I saw a crag, a lofty stoneAs ever tempest beat!Out of its head an Oak had grown,A Broom out of its feet.The time was March, a cheerful noon,The thaw-wind, with the breath of June,Breathed gently from the warm south-west:When, in a voice sedate with age,This Oak, a giant and a sage,His neighbour thus addressed:,III"'Eight weary weeks, through rock and ...
William Wordsworth
The Outcast's Farewell
The sun is banished,The daylight vanished,No rosy traces Are left behind.Here in the meadowI watch the shadowOf forms and faces Upon your blind.Through swift transitions,In new positions,My eyes still follow One shape most fair.My heart delayingAwhile, is playingWith pleasures hollow, Which mock despair.I feel so lonely,I long once onlyTo pass an hour With you, O sweet!To touch your fingers,Where fragrance lingersFrom some rare flower, And kiss your feet.But not this evenTo me is given.Of all sad mortals Most sad am I,Never to meet you,Never to greet you,Nor pass your portals Before I die.All men scorn ...
Robert Fuller Murray
Sonnet XVIII.
Vergognando talor ch' ancor si taccia.THE PRAISES OF LAURA TRANSCEND HIS POETIC POWERS. Ashamed sometimes thy beauties should remainAs yet unsung, sweet lady, in my rhyme;When first I saw thee I recall the time,Pleasing as none shall ever please again.But no fit polish can my verse attain,Not mine is strength to try the task sublime:My genius, measuring its power to climb,From such attempt doth prudently refrain.Full oft I oped my lips to chant thy name;Then in mid utterance the lay was lost:But say what muse can dare so bold a flight?Full oft I strove in measure to indite;But ah, the pen, the hand, the vein I boast,At once were vanquish'd by the mighty theme!NOTT. Ashamed at times that I a...
Francesco Petrarca
At The Road-House: In Memory Of Robert Louis Stevenson.
You hearken, fellows? Turned asideInto the road-house of the past!The prince of vagabonds is goneTo house among his peers at last.The stainless gallant gentleman,So glad of life, he gave no trace,No hint he even once beheldThe spectre peering in his face;But gay and modest held the road,Nor feared the Shadow of the Dust;And saw the whole world rich with joy,As every valiant farer must.I think that old and vasty innWill have a welcome guest to-night,When Chaucer, breaking off some taleThat fills his hearers with delight,Shall lift up his demure brown eyesTo bid the stranger in; and allWill turn to greet the one on whomThe crystal lot was last to fall.Keats of the more than mortal tongue...
Bliss Carman
Winter Flowers.
The summer queen has many flowers To deck her sunny hair,And trailing grasses, pure and sweet, To scent the heavy air;And upward through the misty sky There is a glory too,Of floating clouds and rifts of gold And depths of smiling blue.Yet winter, too, can boast a wealth Of flowers pure and white;A kingly crown of frosted gems-- A wreath of sparkling light;So bright and beautiful, indeed, It were a wondrous sightTo see a world of fragile flowers Sprung up within a night.And sometimes there are cast'es, too, Of glittering ice and snow,Piled high upon our window-panes 'Neath curtains hanging low;And they are like the castles fair Our day-dreams build for aye;A ...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Landscape
So as to write my eclogues in the purest verseI wish to lay me down, like the astrologers,Next to the sky, and hear in reverie the hymnsOf all the neighbouring belfries, carried on the wind.My two hands to my chin, up in my attic room,I'll see the atelier singing a babbled tune;The chimney-pipes, the steeples, all the city's masts,The great, inspiring skies, magnificent and vast.How sweet it is to see, across the misty gloom,A star born in the blue, a lamp lit in a room,Rivers of chimney smoke, rising in purplish streams,The pale of glow of the moon, transfiguring the scene.I will look out on springs and summers, autumn's show,And when the winter comes, in monotone of snow,I'll lock up all the doors and shutters neat and tight,And build a fairy...
Charles Baudelaire
Winter Comes
Winter scourges his horsesThrough the North,His hair is bitter snowOn the great wind.The trees are weeping leavesBecause the nests are dead,Because the flowers were nests of scentAnd the nests had singing petalsAnd the flowers and nests are dead.Your voice brings back the songsOf every nest,Your eyes bring back the sunOut of the South,Violets and roses peepWhere you have laughed the snow awayAnd kissed the snow away,And in my heart there is a garden stillFor the lost birds.Song of Daghestan.
Edward Powys Mathers