Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 47 of 71
Previous
Next
Self-Dependence
Weary of myself, and sick of askingWhat I am, and what I ought to be,At this vessel's prow I stand, which bears meForwards, forwards, o'er the starlit sea.And a look of passionate desireO'er the sea and to the stars I send:"Ye who from my childhood up have calm'd me,Calm me, ah, compose me to the end!"Ah, once more," I cried, "ye stars, ye waters,On my heart your mighty charm renew;Still, still let me, as I gaze upon you,Feel my soul becoming vast like you!"From the intense, clear, star-sown vault of heaven,Over the lit sea's unquiet way,In the rustling night-air came the answer:"Wouldst thou be as these are? Live as they."Unaffrighted by the silence round them,Undistracted by the sights they see,These demand...
Matthew Arnold
Power Of Music
An Orpheus! an Orpheus! yes, Faith may grow bold,And take to herself all the wonders of old;Near the stately Pantheon you'll meet with the sameIn the street that from Oxford hath borrowed its name.His station is there; and he works on the crowd,He sways them with harmony merry and loud;He fills with his power all their hearts to the brim,Was aught ever heard like his fiddle and him?What an eager assembly! what an empire is this!The weary have life, and the hungry have bliss;The mourner is cheered, and the anxious have rest;And the guilt-burthened soul is no longer opprest.As the Moon brightens round her the clouds of the night,So He, where he stands, is a centre of light;It gleams on the face, there, of dusky-browed Jack,And the pal...
William Wordsworth
Spiritual Laws
The living Heaven thy prayers respect,House at once and architect,Quarrying man's rejected hours,Builds therewith eternal towers;Sole and self-commanded works,Fears not undermining days,Grows by decays,And, by the famous might that lurksIn reaction and recoil,Makes flame to freeze and ice to boil;Forging, through swart arms of Offence,The silver seat of Innocence.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Social Amenities
I am getting on well with this anecdote,When suddenly I recallThe many times I have told it of old,And all the worked-up phrases, and the dying fallOf voice, well timed in the crisis, the noteOf mock-heroic ingeniously struck -The whole thing sticks in my throat,And my face all tingles and pricks with shameFor myself and my hearers.These are the social pleasures, my God!But I finish the story triumphantly all the same.
Aldous Leonard Huxley
Miracles.
Love met a worldling on the way, And softly crept into his breast. Straight Self and Greed refused to stay Where Love had dared to make his nest. Love met a mourner on the road, And said: "I'll bear thee company." Full soon the mourner lost his load Of grief, and care, and misery. Into a grim and cheerless home Love forced his way through barriers tall; Fled wretchedness, and chill, and gloom - The golden sunshine flooded all.
Jean Blewett
Spirit Love.
How great my joy! How grand my recompense! I bow to thee; I keep thee in my sight. I call thee mine, in love though not in sense I share with thee the hermitage immense Of holy dreams which come to us at night, When, through the medium of the spirit-lens We see the soul, in its primeval light, And Reason spares the hopes it cannot blight. It is the soul of thee, and not the form, And not the face, I yearn-to in my sleep. It is thyself. The body is the storm, The soul the star beyond it in the deep Of Nature's calm. And yonder on the steep The Sun of Faith, quiescent, round, and warm!
Eric Mackay
The Divine Vision
This mood hath known all beauty for it seesO'erwhelmed majestiesIn these pale forms, and kingly crowns of goldOn brows no longer bold,And through the shadowy terrors of their hellThe love for which they fell,And how desire which cast them in the deepCalled God too from his sleep.O, pity, only seer, who looking throughA heart melted like dew,Seest the long perished in the present thus,For ever dwell in us.Whatever time thy golden eyelids opeThey travel to a hope;Not only backward from these low degreesTo starry dynasties,But, looking far where now the silence ownsAnd rules from empty thrones,Thou seest the enchanted halls of heaven burnFor joy at our return.Thy tender kiss hath memory we are kingsFor all our wanderi...
George William Russell
At Bala-Sala, Isle Of Man
Broken in fortune, but in mind entireAnd sound in principle, I seek reposeWhere ancient trees this convent-pile enclose,In ruin beautiful. When vain desireIntrudes on peace, I pray the eternal SireTo cast a soul-subduing shade on me,A grey-haired, pensive, thankful Refugee;A shade, but with some sparks of heavenly fireOnce to these cells vouchsafed. And when I noteThe old Tower's brow yellowed as with the beamsOf sunset ever there, albeit streamsOf stormy weather-stains that semblance wrought,I thank the silent Monitor, and say"Shine so, my aged brow, at all hours of the day!"
God Is Love.
Come blest Spirit from above,Come and fill my heart with love;Love to God, and love to man,Love to do the good I can;Love to high, and love to low,Love to friend, and love to foe.Love to rich, and love to poor,Love to beggar at my door.Love to young, and love to old,Love to hardened heart and cold.Love, true love, my heart withinFor the sinner, not the sin;Love to holy Sabbath day,Love to meditate and pray,Love for love, for hatred even;Love like this, is born of Heaven.
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
A Mother's Prayer.
I knelt beside a little bed,The curtains drew away,And, 'mid the soft, white folds beheld,Two rosy sleepers lay;The one had seen three summers smileAnd lisped her evening prayer;The other, - only one year's shadeWas on her flaxen hair.No sense of duties ill performedWeighed on each heaving breast,No weariness of work-day careDisturbed their tranquil rest;The stars to them as yet were inThe reach of baby hand,Temptation, trial, grief, were wordsThey could not understand.But in the coming years I sawThe turbulence of lifeO'erwhelm this calm of innocenceWith melancholy strife;"From all the foes that lurk without,From feebleness within,What Sovereign guard from Heaven," I asked,"Will strong bese...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
The Structure
Upon the wreckage of thy yesterdayDesign the structure of to-morrow. LayStrong corner stones of purpose, and prepareGreat blocks of wisdom, cut from past despair.Shape mighty pillars of resolve, to setDeep in the tear-wet mortar of regret.Work on with patience. Though thy toil be slow,Yet day by day the edifice shall grow.Believe in God - in thine own self believe.All that thou hast desired thou shalt achieve.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
God's Gifts To Be Enjoyed
From God's all bounteous hand descendRare gifts in rich effusion,And with those gifts no poisons blend,Nor is their end delusion;So do not spurn if He bestowThose forms arrayed in beauty;If thus His gifts with radiance glow,Enjoyment is a duty.Come, deck your brows with leaves and flowers,Ye fair ones, nothing fearing;Adorn your homes and train your bowersNor deem this sin's appearing;We do not fit ourselves for blissBy scorning all adorning;We may enjoy the good of thisAnd share heaven's brighter morning.A garment plain may have its stain,And saintly brows lack sweetness;But he who would heaven's glory gainMust here acquire a meetness;So eat and drink, rejoice and sing,But don't forget the ending;
Joseph Horatio Chant
The Unimaginative
Each form of beauty's but the new disguiseOf thoughts more beautiful than forms can be;Sceptics, who search with unanointed eyes,Never the Earth's wild fairy-dance shall see.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto XXX
Soon as the polar light, which never knowsSetting nor rising, nor the shadowy veilOf other cloud than sin, fair ornamentOf the first heav'n, to duty each one thereSafely convoying, as that lower dothThe steersman to his port, stood firmly fix'd;Forthwith the saintly tribe, who in the vanBetween the Gryphon and its radiance came,Did turn them to the car, as to their rest:And one, as if commission'd from above,In holy chant thrice shorted forth aloud:"Come, spouse, from Libanus!" and all the restTook up the song--At the last audit soThe blest shall rise, from forth his cavern eachUplifting lightly his new-vested flesh,As, on the sacred litter, at the voiceAuthoritative of that elder, sprangA hundred ministers and messengersOf life ete...
Dante Alighieri
Forerunners
Long I followed happy guides,I could never reach their sides;Their step is forth, and, ere the dayBreaks up their leaguer, and away.Keen my sense, my heart was young,Right good-will my sinews strung,But no speed of mine availsTo hunt upon their shining trails.On and away, their hasting feetMake the morning proud and sweet;Flowers they strew,--I catch the scent;Or tone of silver instrumentLeaves on the wind melodious trace;Yet I could never see their face.On eastern hills I see their smokes,Mixed with mist by distant lochs.I met many travellersWho the road had surely kept;They saw not my fine revellers,--These had crossed them while they slept.Some had heard their fair report,In the country or the court.Fleete...
The Clear Vision
I did but dream. I never knewWhat charms our sternest season wore.Was never yet the sky so blue,Was never earth so white before.Till now I never saw the glowOf sunset on yon hills of snow,And never learned the bough's designsOf beauty in its leafless lines.Did ever such a morning breakAs that my eastern windows see?Did ever such a moonlight takeWeird photographs of shrub and tree?Rang ever bells so wild and fleetThe music of the winter street?Was ever yet a sound by halfSo merry as you school-boy's laugh?O Earth! with gladness overfraught,No added charm thy face hath found;Within my heart the change is wrought,My footsteps make enchanted ground.From couch of pain and curtained roomForth to thy light and...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Poem Sacred to the Memory of Sir Isaac Newton
Shall the great soul of Newton quit this earth,To mingle with his stars; and every muse,Astonish'd into silence, shun the weightOf honours due to his illustrious name?But what can man? Even now the sons of light,In strains high-warbled to seraphic lyre,Hail his arrival on the coast of bliss.Yet am not I deterr'd, though high the theme,And sung to harps of angels, for with you,Ethereal flames! ambitious, I aspireIn Nature's general symphony to join.And what new wonders can ye show your guest!Who, while on this dim spot, where mortals toilClouded in dust, from motion's simple laws,Could trace the secret hand of Providence,Wide-working through this universal frame.Have ye not listen'd while he bound the sunsAnd planets to their s...
James Thomson
Our Dreams
Spare us our Dreams, O God! The dream we dreamedWhen we were children and dwelt near the LandOf Faery, which our Childhood often plannedTo reach, beholding where its towers gleamed:The dream our Youth put seaward with; that streamedWith Love's wild hair, or beckoned with the handOf stout Adventure: Then that dream which spannedOur Manhood's skies with fame; that shone, it seemed,The one fixed star of purpose, fair and far,The dream of great achievement, in the heavenOf our desire, and gave the soul strong wings:Then that last dream, through which these others areMade true: The dream that holds us at Life's even,The mortal hope of far immortal things.