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Of Old Sat Freedom
Of old sat Freedom on the heights,The thunders breaking at her feet:Above her shook the starry lights:She heard the torrents meet.There in her place she did rejoice,Self-gather'd in her prophet-mind,But fragments of her mighty voiceCame rolling on the wind.Then stept she down thro' town and fieldTo mingle with the human race,And part by part to men reveal'dThe fullness of her face --Grave mother of majestic works,From her isle-alter gazing down,Who, God-like, grasps the triple forks,And, King-like, wears the crown:Her open eyes desire the truth.The wisdom of a thousand yearsIs in them. May perpetual youthKeep dry their light from tears;That her fair form may stand and shineMake bright ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
To Count Carlo Pepoli.
This wearisome and this distressing sleep That we call life, O how dost thou support, My Pepoli? With what hopes feedest thou Thy heart? Say in what thoughts, and in what deeds, Agreeable or sad, dost thou invest The idleness thy ancestors bequeathed To thee, a dull and heavy heritage? All life, indeed, in every walk of life, Is idleness, if we may give that name To every work achieved, or effort made, That has no worthy aim in view, or fails That aim to reach. And if you idle call The busy crew, that daily we behold, From tranquil morn unto the dewy eve, Behind the plough, or tending plants and flocks, Because they live simply to keep alive, And life is worthless for itself alone, Th...
Giacomo Leopardi
Natural Theology
PrimitiveI ate my fill of a whale that diedAnd stranded after a month at sea. . . .There is a pain in my inside.Why have the Gods afflicted me?Ow! I am purged till I am a wraith!Wow! I am sick till I cannot see!What is the sense of Religion and Faith:Look how the Gods have afflicted me!PaganHow can the skin of rat or mouse holdAnything more than a harmless flea?. . .The burning plague has taken my household.Why have my Gods afflicted me?All my kith and kin are deceased,Though they were as good as good could be,I will out and batter the family priest,Because my Gods have afflicted me!MedievalMy privy and well drain into each otherAfter the custom of Christendie. . . .F...
Rudyard
The New Eden
Meeting Of The Berkshire Horticultural Society, At Stockbridge, September 13,1854Scarce could the parting ocean close,Seamed by the Mayflower's cleaving bow,When o'er the rugged desert roseThe waves that tracked the Pilgrim's plough.Then sprang from many a rock-strewn fieldThe rippling grass, the nodding grain,Such growths as English meadows yieldTo scanty sun and frequent rain.But when the fiery days were done,And Autumn brought his purple haze,Then, kindling in the slanted sun,The hillsides gleamed with golden maize.The food was scant, the fruits were fewA red-streak glistening here and there;Perchance in statelier precincts grewSome stern old Puritanic pear.Austere in taste, and tough at core,Its unr...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Lily In A Crystal.
You have beheld a smiling roseWhen virgins' hands have drawnO'er it a cobweb-lawn;And here you see this lily shows,Tomb'd in a crystal stone,More fair in this transparent caseThan when it grew aloneAnd had but single grace.You see how cream but naked isNor dances in the eyeWithout a strawberry,Or some fine tincture like to this,Which draws the sight theretoMore by that wantoning with itThan when the paler hueNo mixture did admit.You see how amber through the streamsMore gently strokes the sightWith some conceal'd delightThan when he darts his radiant beamsInto the boundless air;Where either too much light his worthDoth all at once impair,Or set it little forth.Put purple grapes o...
Robert Herrick
The Resurrection.
I thought I had forever lost, Alas, though still so young, The tender joys and sorrows all, That unto youth belong; The sufferings sweet, the impulses Our inmost hearts that warm; Whatever gives this life of ours Its value and its charm. What sore laments, what bitter tears O'er my sad state I shed, When first I felt from my cold heart Its gentle pains had fled! Its throbs I felt no more; my love Within me seemed to die; Nor from my frozen, senseless breast Escaped a single sigh! I wept o'er my sad, hapless lot; The life of life seemed lost; The earth an arid wilderness, Locked in eternal frost;
Mount Erebus (A Fragment)
A mighty theatre of snow and fire,Girt with perpetual Winter, and sublimeBy reason of that lordly solitudeWhich dwells for ever at the worlds white ends;And in that weird-faced wilderness of ice,There is no human foot, nor any pawOr hoof of beast, but where the shrill winds driveThe famished birds of storm across the tractsWhose centre is the dim mysterious Pole.Beyond yea far beyond the homes of man,By water never dark with coming ships,Near seas that know not feather, scale, or fin,The grand volcano, like a weird Isaiah,Set in that utmost region of the Earth,Doth thunder forth the awful utterance,Whose syllables are flame; and when the fierceAntarctic Night doth hold dominionshipWithin her fastnessess, then round the coneOf Erebu...
Henry Kendall
The Sun-Shower.
A penciled shade the sky doth sweep,And transient glooms creep in to sleep Amid the orchard;Fantastic breezes pull the treesHither and yon, to vagaries Of aspect tortured.Then, like the downcast dreamy fringeOf eyelids, when dim gates unhinge That locked their tears,Falls on the hills a mist of rain, -So faint, it seems to fade again; Yet swiftly nears.Now sparkles the air, all steely-bright,With drops swept down in arrow-flight, Keen, quivering lines.Ceased in a breath the showery sound;And teasingly, now, as I look around, Sweet sunlight shines!
George Parsons Lathrop
The Teacher's Lesson.
I saw a child some four years old,Along a meadow stray;Alone she went unchecked untoldHer home not far away.She gazed around on earth and skyNow paused, and now proceeded;Hill, valley, wood, she passed them by,Unmarked, perchance unheeded.And now gay groups of roses bright,In circling thickets bound herYet on she went with footsteps light,Still gazing all around her.And now she paused, and now she stooped,And plucked a little flowerA simple daisy 'twas, that droopedWithin a rosy bower.The child did kiss the little gem,And to her bosom pressed it;And there she placed the fragile stem,And with soft words caressed it.I love to read a lesson true,From nature's open bookAnd oft I lear...
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
Neutral Tones
We stood by a pond that winter day,And the sun was white, as though chidden of God,And a few leaves lay on the starving sod,They had fallen from an ash, and were gray.Your eyes on me were as eyes that roveOver tedious riddles solved years ago;And some words played between us to and fro -On which lost the more by our love.The smile on your mouth was the deadest thingAlive enough to have strength to die;And a grin of bitterness swept therebyLike an ominous bird a-wing . . .Since then, keen lessons that love deceives,And wrings with wrong, have shaped to meYour face, and the God-curst sun, and a tree,And a pond edged with grayish leaves.1867.
Thomas Hardy
The Earth Breath
From the cool and dark-lipped furrow breathes a dim delightThrough the woodland's purple plumage to the diamond night.Aureoles of joy encircle every blade of grassWhere the dew-fed creatures silent and enraptured pass.And the restless ploughman pauses, turns, and wondering,Deep beneath his rustic habit finds himself a king;For a fiery moment looking with the eyes of GodOver fields a slave at morning bowed him to the sod.Blind and dense with revelation every moment flies.And unto the mighty mother, gay, eternal, riseAll the hopes we hold, the gladness, dreams of things to be.One of all thy generations, mother, hails to thee.Hail, and hail, and hail for ever, though I turn againFrom thy joy unto the human vestiture of pain.I, thy child who went forth radiant...
George William Russell
Summer Morning
The cocks have now the morn foretold,The sun again begins to peep,The shepherd, whistling to his fold,Unpens and frees the captive sheep.Oer pathless plains at early hoursThe sleepy rustic sloomy goes;The dews, brushed off from grass and flowers,Bemoistening sop his hardened shoesWhile every leaf that forms a shade,And every flowerets silken top,And every shivering bent and blade,Stoops, bowing with a diamond drop.But soon shall fly those diamond drops,The red round sun advances higher,And, stretching oer the mountain tops,Is gilding sweet the village-spire.Tis sweet to meet the morning breeze,Or list the gurgling of the brook;Or, stretched beneath the shade of trees,Peruse and pause on Natures book,When...
John Clare
Faerie.
From the oped lattice glance once more abroadWhile the ethereal moontide bathes with lightHill, stream, and garden, and white-winding road.All gracious myths born of the shadowy nightRecur, and hover in fantastic guise,Airy and vague, before the drowsy sight.On yonder soft gray hill Endymion liesIn rosy slumber, and the moonlit airBreathes kisses on his cheeks and lips and eyes.'Twixt bush and bush gleam flower-white limbs, left bare,Of huntress-nymphs, and flying raiment thin,Vanishing faces, and bright floating hair.The quaint midsummer fairies and their kin,Gnomes, elves, and trolls, on blossom, branch, and grassGambol and dance, and winding out and inLeave circles of spun dew where'er th...
Emma Lazarus
A Character.
As thro' the hedge-row shade the violet steals,And the sweet air its modest leaf reveals;Her softer charms, but by their influence known,Surprise all hearts, and mould them to her own.
Samuel Rogers
I Know What Beauty Is
I know what beauty is, for thou Hast set the world within my heart; Of me thou madest it a part; I never loved it more than now. I know the Sabbath afternoons; The light asleep upon the graves: Against the sky the poplar waves; The river murmurs organ tunes. I know the spring with bud and bell; The hush in summer woods at night; Autumn, when trees let in more light; Fantastic winter's lovely spell. I know the rapture music gives, Its mystery of ordered tones: Dream-muffled soul, it loves and moans, And, half-alive, comes in and lives. And verse I know, whose concord high Of thought and music lifts the soul Where ...
George MacDonald
From Wonder World.
Out of Wonder World I think you come;For in your eyes the wonder comes with you.The stars are the windows of Heaven,And sometimes I think you peep through.Oh, little girl, tell us do the FlowersTell you secrets when they find you all alone?Or the Birds and Butterflies whisperOf things to us unknown?Or do angel voices speak to you so softly,When we only hear a little wind sigh;And the peaceful dew of Heaven fall upon youWhen we only see a white cloud passing by?
Kate Greenaway
Nothing Will Die
When will the stream be aweary of flowingUnder my eye?When will the wind be aweary of blowingOver the sky?When will the clouds be aweary of fleeting?When will the heart be aweary of beating?And nature die?Never, O, never, nothing will die;The stream flows,The wind blows,The cloud fleets,The heart beats,Nothing will die.Nothing will die;All things will changeThro eternity.Tis the worlds winter;Autumn and summerAre gone long ago;Earth is dry to the centre,But spring, a new comer,A spring rich and strange,Shall make the winds blowRound and round,Thro and thro,Here and there,Till the airAnd the groundShall be filld with life anew.The world wa...
The Second Best
Moderate tasks and moderate leisure,Quiet living, strict-kept measureBoth in suffering and in pleasureTis for this thy nature yearns.But so many books thou readest,But so many schemes thou breedest,But so many wishes feedest,That thy poor head almost turns.And (the worlds so madly jangled,Human things so fast entangled)Natures wish must now be strangledFor that best which she discerns.So it must be! yet, while leadingA straind life, while overfeeding,Like the rest, his wit with reading,No small profit that man earns,Who through all he meets can steer him,Can reject what cannot clear him,Cling to what can truly cheer him!Who each day more surely learnsThat an impulse, from the distance
Matthew Arnold