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The Ideals.
And wilt thou, faithless one, then, leave me,With all thy magic phantasy,With all the thoughts that joy or grieve me,Wilt thou with all forever fly?Can naught delay thine onward motion,Thou golden time of life's young dream?In vain! eternity's wide oceanCeaselessly drowns thy rolling stream.The glorious suns my youth enchantingHave set in never-ending night;Those blest ideals now are wantingThat swelled my heart with mad delight.The offspring of my dream hath perished,My faith in being passed away;The godlike hopes that once I cherishAre now reality's sad prey.As once Pygmalion, fondly yearning,Embraced the statue formed by him,Till the cold marble's cheeks were burning,And life diffused through every limb,So...
Friedrich Schiller
Sonnet LXIV.
Io amai sempre, ed amo forte ancora.HE LOVES, AND WILL ALWAYS LOVE, THE SPOT AND THE HOUR IN WHICH HE FIRST BECAME ENAMOURED OF LAURA.I always loved, I love sincerely yet,And to love more from day to day shall learn,The charming spot where oft in grief I turnWhen Love's severities my bosom fret:My mind to love the time and hour is setWhich taught it each low care aside to spurn;She too, of loveliest face, for whom I burnBids me her fair life love and sin forget.Who ever thought to see in friendship join'd,On all sides with my suffering heart to cope,The gentle enemies I love so well?Love now is paramount my heart to bind,And, save that with desire increases hope,Dead should I lie alive where I would dwell.MACGREGO...
Francesco Petrarca
Content
When I behold how some pursueFame, that is Care's embodimentOr fortune, whose false face looks true,An humble home with sweet contentIs all I ask for me and you.An humble home, where pigeons coo,Whose path leads under breezy linesOf frosty-berried cedars toA gate, one mass of trumpet-vines,Is all I ask for me and you.A garden, which all summer through,The roses old make redolent,And morning-glories, gay of hue,And tansy, with its homely scent,Is all I ask for me and you.An orchard, that the pippins strew,From whose bruised gold the juices spring;A vineyard, where the grapes hang blue,Wine-big and ripe for vintaging,Is all I ask for me and you.A lane that leads to some far viewOf forest or of...
Madison Julius Cawein
To Earthward
Love at the lips was touchAs sweet as I could bear;And once that seemed too much;I lived on airThat crossed me from sweet things,The flow of was it muskFrom hidden grapevine springsDownhill at dusk?I had the swirl and acheFrom sprays of honeysuckleThat when they're gathered shakeDew on the knuckle.I craved strong sweets, but thoseSeemed strong when I was young;The petal of the roseIt was that stung.Now no joy but lacks salt,That is not dashed with painAnd weariness and fault;I crave the stainOf tears, the aftermarkOf almost too much love,The sweet of bitter barkAnd burning clove.When stiff and sore and scarredI take away my handFrom leaning on it har...
Robert Lee Frost
Peggy Mitchell
As lily grows up easily, In modest, gentle dignity To sweet perfection, So grew she, As easily. Or as the rose that takes no care Will open out on sunny air Bloom after bloom, fair after fair, Sweet after sweet; Just so did she, As carelessly. She is our torment without end, She is our enemy and friend, Our joy, our woe; And she will send Madness or glee To you and me, And endlessly.
James Stephens
Constancy. To----.
Dearest love! when thy God shall recall thee,Be this record inscribed on thy tomb:Truth, and gratitude, well may applaud thee,And all thy past virtues relume.It shall tell--to thy sex's proud honour,Of sufferings and trials severe,While still, through protracted affliction,Not a murmur escaped; but the tearOf resignment to Heaven's high dictates,'Twas thine, like a martyr, to shed:That heart--all affection for others--For thyself, uncomplainingly, bled.Midst the storms, which misfortune had gather'd,What an angel thou wert unto me;In that hour, when all friendship seem'd sever'd,Thou didst bloom like the ever-green tree!All was gloom; and in vain had I striven,For hope ceased a ray to impart;When thou cam'st,...
Thomas Gent
A Ballade Of Waiting.
No girdle hath weaver or goldsmith wroughtSo rich as the arms of my love can be;No gems with a lovelier lustre fraughtThan her eyes, when they answer me liquidly.Dear lady of love, be kind to meIn days when the waters of hope abate,And doubt like a shimmer on sand shall be,In the year yet, Lady, to dream and wait.Sweet mouth, that the wear of the world hath taughtNo glitter of wile or traitorie,More soft than a cloud in the sunset caught,Or the heart of a crimson peony;Oh turn not its beauty away from me;To kiss it and cling to it early and lateShall make sweet minutes of days that flee,In the year yet, Lady, to dream and wait.Rich hair that a painter of old had soughtFor the weaving of some soft phantasy,Most fair when ...
Archibald Lampman
To ......., 1801.
To be the theme of every hourThe heart devotes to Fancy's power,When her prompt magic fills the mindWith friends and joys we've left behind,And joys return and friends are near,And all are welcomed with a tear:--In the mind's purest seat to dwell,To be remembered oft and wellBy one whose heart, though vain and wild,By passion led, by youth beguiled,Can proudly still aspire to beAll that may yet win smiles from thee:--If thus to live in every partOf a lone, weary wanderer's heart;If thus to be its sole employCan give thee one faint gleam of joy,Believe it. Mary,--oh! believeA tongue that never can deceive,Though, erring, it too oft betrayEven more than Love should dare to say,--In Pleasure's dream or Sorrow's hour,I...
Thomas Moore
Joy Supreme
The birds are pirates of her notes,The blossoms steal her face's light;The stars in ambush lie all day,To take her glances for the night.Her voice can shame rain-pelted leaves;Young robin has no notes as sweetIn autumn, when the air is still,And all the other birds are mute.When I set eyes on ripe, red plumsThat seem a sin and shame to bite,Such are her lips, which I would kiss,And still would keep before my sight.When I behold proud gossamerMake silent billows in the air,Then think I of her head's fine stuff,Finer than gossamer's, I swear.The miser has his joy, with goldBeneath his pillow in the night;My head shall lie on soft warm hair,And miser's know not that delight.Captains that own their ships can boas...
William Henry Davies
To A Young Girl
My dear, my dear, I knowMore than anotherWhat makes your heart beat so;Not even your own motherCan know it as I know,Who broke my heart for herWhen the wild thought,That she deniesAnd has forgot,Set all her blood astirAnd glittered in her eyes.
William Butler Yeats
To J. S. B.
On seeing her December 25th, 1904, after two years' travel.Take, fair maid, these simple lines From my pen;Think of strollings 'neath the pines, Which have been -Long and lonesome were the days We were apart,But may Love, now, have her sways, - Bind heart to heart!O'er main to isle and back to land Have I been;Beheld on either hand A maiden queen:But none with captivating charms Like thine;None to nestle in her arms, Love of mine!Charms unto thee God gave To banish strife;To glorify and save One sweet life -Take this, dear, before we part From this bliss;'Tis but love flowing from my heart, Thine to kiss!
Edward Smyth Jones
Early Love
The Spring of life is o'er with me,And love and all gone by;Like broken bough upon yon tree,I'm left to fade and die.Stern ruin seized my home and me,And desolate's my cot:Ruins of halls, the blasted tree,Are emblems of my lot.I lived and loved, I woo'd and won,Her love was all to me,But blight fell o'er that youthful one,And like a blasted treeI withered, till I all forgotBut Mary's smile on me;She never lived where love was not,And I from bonds was free.The Spring it clothed the fields with pride,When first we met together;And then unknown to all besideWe loved in sunny weather;We met where oaks grew overhead,And whitethorns hung with may;Wild thyme beneath her feet was spread,And cows in ...
John Clare
In That Dark Silent Hour
In that dark silent hourWhen the wind wants power,And in the black heightThe sky wants light,Stirless and blackIn utter lack,And not a soundEscapes from that untroubled round:--To wake thenIn the dark, and ache thenUntil the dark is gone--Lonely, yet not alone;Hearing another's breathAll the quiet beneath,Knowing one sleeps nearThat day held dearAnd dreams held dear; but nowIn this sharp moment--howShare the moment's sweetness,Forgo its completeness,Nor be aloneNow the dark is grownSpiritual and deepMore than in dreams and sleep?O, it is pain, 'tis needThat so will pleadFor a little loneliness.If it be pain to missLoved touch, look and lip,Companions...
John Frederick Freeman
Love and Sleep
Lying asleep between the strokes of nightI saw my love lean over my sad bed,Pale as the duskiest lilys leaf or head,Smooth-skinned and dark, with bare throat made to bite,Too wan for blushing and too warm for white,But perfect-coloured without white or red.And her lips opened amorously, and saidI wist not what, saving one word Delight.And all her face was honey to my mouth,And all her body pasture to mine eyes;The long lithe arms and hotter hands than fire,The quivering flanks, hair smelling of the south,The bright light feet, the splendid supple thighsAnd glittering eyelids of my souls desire.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Fare Thee Well, O Love Of Woman!
Fare thee well, O Love of Woman!Lip of Beauty, fare thee well!Thy soft heart, divinely human,Holds me by a magic spell.All that grieves me now to perishIs the loss of one bright eye,And I still the vision cherishWhile I lay me down to die.At my headstone, kindly kneeling,May I beg a votive tear?Woman, with her pure appealing,Is my angel at the bier.Let me have but one such linger,Praying Christ to help and save,Let me have but one dear fingerPlace a chaplet on my grave.Though the soldier dies in dying,The true lover never dies;Upward, from his embers flying,He transfigures in the skies.Heaven is rare, but Love is rarer,Whether it be blest or crost;Heaven blooms fair, but Love blooms fairer,B...
A. H. Laidlaw
Sweet Stay-At-Home
Sweet Stay-at-Home, sweet Well-content,Thou knowest of no strange continent:Thou hast not felt thy bosom keepA gentle motion with the deep;Thou hast not sailed in Indian seas,Where scent comes forth in every breeze.Thou hast not seen the rich grape growFor miles, as far as eyes can go;Thou hast not seen a summer's nightWhen maids could sew by a worm's light;Nor the North Sea in spring send outBright hues that like birds flit aboutIn solid cages of white ice,Sweet Stay-at-Home, sweet Love-one-place.Thou hast not seen black fingers pickWhite cotton when the bloom is thick,Nor heard black throats in harmony;Nor hast thou sat on stones that lieFlat on the earth, that once did riseTo hide proud kings from common eyes,Thou has...
Sonnet, To Mrs. Bates.
Oh, thou whose melody the heart obeys,Thou who can'st all its subject passions move,Whose notes to heav'n the list'ning soul can raise,Can thrill with pity, or can melt with love!Happy! whom nature lent this native charm;Whose melting tones can shed with magic power,A sweeter pleasure o'er the social hour,The breast to softness sooth, to virtue warm - Butyet more happy! that thy life as clearFrom discord, as thy perfect cadence flows;That tun'd to sympathy, thy faithful tear,In mild accordance falls for others woes;That all the tender, pure affections bindIn chains of harmony, thy willing mind!
Helen Maria Williams
Sonnet IX.
Fair is the rising morn when o'er the sky The orient sun expands his roseate ray,And lovely to the Bard's enthusiast eye Fades the meek radiance of departing day;But fairer is the smile of one we love, Than all the scenes in Nature's ample sway.And sweeter than the music of the grove, The voice that bids us welcome. Such delight EDITH! is mine, escaping to thy sightFrom the hard durance of the empty throng. Too swiftly then towards the silent nightYe Hours of happiness! ye speed along, Whilst I, from all the World's cold cares apart, Pour out the feelings of my burthen'd heart.
Robert Southey