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Love Letters of a Violinist. Letter VIII. A Vision.
Letter VIII. A Vision.I. Yes, I will tell thee what, a week ago, I dreamt of thee, and all the joy therein Which I conceiv'd, and all the holy din Of throbbing music, which appear'd to flow From room to room, as if to make me know The power thereof to lead me out of sin.II. Methought I saw thee in a ray of light, This side a grove - a dream within a dream - With eyes of tender pleading, and the gleam Of far-off summers in thy tresses bright; And I did tremble at the gracious sig...
Eric Mackay
Gold And Silver Fishes In A Vase
The soaring lark is blest as proudWhen at heaven's gate she sings;The roving bee proclaims aloudHer flight by vocal wings;While Ye, in lasting durance pent,Your silent lives employFor something more than dull content,Though haply less than joy.Yet might your glassy prison seemA place where joy is known,Where golden flash and silver gleamHave meanings of their own;While, high and low, and all about,Your motions, glittering Elves!Ye weave, no danger from without,And peace among yourselves.Type of a sunny human breastIs your transparent cell;Where Fear is but a transient guest,No sullen Humours dwell;Where, sensitive of every rayThat smites this tiny sea,Your scaly panoplies repayThe loan with ...
William Wordsworth
Pleasure! why thus desert the heart
Pleasure! why thus desert the heartIn its spring-tide?I could have seen her, I could part,And but have sigh'd!O'er every youthful charm to stray,To gaze, to touch....Pleasure! why take so much away,Or give so much?
Walter Savage Landor
Life.
A dewy flower, bathed in crimson light,May touch the soul--a pure and beauteous sight;A golden river flashing 'neath the sun,May reach the spot where life's dark waters run;Yet, when the sun is gone, the splendor dies,With drooping head the tender flower lies.And such is life; a golden mist of light,A tangled web that glitters in the sun;When shadows come, the glory takes its flight,The treads are dark and worn, and life is done.Oh! tears, that chill us like the dews of eve,Why come unbid--why should we ever grieve?Why is it, though life hath its leaves of gold,The book each day some sorrow must unfold!What human heart with truth can dare to sayNo grief is mine--this is a perfect day?Oh! poet, take your harp of gold and sing,And all the e...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
To The Moon.
Bush and vale thou fill'st againWith thy misty ray,And my spirit's heavy chainCastest far away.Thou dost o'er my fields extendThy sweet soothing eye,Watching like a gentle friend,O'er my destiny.Vanish'd days of bliss and woeHaunt me with their tone,Joy and grief in turns I know,As I stray alone.Stream beloved, flow on! flow on!Ne'er can I be gay!Thus have sport and kisses gone,Truth thus pass'd away.Once I seem'd the lord to beOf that prize so fair!Now, to our deep sorrow, weCan forget it ne'er.Murmur, stream, the vale along,Never cease thy sighs;Murmur, whisper to my songAnswering melodies!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
A Meditation For His Mistress
You are a tulip seen today,But (Dearest) of so short a stay;That where you grew, scarce man can say.You are a lovely July-flower,Yet one rude wind, or ruffling shower,Will force you hence, (and in an hour.)You are a sparkling Rose i'th'bud,Yet lost, ere that chaste flesh and bloodCan show where you or grew, or stood.You are a full-spread fair-set Vine,And can with Tendrils love entwine,Yet dried, ere you distill your Wine.You are like Balm enclosed (well)In Amber, or some Crystal shell,Yet lost, ere you transfuse your smell.You are a dainty Violet,Yet withered, ere you can be setWithin the Virgin's Coronet.You are the Queen all flowers among,But die you must (fair Maid) ere long,As He,...
Robert Herrick
Love And Folly. - From La Fontaine. (Translations.)
Love's worshippers alone can knowThe thousand mysteries that are his;His blazing torch, his twanging bow,His blooming age are mysteries.A charming science, but the dayWere all too short to con it o'er;So take of me this little lay,A sample of its boundless lore.As once, beneath the fragrant shadeOf myrtles breathing heaven's own air,The children, Love and Folly, played,A quarrel rose betwixt the pair.Love said the gods should do him right,But Folly vowed to do it then,And struck him, o'er the orbs of sight,So hard he never saw again.His lovely mother's grief was deep,She called for vengeance on the deed;A beauty does not vainly weep,Nor coldly does a mother plead.A shade came o'er the eternal blissThat ...
William Cullen Bryant
Etheline
The heart that once was rich with light,And happy in your grace,Now lieth cold beneath the scornThat gathers on your face;And every joy it knew before,And every templed dream,Is paler than the dying flashOn yonder mountain stream.The soul, regretting foundered blissAmid the wreck of years,Hath mourned it with intensityToo deep for human tears!The forest fadeth underneathThe blast that rushes byThe dripping leaves are white with death,But Love will never die!We both have seen the starry mossThat clings where Ruin reigns,And one must know his lonely breastAffection still retains;Through all the sweetest hopes of life,That clustered round and round,Are lying now, like withered things,Forsaken on the ...
Henry Kendall
The Singer
Years since (but names to me before),Two sisters sought at eve my door;Two song-birds wandering from their nest,A gray old farm-house in the West.How fresh of life the younger one,Half smiles, half tears, like rain in sun!Her gravest mood could scarce displaceThe dimples of her nut-brown face.Wit sparkled on her lips not lessFor quick and tremulous tenderness;And, following close her merriest glance,Dreamed through her eyes the heart's romance.Timid and still, the elder hadEven then a smile too sweetly sad;The crown of pain that all must wearToo early pressed her midnight hair.Yet ere the summer eve grew long,Her modest lips were sweet with song;A memory haunted all her wordsOf clover-fields and singing...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Love Is Home
Love is the part, and love is the whole; Love is the robe, and love is the pall; Ruler of heart and brain and soul, Love is the lord and the slave of all! I thank thee, Love, that thou lov'st me; I thank thee more that I love thee. Love is the rain, and love is the air, Love is the earth that holdeth fast; Love is the root that is buried there, Love is the open flower at last! I thank thee, Love all round about, That the eyes of my love are looking out. Love is the sun, and love is the sea; Love is the tide that comes and goes; Flowing and flowing it comes to me; Ebbing and ebbing to thee it flows! Oh my sun, and my wind, and tide! My sea, and my shore, and all beside!
George MacDonald
Aileen
A splendid sun betwixt the treesLong spikes of flame did shoot,When turning to the fragrant South,With longing eyes and burning mouth,I stretched a hand athwart the drouth,And plucked at cooling fruit.So thirst was quenched, and hastening onWith strength returned to me,I set my face against the noon,And reached a denser forest soon;Which dipped into a still lagoonHard by the sooming sea.All day the ocean beat on barAnd bank of gleaming sand;Yet that lone pool was always mild,It never moved when waves were wild,But slumbered, like a quiet child,Upon the lap of land.And when I rested on the brink,Amongst the fallen flowers,I lay in calm; no leaves were stirredBy breath of wind, or wing of bird;
A Word To Two Young Ladies.
WHEN tender Rose-trees first receiveOn half-expanded Leaves, the Shower;Hope's gayest pictures we believe,And anxious watch each coining flower.Then, if beneath the genial SunThat spreads abroad the full-blown May,Two infant Stems the rest out-run,Their buds the first to meet the day,With joy their op'ning tints we view,While morning's precious moments fly:My pretty Maids, 'tis thus with you;The fond admiring gazer, I.Preserve, sweet Buds, where'er you be;The richest gem that decks a Wife;The charm of female modesty:And let sweet Music give it life.Still may the favouring Muse be found:Still circumspect the paths ye tread:Plant moral truths in Fancy's ground;And meet old Age without...
Robert Bloomfield
To A Lady.
1.Oh! had my Fate been join'd with thine, [1]As once this pledge appear'd a token,These follies had not, then, been mine,For, then, my peace had not been broken.2.To thee, these early faults I owe,To thee, the wise and old reproving:They know my sins, but do not know'Twas thine to break the bonds of loving.3.For once my soul, like thine, was pure,And all its rising fires could smother;But, now, thy vows no more endure,Bestow'd by thee upon another. [1]4.Perhaps, his peace I could destroy,And spoil the blisses that await him;Yet let my Rival smile in joy,For thy dear sake, I cannot hate him.5.Ah! since thy angel form ...
George Gordon Byron
Sonnet XXVI.
Già fiammeggiava l' amorosa stella.LAURA, WHO IS ILL, APPEARS TO HIM IN A DREAM, AND ASSURES HIM THAT SHE STILL LIVES. Throughout the orient now began to flameThe star of love; while o'er the northern skyThat, which has oft raised Juno's jealousy,Pour'd forth its beauteous scintillating beam:Beside her kindled hearth the housewife dame,Half-dress'd, and slipshod, 'gan her distaff ply:And now the wonted hour of woe drew nigh,That wakes to tears the lover from his dream:When my sweet hope unto my mind appear'd,Not in the custom'd way unto my sight;For grief had bathed my lids, and sleep had weigh'd;Ah me, how changed that form by love endear'd!"Why lose thy fortitude?" methought she said,"These eyes not yet from thee ...
Francesco Petrarca
When Cold In The Earth.
When cold in the earth lies the friend thou hast loved, Be his faults and his follies forgot by thee then;Or, if from their slumber the veil be removed, Weep o'er them in silence, and close it again.And oh! if 'tis pain to remember how far From the pathways of light he was tempted to roam,Be it bliss to remember that thou wert the star That arose on his darkness and guided him home.From thee and thy innocent beauty first came The revealings, that taught him true love to adore,To feel the bright presence, and turn him with shame From the idols he blindly had knelt to before.O'er the waves of a life, long benighted and wild, Thou camest, like a soft golden calm o'er the sea;And if happiness purely and glowingly smiled On h...
Thomas Moore
Love Song
Your eyes are bright lands.Your looks are little birds,Handkerchiefs gently waving goodbye.In your smile I rest as though in bobbing boats.Your little stories are made of silk.I must behold you always.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Lines on Receiving a Bunch of Wild Hyacinths by Post.
Sweet, drooping, azure tinted bells,How dear you are;Bringing the scent of shady dells,To me from far;Telling of spring and gladsome sunny hours, -Nature's bright jewels!=-heart-refreshing flowers!Oh, for a stroll when opening daySilvers the dew,Kissing the buds, whilst zephyrs playAs though they knewTheir gentle breath was needed, just to shakeYour slumbering beauties, and to bid you wake.Far from the moilding town and trade,How sweet to spendAn hour amid the misty glade,And find a friendIn every tiny blossom, and to lie,And dream of Him whose love can never die.Ye are Gael's messengers, sent hereTo make us glad;Mute, and yet eloquent, to cheerThe heart that's sad;To turn our thoughts from ...
John Hartley
Better than Gold
Better than grandeur, better than gold,Than rank and titles a thousand fold,Is a healthy body and a mind at ease,And simple pleasures that always pleaseA heart that can feel for another's woe,With sympathies large enough to enfoldAll men as brothers, is better than gold.Better than gold is a conscience clear,Though toiling for bread in an humble sphere,Doubly blessed with content and health,Untried by the lusts and cares of wealth,Lowly living and lofty thoughtAdorn and ennoble a poor man's cot;For mind and morals in nature's planAre the genuine tests of a gentleman.Better than gold is the sweet reposeOf the sons of toil when the labors close;Better than gold is the poor man's sleep,And the balm that drops on his slumber...
Abram Joseph Ryan