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Upon Returning to the Country Road
Even the shrewd and bitter, Gnarled by the old world's greed, Cherished the stranger softly Seeing his utter need. Shelter and patient hearing, These were their gifts to him, To the minstrel, grimly begging As the sunset-fire grew dim. The rich said "You are welcome." Yea, even the rich were good. How strange that in their feasting His songs were understood! The doors of the poor were open, The poor who had wandered too, Who had slept with ne'er a roof-tree Under the wind and dew. The minds of the poor were open, Their dark mistrust was dead. They loved his wizard stories, They bought his rhymes with bread. Those were his days of glory, Of faith in ...
Vachel Lindsay
Golden Dream
Golden dream of summer morn, By a well-remembered streamIn the land where I was born, Golden dream!Ripples, by the glancing beam Lightly kissed in playful scorn,Meadows moist with sunlit steam.When I lift my eyelids worn Like a fair mirage you seem,In the winter dawn forlorn, Golden dream!
Robert Fuller Murray
Caroline Branson
With our hearts like drifting suns, had we but walked, As often before, the April fields till star - light Silkened over with viewless gauze the darkness Under the cliff, our trysting place in the wood, Where the brook turns! Had we but passed from wooing Like notes of music that run together, into winning, In the inspired improvisation of love! But to put back of us as a canticle ended The rapt enchantment of the flesh, In which our souls swooned, down, down, Where time was not, nor space, nor ourselves - Annihilated in love! To leave these behind for a room with lamps: And to stand with our Secret mocking itself, And hiding itself amid flowers and mandolins, Stared at by all between salad and coffee....
Edgar Lee Masters
Innominatus
Breathes there the man with soul so dead,Who never to himself hath said,This is my own, my native land!Whose heart hath neer within him burndAs home his footsteps he hath turndFrom wandering on a foreign strand?If such there breathe, go, mark him well;For him no Minstrel raptures swell;High though his titles, proud his name,Boundless his wealth as wish can claim;Despite those titles, power, and pelf,The wretch, concentred all in self,Living, shall forfeit fair renown,And, doubly dying, shall go downTo the vile dust from whence he sprung,Unwept, unhonourd, and unsung.
Walter Scott
The Roasting Of Lydia
No more your needed rest at nightBy ribald youth is troubled;No more your windows, fastened tight,Yield to their knocks redoubled.No longer you may hear them cry,"Why art thou, Lydia, lyingIn heavy sleep till morn is nigh,While I, your love, am dying?"Grown old and faded, you bewailThe rake's insulting sally,While round your home the Thracian galeStorms through the lonely alley.What furious thoughts will fill your breast,What passions, fierce and tinglish(Cannot be properly expressedIn calm, reposeful English).Learn this, and hold your carping tongue:Youth will be found rejoicingIn ivy green and myrtle young,The praise of fresh life voicing;And not content to dedicate,With much protest...
Eugene Field
The Shepherd Wind
When hills and plains are powdered white,And bitter cold the north wind blows,Upon my window in the nightA fairy-garden grows.Here poppies that no hand hath sownBloom white as foam upon the sea,And elfin bells to earth unknownHold frost-bound melody.And here are blossoms like to starsTangled in nets of silver lace -My very breath their beauty mars,Or stirs them from their place.Perchance the echoes of old songsFound here a resting place at lastWith drifting perfume that belongsTo roses of the past.Or all the moonbeams that were lostOn summer nights the world forgetsMay here be prisoned by the frostWith souls of violets.The wind doth shepherd many things -And when the nights are long an...
Virna Sheard
The Lamentation Of The Old Pensioner
Although I shelter from the rainUnder a broken tree,My chair was nearest to the fireIn every companyThat talked of love or politics,Ere Time transfigured me.Though lads are making pikes againFor some conspiracy,And crazy rascals rage their fillAt human tyranny,My contemplations are of TimeThat has transfigured me.There's not a woman turns her faceUpon a broken tree,And yet the beauties that I lovedAre in my memory;I spit into the face of TimeThat has transfigured me.
William Butler Yeats
A Plea For Our Northern Winters.
"Oh, Earth, where is the mantle of pleasant emerald dyeThat robed thee in sweet summer-time, and gladdened heart and eye,Adorned with blooming roses, graceful ferns and blossoms sweet,And bright green moss like velvet that lay soft beneath our feet?""What! am I not as lovely in my garb of spotless white?Was young bride in her beauty ever clothed in robe as bright?Or, if you seek for tinting warm, at morn and evening hour,You'll find me bathed in blushes bright as those of summer flower.""But, Earth, I miss the verdure of thy woods and forests old,The waving of their foliage, casting shadows o'er the wold,The golden sunbeams peering 'mid the green leaves here and there,And I sigh to see the branches so cheerless and so bare.""But oft they're clothed i...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Austerity Of Poetry
That son of Italy who tried to blow,Ere Dante came, the trump of sacred song,In his light youth amid a festal throngSate with his bride to see a public show.Fair was the bride, and on her front did glowYouth like a star; and what to youth belong,Gay raiment, sparkling gauds, elation strong.A prop gave way! crash fell a platform! lo,Mid struggling sufferers, hurt to death, she layShuddering they drew her garments off and foundA robe of sackcloth next the smooth, white skin.Such, poets, is your bride, the Muse! young, gay,Radiant, adornd outside; a hidden groundOf thought and of austerity within.
Matthew Arnold
The Firetail's Nest
"Tweet" pipes the robin as the cat creeps byHer nestling young that in the elderns lie,And then the bluecap tootles in its glee,Picking the flies from orchard apple tree,And "pink" the chaffinch cries its well-known strain,Urging its kind to utter "pink" again,While in a quiet mood hedgesparrows tryAn inward stir of shadowed melody.Around the rotten tree the firetail mournsAs the old hedger to his toil returns,Chopping the grain to stop the gap close byThe hole where her blue eggs in safety lie.Of everything that stirs she dreameth wrongAnd pipes her "tweet tut" fears the whole day long.
John Clare
Retrospection.
I'd wandered, for a week or more, Through hills, and dells, and doleful green'ry, Lodging at any carnal door, Sustaining life on pork, and scenery. A weary scribe, I'd just let slip My collar, for a short vacation, And started on a walking trip, That cheapest form of dissipation And vilest, Oh! confess my pen, That I, prosaic, rather hate your "Ode to a Sky-lark" sort of men; I really am not fond of Nature. Mad longing for a decent meal And decent clothing overcame me; There came a blister on my heel I gave it up; and who can blame me? Then wrote my "Pulse of Nature's Heart," ...
George Augustus Baker, Jr.
The Ghosts Of Growth.
Last night it snowed; and Nature fell asleep. Forest and field lie tranced in gracious dreams Of growth, for ghosts of leaves long dead, me-seems,Hover about the boughs; and wild winds sweepO'er whitened fields full many a hoary heap From the storm-harvest mown by ice-bound streams! With beauty of crushed clouds the cold earth teems,And winter a tranquil-seeming truce would keep.But such ethereal slumber may not bide The ascending sun's bright scorn - not long, I fear;And all its visions on the golden tide Of mid-noon gliding off, must disappear.Fair dreams, farewell! So in life's stir and pride You fade, and leave the treasure of a tear!
George Parsons Lathrop
The Marble Faun.
("Il semblait grelotter.")[XXXVI., December, 1837.]He seemed to shiver, for the wind was keen.'Twas a poor statue underneath a massOf leafless branches, with a blackened backAnd a green foot - an isolated FaunIn old deserted park, who, bending forward,Half-merged himself in the entangled boughs,Half in his marble settings. He was there,Pensive, and bound to earth; and, as all thingsDevoid of movement, he was there - forgotten.Trees were around him, whipped by icy blasts -Gigantic chestnuts, without leaf or bird,And, like himself, grown old in that same place.Through the dark network of their undergrowth,Pallid his aspect; and the earth was brown.Starless and moonless, a rough winter's nightWas letting down h...
Victor-Marie Hugo
The Schoolboy, The Pedant, And The Owner Of A Garden.
A boy who savour'd of his school, -A double rogue and double fool, -By youth and by the privilegeWhich pedants have, by ancient right,To alter reason, and abridge, -A neighbour robb'd, with fingers light,Of flowers and fruit. This neighbour had,Of fruits that make the autumn glad,The very best - and none but he.Each season brought, from plant and tree,To him its tribute; for, in spring,His was the brightest blossoming.One day, he saw our hopeful ladPerch'd on the finest tree he had,Not only stuffing down the fruit,But spoiling, like a Vandal brute,The buds that play advance-courierOf plenty in the coming year.The branches, too, he rudely tore,And carried things to such a pass,The owner sent his servant o'erTo tell ...
Jean de La Fontaine
Upon A Painted Gentlewoman
Men say you're fair; and fair ye are, 'tis true;But, hark! we praise the painter now, not you.
Robert Herrick
Verses On An Autumnal Leaf.
Think not, thou pride of Summer's softest strain!Sweet dress of Nature, in her virgin bloom!That thou hast flutter'd to the breeze in vain,Or unlamented found thy native tomb.The Muse, who sought thee in the whisp'ring shade,When scarce one roving breeze was on the wing,With tones of genuine grief beholds thee fade,And asks thy quick return in earliest Spring.I mark'd the victim of the wintry hour,I heard the winds breathe sad a fun'ral sigh,When the lone warbler, from his fav'rite bow'r,Pour'd forth his pensive song to see thee die; -When, in his little temple, colder grown,He saw its sides of green to yellow grow,And mourn'd his little roof, around him blown,Or toss'd in beauteous ruin on the snow;And vow'd, throughout...
John Carr
The Sun On The Bookcase
(Student's Love-song)Once more the cauldron of the sunSmears the bookcase with winy red,And here my page is, and there my bed,And the apple-tree shadows travel along.Soon their intangible track will be run, And dusk grow strong And they be fled.Yes: now the boiling ball is gone,And I have wasted another day . . .But wasted WASTED, do I say?Is it a waste to have imaged oneBeyond the hills there, who, anon, My great deeds done Will be mine alway?
Thomas Hardy
Russell Kincaid
In the last spring I ever knew, In those last days, I sat in the forsaken orchard Where beyond fields of greenery shimmered The hills at Miller's Ford; Just to muse on the apple tree With its ruined trunk and blasted branches, And shoots of green whose delicate blossoms Were sprinkled over the skeleton tangle, Never to grow in fruit. And there was I with my spirit girded By the flesh half dead, the senses numb Yet thinking of youth and the earth in youth, - Such phantom blossoms palely shining Over the lifeless boughs of Time. O earth that leaves us ere heaven takes us! Had I been only a tree to shiver With dreams of spring and a leafy youth, Then I had fallen in the cyclone ...