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Flos Aevorum
You must mean more than just this hour, You perfect thing so subtly fair,Simple and complex as a flower, Wrought with such planetary care;How patient the eternal power That wove the marvel of your hair.How long the sunlight and the sea Wove and re-wove this rippling goldTo rhythms of eternity; And many a flashing thing grew old,Waiting this miracle to be; And painted marvels manifold,Still with his work unsatisfied, Eager each new effect to try,The solemn artist cast aside, Rainbow and shell and butterfly,As some stern blacksmith scatters wide The sparks that from his anvil fly.How many shells, whorl within whorl, Litter the marges of the sphereWith wrack of unregarded pear...
Richard Le Gallienne
Love Better Than Knowledge
O Thou Eternal One, look downUpon an erring child of earth;Thy handiwork with knowledge crown,Or life will seem of little worth;By Thine own light illume my way,And turn this darkness into day.I hear a whisper in my heart--"Than knowledge, better far is love;Thy knowledge here is but in part,The perfect waits for Thee above:Walk now by faith, and leave to meThe things now wrap'd in mystery."Weighed down with mysteries profoundI lean upon Thy loving breast;The great unknown still girts me round,But Thou art mine, and here I rest;Unsolved the mysteries remain;But they no longer give me pain.My finite mind may never graspThe thought of Thy immensity;But I Thy hand more firmly clasp--To feel Thee near...
Joseph Horatio Chant
A Man's Requirements
ILove me Sweet, with all thou art,Feeling, thinking, seeing;Love me in the lightest part,Love me in full being.IILove me with thine open youthIn its frank surrender;With the vowing of thy mouth,With its silence tender.IIILove me with thine azure eyes,Made for earnest grantings;Taking colour from the skies,Can Heaven's truth be wanting?IVLove me with their lids, that fallSnow-like at first meeting;Love me with thine heart, that allNeighbours then see beating.VLove me with thine hand stretched outFreely, open-minded:Love me with thy loitering foot,Hearing one behind it.VILove me with thy voice, that turnsSudden faint...
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Thy Will Be Done.
Sometimes the silver cord of life Is loosed at one brief stroke;As when the elements at strife,With Nature's wild contentions rife, Uproot the sturdy oak.Or fell disease, in patience borne, Attenuates the frameTill the meek sufferer, wan and worn,Of energy and beauty shorn, Death's sweet release would claim.By instant touch or long decay Is dissolution wrought;When, lost to earth, the grave and gay,The young and old who pass away, Abide in hallowed thought.In dear regard together drawn, Affection's debt to pay,Fond greetings we exchange at dawnWith one who, ere the day be gone, Is bruised and lifeless clay.O thou in manhood's morning-time With health and hope elate...
Hattie Howard
Sonnet--The Love Of Narcissus
Like him who met his own eyes in the river, The poet trembles at his own long gaze That meets him through the changing nights and daysFrom out great Nature; all her waters quiverWith his fair image facing him for ever; The music that he listens to betrays His own heart to his ears; by trackless waysHis wild thoughts tend to him in long endeavour.His dreams are far among the silent hills; His vague voice calls him from the darkened plainWith winds at night; strange recognition thrills His lonely heart with piercing love and pain;He knows his sweet mirth in the mountain rills, His weary tears that touch him with the rain.
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
Dear Heart, Why Will You Use Me So?
Dear heart, why will you use me so?Dear eyes that gently me upbraid,Still are you beautiful, but O,How is your beauty raimented!Through the clear mirror of your eyes,Through the soft sigh of kiss to kiss,Desolate winds assail with criesThe shadowy garden where love is.And soon shall love dissolved beWhen over us the wild winds blow,But you, dear love, too dear to me,Alas! why will you use me so?
James Joyce
"Lucy" - For Her Golden Wedding, October 18, 1875
"Lucy." - The old familiar nameIs now, as always, pleasant,Its liquid melody the sameAlike in past or present;Let others call you what they will,I know you'll let me use it;To me your name is Lucy still,I cannot bear to lose it.What visions of the past returnWith Lucy's image blended!What memories from the silent urnOf gentle lives long ended!What dreams of childhood's fleeting morn,What starry aspirations,That filled the misty days unbornWith fancy's coruscations!Ah, Lucy, life has swiftly spedFrom April to November;The summer blossoms all are shedThat you and I remember;But while the vanished years we shareWith mingling recollections,How all their shadowy features wearThe hue of old affect...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
To - .
Music, when soft voices die,Vibrates in the memory -Odours, when sweet violets sicken,Live within the sense they quicken.Rose leaves, when the rose is dead,Are heaped for the beloved's bed;And so thy thoughts, when thou art gone,Love itself shall slumber on.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Rose In The Garden.
Thirty years have come and gone,Melting away like Southern Snows,Since, in the light of a summer's night,I went to the garden to seek my Rose.Mine! Do you hear it, silver moon,Flooding my heart with your mellow shine?Mine! Be witness, ye distant stars,Looking on me with eyes divine!Tell me, tell me, wandering winds,Whisper it, if you may not speak--Did you ever, in all your round,Fan a lovelier brow or cheek?Long I nursed in my heart the love,Love which felt, but dared not tell,Till, I scarcely know how or when--It found wild words,- and all was well!I can hear her sweet voice even now--It makes my pulses leap and thrill--"I owe you more than I well can pay;You may take me, Robert, if you will!"
Horatio Alger, Jr.
Wishes
A BIRTHDAY WISH. I'm wishing a happy birthday, To you my dear sweet friend; And may every day be a happy day Is the wish I will always send.A CHRISTMAS WISH. A Merry Christmas Wish to you, And may your heart be gay; May Santa bring you many things, This Merry Christmas day.A NEW YEAR WISH A happy happy, New Year, We all are wishing you; We hope no sorrow you shall know This whole year through.
Alan L. Strang
To The Same (John Dyer)
Enough of climbing toil! Ambition treadsHere, as 'mid busier scenes, ground steep and rough,Or slippery even to peril! and each step,As we for most uncertain recompenceMount toward the empire of the fickle clouds,Each weary step, dwarfing the world below,Induces, for its old familiar sights,Unacceptable feelings of contempt,With wonder mixed that Man could e'er be tied,In anxious bondage, to such nice arrayAnd formal fellowship of petty things!Oh! 'tis the 'heart' that magnifies this life,Making a truth and beauty of her own;And moss-grown alleys, circumscribing shades,And gurgling rills, assist her in the workMore efficaciously than realms outspread,As in a map, before the adventurer's gazeOcean and Earth contending for regard.The ...
William Wordsworth
Lost And Found.
In the mildest, greenest groveBlest by sprite or fairy,Where the melting echoes rove,Voices sweet and airy; Where the streams Drink the beams Of the Sun, As they run Riverward Through the sward,A shepherd went astray -E'en gods have lost their way.Every bird had sought its nest,And each flower-spiritDreamed of that delicious restMortals ne'er inherit; Through the trees Swept the breeze, Bringing airs Unawares Through the grove, Until loveCame down upon his heart,Refusing to depart.Hungrily he quaffed the strain,Sweeter still, and clearer,Drenched with music's mellow rain,Nearer - nearer - dearer! Chains of sound...
Charles Sangster
Cor Cordium
To My Wife, MildredDear wife, there is no word in all my songsBut unto thee belongs:Though I indeed before our true day cameMistook thy star in many a wandering flame,Singing to thee in many a fair disguise,Calling to thee in many another's name,Before I knew thine everlasting eyes.Faces that fled me like a hunted fawnI followed singing, deeming it was Thou,Seeking this face that on our pillow nowGlimmers behind thy golden hair like dawn,And, like a setting moon, within my breastSinks down each night to rest.Moon follows moon before the great moon flowers,Moon of the wild wild honey that is ours;Long must the tree strive up in leaf and root,Before it bear the golden-hearted fruit:And shall great Love at once per...
Sonnet.
My heart is sick with longing, tho' I feedOn hope; Time goes with such a heavy paceThat neither brings nor takes from thy embrace,As if he slept - forgetting his old speed:For, as in sunshine only we can readThe march of minutes on the dial's face,So in the shadows of this lonely placeThere is no love, and Time is dead indeed.But when, dear lady, I am near thy heart,Thy smile is time, and then so swift it flies,It seems we only meet to tear apart,With aching hands and lingering of eyes.Alas, alas! that we must learn hours' flightBy the same light of love that makes them bright!
Thomas Hood
Oh, Ask Me Not
Love, should I set my heart upon a crown, Squander my years, and gain it, What recompense of pleasure could I own? For youth's red drops would stain it. Much have I thought on what our lives may mean, And what their best endeavor, Seeing we may not come again to glean, But, losing, lose forever. Seeing how zealots, making choice of pain, From home and country parted, Have thought it life to leave their fellows slain, Their women broken-hearted; How teasing truth a thousand faces claims, As in a broken mirror, And what a father died for in the flames His own son scorns as error; ...
John Charles McNeill
Love's Last Adieu.
[Greek: Aeì d' aeí me pheugei.] - [Pseud.] ANACREON, [Greek: Eis chruson].1.The roses of Love glad the garden of life,Though nurtur'd 'mid weeds dropping pestilent dew,Till Time crops the leaves with unmerciful knife,Or prunes them for ever, in Love's last adieu!2.In vain, with endearments, we soothe the sad heart,In vain do we vow for an age to be true;The chance of an hour may command us to part,Or Death disunite us, in Love's last adieu!3.Still Hope, breathing peace, through the grief-swollen breast,Will whisper, "Our meeting we yet may renew:"With this dream of deceit, half our sorrow's represt,Nor taste we the poison, of Love's last adieu!4.Oh! mark you yon pair,...
George Gordon Byron
I Loved You, Once
And did you think my heartCould keep its love unchanging,Fresh as the buds that startIn spring, nor know estranging?Listen! The buds depart:I loved you once, but now -I love you more than ever.'T is not the early love;With day and night it alters,And onward still must moveLike earth, that never faltersFor storm or star above.I loved you once; but now -I love you more than ever.With gifts in those glad daysHow eagerly I sought you!Youth, shining hope, and praise:These were the gifts I brought you.In this world little stays:I loved you once, but now -I love you more than ever.A child with glorious eyesHere in our arms half sleeping -So passion wakeful lies;Then grows to manhood, ke...
George Parsons Lathrop
Vastness
I.Many a hearth upon our dark globe sighsafter many a vanishd face,Many a planet by many a sun may rollwith the dust of a vanishd race.II.Raving politics, never at restas this poorearths pale history runs,What is it all but a trouble of ants in thegleam of a million million of suns?III.Lies upon this side, lies upon that side,truthless violence mournd by the Wise,Thousands of voices drowning his own in apopular torrent of lies upon lies;IV.Stately purposes, valour in battle, gloriousannals of army and fleet,Death for the right cause, death for the wrong cause,trumpets of vi...
Alfred Lord Tennyson