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The Lonely Life.
The morning rain, when, from her coop released, The hen, exulting, flaps her wings, when from The balcony the husbandman looks forth, And when the rising sun his trembling rays Darts through the falling drops, against my roof And windows gently beating, wakens me. I rise, and grateful, bless the flying clouds, The cheerful twitter of the early birds, The smiling fields, and the refreshing air. For I of you, unhappy city walls, Enough have seen and known; where hatred still Companion is to grief; and grieving still I live, and so shall die, and that, how soon! But here some pity Nature shows, though small, Once in this spot to me so courteous! Thou, too, O Nature, turn'st away thy gaze From mis...
Giacomo Leopardi
Seeta And Rama - A Tale Of The Indian Famine.
It was by far the loveliest scene in Ind: - A deep sunk lonely vale, 'tween verdant hills That, in eternal friendship, seemed to hold Communion with the changing skies above; Dark shady groves the haunts of shepherd boys And wearied peasants in the midday noon; A lake that shone in lustre clear and bright Like a pure Indian diamond set amidst Green emeralds, where every morn, with songs Of parted lovers that tempted blooming maids With pitchers on their heads to stay and hear Those songs, the busy villagers of the vale Their green fields watered that gave them sure hopes Of future plenty and of future joys. Oh, how uncertain man's sure hopes and joys! In this enchanted hollow that was scooped - ...
T. Ramakrishna
June On The Merrimac
O dwellers in the stately towns,What come ye out to see?This common earth, this common sky,This water flowing free?As gayly as these kalmia flowersYour door-yard blossoms spring;As sweetly as these wild-wood birdsYour caged minstrels sing.You find but common bloom and green,The rippling river's rune,The beauty which is everywhereBeneath the skies of June;The Hawkswood oaks, the storm-torn plumesOf old pine-forest kings,Beneath whose century-woven shadeDeer Island's mistress sings.And here are pictured Artichoke,And Curson's bowery mill;And Pleasant Valley smiles betweenThe river and the hill.You know full well these banks of bloom,The upland's wavy line,And how the sunshine tips ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Blessing
Be you near, or be you far,Let my blessing, like a star,Shine upon you everywhere!And in each lone evening hour,When the twilight folds the flower,I will fold thy name in prayer.In the dark and in the day,To my heart you know the way,Sorrow's pale hand keeps the key;In your sorrow or your sinYou may always enter in;I will keep a place for thee.If God's blessing pass awayFrom your spirit; if you strayFrom his presence, do not wait.Come to my heart, for I keepFor the hearts that wail and weep,Ever opened wide -- a gate.In your joys to others go,When your feet walk ways of woeOnly then come back to me;I will give you tear for tear,And our tears shall more endearThee to me and me to thee.<...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Fisher's Wife.
A long, low waste of yellow sandLay shining northward far as eye could reach,Southward a rocky bluff rose highBroken in wild, fantastic shapes.Near by, one jagged rock towered high,And o'er the waters leaned, like giant grim,Striving to peer into the mysteriesThe ocean whispers of continually,And covers with her soft, treacherous face.For the rest, the sun was sinking lowLike a great golden globe, into the sea;Above the rock a bird was flyingIn dizzy circles, with shrill cries,And on a plank floated from some wreck,With shreds of musty seaweedClinging to it yet, a woman satHolding a child within her arms;A sweet-faced woman - looking out to seaWith dark, patient eyes, and singing to the child,And this the song she in the sunse...
Marietta Holley
A Parting Song
To a friend leaving England for a year's residence in Australia.These winds and suns of springThat warm with breath and wingThe trembling sleep of earth, till half awakeShe laughs and blushes ere her slumber break,For all good gifts they bringRequire one better thing,For all the loans of joy they lend us, borrowOne sharper dole of sorrow,To sunder soon by half a world of seaHer son from England and my friend from me.Nor hope nor love nor fearMay speed or stay one year,Nor song nor prayer may bid, as mine would fain,The seasons perish and be born again,Restoring all we lend,Reluctant, of a friend,The voice, the hand, the presence and the sightThat lend their life and lightTo present gladness and heart-strengt...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
A Motive In Gold And Gray
I.To-night he sees their star burn, dewy-bright,Deep in the pansy, eve hath made for it,Low in the west; a placid purple litAt its far edge with warm auroral light:Love's planet hangs above a cedared height;And there in shadow, like gold music writOf dusk's dark fingers, scale-like fire-flies flitNow up, now down the balmy bars of night.How different from that eve a year ago!Which was a stormy flower in the hairOf dolorous day, whose sombre eyes looked, blurred,Into night's sibyl face, and saw the woeOf parting near, and imaged a despair,As now a hope caught from a homing word.II.She came unto him, as the springtime doesUnto the land where all lies dead and cold,Until her rosary of days is toldAnd beaut...
Madison Julius Cawein
Rhymes On The Road. Extract XV. Rome.
Mary Magdalen.--Her Story.--Numerous Pictures of her.--Correggio--Guido --Raphael, etc.--Canova's two exquisite Statues.--The Somariva Magdalen. --Chantrey's Admiration of Canova's Works.No wonder, MARY, that thy story Touches all hearts--for there we see thee.The soul's corruption and its glory, Its death and life combine in thee.From the first moment when we find Thy spirit haunted by a swarmOf dark desires,--like demons shrined Unholily in that fair form,--Till when by touch of Heaven set free, Thou camest, with those bright locks of gold(So oft the gaze of BETHANY), And covering in their precious foldThy Saviour's feet didst shed such tearsAs paid, each drop, the sins of years!--Thence on thro' all thy c...
Thomas Moore
A Lyric
My lady love lives far away,And oh my heart is sad by day,And ah my tears fall fast by night,What may I do in such a plight.Why, miles grow few when love is fleet,And love, you know, hath flying feet;Break off thy sighs and witness this,How poor a thing mere distance is.My love knows not I love her so,And would she scorn me, did she know?How may the tale I would impartAttract her ear and storm her heart?Calm thou the tempest in my breast,Who loves in silence loves the best,But bide thy time, she will awake,No night so dark but morn will break.But though my heart so strongly yearn,My lady loves me not in turn,How may I win the blest replyThat my void heart shall satisfy.Love breedeth love, be...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Of Her who Died.
We look up to the stars tonight, Idolatrous of them,And dream that Heaven is in sight,And each a ray of purest light From some celestial gem In her bright diadem.Before that lonely home we wait, Ah! nevermore to seeHer lovely form within the gateWhere heart and hearthstone desolate And vine and shrub and tree Seem asking: "Where is she?"There is the cottage Love had planned - Where hope in ashes lies -A tower beautiful to stand,Her monument whose gentle hand And presence in the skies Make home of Paradise.In wintry bleakness nature glows Beneath the stellar ray;We see the mold, but not the rose,And meditate if knowledge goes Into yon mound of clay, W...
Hattie Howard
Aspasia.
'Twas in the fair Aspasia's bower,That Love and Learning, many an hour,In dalliance met; and Learning smiledWith pleasure on the playful child,Who often stole, to find a nestWithin the folds of Learning's vest. There, as the listening statesman hungIn transport on Aspasia's tongue,The destinies of Athens tookTheir color from Aspasia's look.Oh happy time, when laws of stateWhen all that ruled the country's fate,Its glory, quiet, or alarms,Was planned between two snow-white arms! Blest times! they could not always last--And yet, even now, they are not past,Though we have lost the giant mould.In which their men were cast of old,Woman, dear woman, still the same,While beauty breathes through soul or frame,...
The Thread Of Life.
1.The irresponsive silence of the land,The irresponsive sounding of the sea,Speak both one message of one sense to me: -Aloof, aloof, we stand aloof, so standThou too aloof bound with the flawless bandOf inner solitude; we bind not thee;But who from thy self-chain shall set thee free?What heart shall touch thy heart? what hand thy hand? -And I am sometimes proud and sometimes meek,And sometimes I remember days of oldWhen fellowship seemed not so far to seekAnd all the world and I seemed much less cold,And at the rainbow's foot lay surely gold,And hope felt strong and life itself not weak.2.Thus am I mine own prison. EverythingAround me free and sunny and at ease:Or if in shadow, in a shade of treesWhich...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Amour 41
Rare of-spring of my thoughts, my dearest Loue,Begot by fancy on sweet hope exhortiue,In whom all purenes with perfection stroue,Hurt in the Embryon makes my ioyes abhortiue.And you, my sighes, Symtomas of my woe,The dolefull Anthems of my endelesse care,Lyke idle Ecchoes euer answering; so,The mournfull accents of my loues dispayre.And thou, Conceite, the shadow of my blisse,Declyning with the setting of my sunne,Springing with that, and fading straight with this,Now hast thou end, and now thou wast begun: Now was thy pryme, and loe! is now thy waine; Now wast thou borne, now in thy cradle slayne.
Michael Drayton
An Old Sweetheart Of Mine
As one who cons at evening o'er an album all alone,And muses on the faces of the friends that he has known,So I turn the leaves of fancy till, in shadowy design,I find the smiling features of an old sweetheart of mine.The lamplight seems to glimmer with a flicker of surprise,As I turn it low to rest me of the dazzle in my eyes,And light my pipe in silence, save a sigh that seems to yokeIts fate with my tobacco and to vanish with the smoke.'Tis a fragrant retrospection - for the loving thoughts that startInto being are like perfume from the blossom of the heart;And to dream the old dreams over is a luxury divine -When my truant fancy wanders with that old sweetheart of mine.Though I hear, beneath my study, like a fluttering of wings,The voices o...
James Whitcomb Riley
Art
I.What precious thing are you making fastIn all these silken lines?And where and to whom will it go at last?Such subtle knots and twines!I am tying up all my love in this,With all its hopes and fears,With all its anguish and all its bliss,And its hours as heavy as years.I am going to send it afar, afar,To I know not where above;To that sphere beyond the highest starWhere dwells the soul of my Love.But in vain, in vain, would I make it fastWith countless subtle twines;For ever its fire breaks out at last,And shrivels all the lines.II.If you have a carrier-doveThat can fly over land and sea;And a message for your Love,Lady, I love but thee!And this dove wi...
James Thomson
Sylvia In The West.
I. What shall be done? I cannot pray; And none shall know the pangs I feel. If prayers could alter night to day, - Or black to white, - I might appeal; I might attempt to sway thy heart, And prove it mine, or claim a part.II. I might attempt to urge on thee At least the chance of some redress: - An hour's revoke, - a moment's plea, - A smile to make my sorrows less. I might indeed be taught in time To blush for hope, as for a crime!III. But thou art stone, though soft and fleet, - A statue, not a maiden, thou! A man may hear thy bosom beat When thou hast sworn some idle vow. But not for love, no! not for this; For thou wilt se...
Eric Mackay
Winter Magic
Winter that hath few friends yet numbers thoseOf spirit erect and delicate of eye;All may applaud sweet Summer, with her rose,And Autumn, with her banners in the sky;But when from the earth's cheek the colour goes,Her old adorers from her presence fly.So cold her bosom seems, such icy glareIs in her eyes, while on the frozen mereThe shrill ice creaks in the congealing air;Where is the lover that shall call her dear,Or the devotion that shall find her fair?The white-robed widow of the vanished year.Yet hath she loveliness and many flowers,Dreams hath she too and tender reveries,Tranced mid the rainbows of her gleaming bowers,Or the hushed temples of her pillared trees;Summer has scarce such soft and silent hours,Autumn has no s...
Richard Le Gallienne
Hermione
On a mound an Arab lay,And sung his sweet regretsAnd told his amulets:The summer birdHis sorrow heard,And, when he heaved a sigh profound,The sympathetic swallow swept the ground.'If it be, as they said, she was not fair,Beauty's not beautiful to me,But sceptred genius, aye inorbed,Culminating in her sphere.This Hermione absorbedThe lustre of the land and ocean,Hills and islands, cloud and tree,In her form and motion.'I ask no bauble miniature,Nor ringlets deadShorn from her comely head,Now that morning not disdainsMountains and the misty plainsHer colossal portraiture;They her heralds be,Steeped in her quality,And singers of her fameWho is their Muse and dame.'Higher, dear...
Ralph Waldo Emerson