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The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto V
"If beyond earthly wont, the flame of loveIllume me, so that I o'ercome thy powerOf vision, marvel not: but learn the causeIn that perfection of the sight, which soonAs apprehending, hasteneth on to reachThe good it apprehends. I well discern,How in thine intellect already shinesThe light eternal, which to view aloneNe'er fails to kindle love; and if aught elseYour love seduces, 't is but that it showsSome ill-mark'd vestige of that primal beam."This would'st thou know, if failure of the vowBy other service may be so supplied,As from self-question to assure the soul."Thus she her words, not heedless of my wish,Began; and thus, as one who breaks not offDiscourse, continued in her saintly strain."Supreme of gifts, which God crea...
Dante Alighieri
God And The Universe
I.Will my tiny spark of being wholly vanish in your deeps and heights?Must my day be dark by reason, O ye Heavens, of your boundless nights,Rush of Suns, and roll of systems, and your fiery clash of meteorites?II.Spirit, nearing yon dark portal at the limit of thy human state,Fear not thou the hidden purpose of that Power which alone is great,Nor the myriad world, His shadow, nor the silent Opener of the Gate.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Fantasia - The Young Girl's Poem
Kiss mine eyelids, beauteous Morn,Blushing into life new-born!Lend me violets for my hair,And thy russet robe to wear,And thy ring of rosiest hueSet in drops of diamond dew!Kiss my cheek, thou noontide ray,From my Love so far awayLet thy splendor streaming downTurn its pallid lilies brown,Till its darkening shades revealWhere his passion pressed its seal!Kiss my lips, thou Lord of light,Kiss my lips a soft good-night!Westward sinks thy golden car;Leave me but the evening star,And my solace that shall be,Borrowing all its light from thee!
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Raymond And Ida
Raymond.Dearest, that sit'st in dreams,Through the window look, this way.How changed and desolate seemsThe world, Ida, to-day!Heavy and low the sky is glooming:Winter is coming!Ida.My dreaming heart is stirr'd:Sadly the winter comes!The wind is loud: how weird,Heard in these darken'd rooms!Speak to me, Raymond; ease this dread:I am afraid, afraid.Raymond.Love, what is this? Like snowThy cheeks feel, snow they wear.What ails my darling so?What is it thou dost hear?Close, close, thy soft arms cling to mine:Tears on thy lashes shine.Ida.Hark! love, the wind wails byThe wet October trees,Swaying them mournfully:The wet leaves ...
Manmohan Ghose
Existence
You are here, and you are wanted, Though a waif upon life's stair;Though the sunlit hours are haunted With the shadowy shapes of care.Still the Great One, the All-SeeingCalled your spirit into being -Gave you strength for any fate.Since your life by Him was needed,All your ways by Him are heeded - You can trust and you can wait.You can wait to know the meaning Of the troubles sent your soul;Of the chasms intervening 'Twixt your purpose and your goal;Of the sorrows and the trials,Of the silence and denials, Ofttimes answering to your pleas;Of the stinted sweets of pleasure,And of pain's too generous measure - You can wait the WHY of these.Forth from planet unto planet, You have go...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Wood Myths
Sylvan, they say, and nymph are gone;And yet I saw the two last night,When overhead the moon sailed white,And through the mists, her light made wan,Each bush and tree doffed its disguise,And stood revealed to mortal eyes.The hollow, rimmed with rocks and trees,And massed with ferns and matted vines,Seemed an arena mid the pines,A theatre of mysteries,Where oread and satyr met,And all the myths that men forget.The rain and frost had carved the rocksWith faces that were wild and strange,Which Protean fancy seemed to changeEach moment in the granite blocks,That seemed slow dreaming into formThe gods grotesque of wind and storm.Then suddenly Diana stood,Slim as a shaft of moonlight, there,Immortalizing eart...
Madison Julius Cawein
Alone In Crowds To Wander On.
Alone in crowds to wander on,And feel that all the charm is goneWhich voices dear and eyes belovedShed round us once, where'er we roved--This, this the doom must beOf all who've loved, and lived to seeThe few bright things they thought would stayFor ever near them, die away.Tho' fairer forms around us throng,Their smiles to others all belong,And want that charm which dwells aloneRound those the fond heart calls its own.Where, where the sunny brow?The long-known voice--where are they now?Thus ask I still, nor ask in vain,The silence answers all too plain.Oh, what is Fancy's magic worth,If all her art can not call forthOne bliss like those we felt of oldFrom lips now mute, and eyes now cold?No, no,--her spell i...
Thomas Moore
Speranza.
Her younger sister, that Speranza hight.England puts on her purple, and pale, pale With too much light, the primrose doth but waitTo meet the hyacinth; then bower and dale Shall lose her and each fairy woodland mate.April forgets them, for their utmost sumOf gift was silent, and the birds are come.The world is stirring, many voices blend, The English are at work in field and way;All the good finches on their wives attend, And emmets their new towns lay out in clay;Only the cuckoo-bird only doth sayHer beautiful name, and float at large all day.Everywhere ring sweet clamours, chirrupping, Chirping, that comes before the grasshopper;The wide woods, flurried with the pulse of spring, Shake out their wrink...
Jean Ingelow
Things Worth While.
To sit and dream in a shady nookWhile the phantom clouds roll by;To con some long-remembered bookWhen the pulse of youth beats high.To thrill when the dying sunset glowsThrough the heart of a mystic wood,To drink the sweetness of some wild rose,And to find the whole world good.To bring unto others joy and mirth,And keep what friends you can;To learn that the rarest gift on earthIs the love of your fellow man.To hold the respect of those you know,To scorn dishonest pelf;To sympathize with another's woe,And just be true to yourself.To find that a woman's honest loveIn this great world of strifeGleams steadfast like a star, aboveThe dark morass of life.To feel a baby's clinging hand,To wa...
Edwin C. Ranck
He Shall Dwell On High
(Isaiah 33:16)Tossed about in strange commotionLike the surface of the oceanWhen the wind, its waters lashing,Sends great billows, roaring, dashingO'er the breakers, which for agesHave withstood the storms it wages,See those clouds, so like this ocean,How they whirl in strange commotion.Dust and vapor now are meeting,Each the other wildly greeting;As one hand another grasping,So are these each other clasping;Now they whirl in form fantasticAnd great trees with boughs elasticWith loud moans are lowly bending,Leaves and fruit to earth descending.Eyes 'most blinded, nerves all shaken,By this fearful storm o'ertaken,As it swept on toward the sunrise;Yet, I chanced to lift my dim eyesUpward, when...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Portrait Of A Baby
He lay within a warm, soft worldOf motion. Colors bloomed and fled,Maroon and turquoise, saffron, red,Wave upon wave that broke and whirledTo vanish in the grey-green gloom,Perspectiveless and shadowy.A bulging world that had no walls,A flowing world, most like the sea,Compassing all infinityWithin a shapeless, ebbing room,An endless tide that swells and falls...He slept and woke and slept again.As a veil drops Time dropped away;Space grew a toy for children's play,Sleep bolted fast the gates of Sense --He lay in naked impotence;Like a drenched moth that creeps and crawlsHeavily up brown, light-baked walls,To fall in wreck, her task undone,Yet somehow striving toward the sun.So, as he slept, his hands clenched tighter,
Stephen Vincent Benét
Written In A Friend's Album.
Trust not Hope's illusive ray,Trust not Joy's deceitful smiles;Oft they reckless youth betrayWith their bland, seductive wiles.I have proved them all, alas!Transient as the hues of eve;Meteor-like, they quickly passThrough the bosoms they deceive.Let not Love thy prospects gild;Soon they will be clouded o'er,And the budding heart once chilled,It can brightly bloom no more.Slumber not in Pleasure's beam;It may sparkle for a while,But 'tis transient as a dream,Faithless as a foeman's smile.There's a light that's brighter far,Soothes the soul by anguish riven,'Tis Religion's guiding starGlittering on the verge of Heaven.Oh! this beam divine is worthAll the charm that life can give;'...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
The Boat On The Serchio.
Our boat is asleep on Serchio's stream,Its sails are folded like thoughts in a dream,The helm sways idly, hither and thither;Dominic, the boatman, has brought the mast,And the oars, and the sails; but 'tis sleeping fast,Like a beast, unconscious of its tether.The stars burnt out in the pale blue air,And the thin white moon lay withering there;To tower, and cavern, and rift, and tree,The owl and the bat fled drowsily.Day had kindled the dewy woods,And the rocks above and the stream below,And the vapours in their multitudes,And the Apennine's shroud of summer snow,And clothed with light of aery goldThe mists in their eastern caves uprolled.Day had awakened all things that be,The lark and the thrush and the swallow free,And...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Poem
Books and a coloured skein of thoughts were mine;And magic words lay ripening in my soulTill their much-whispered music turned a wineWhose subtlest power was all in my control.These things were mine, and they were real for meAs lips and darling eyes and a warm breast:For I could love a phrase, a melody,Like a fair woman, worshipped and possessed.I scorned all fire that outward of the eyesCould kindle passion; scorned, yet was afraid;Feared, and yet envied those more deeply wiseWho saw the bright earth beckon and obeyed.But a time came when, turning full of hateAnd weariness from my remembered themes,I wished my poet's pipe could modulateBeauty more palpable than words and dreams.All loveliness with which an act informs
Aldous Leonard Huxley
The Call To Bran
One time Bran, son of Febal, was out by himself near his dun, and he heard music behind him. And it kept always after him, and at last he fell asleep with the sweetness of the sound. And when he awoke from his sleep he saw beside him a branch of silver, and it having white blossoms, and the whiteness of the silver was the same as the whiteness of the blossoms. And he brought the branch in his hand into the royal house, and when all his people were with him they saw a woman with strange clothing standing in the house. And she began to make a song for Bran, and all the people were looking at her and listening to her, and it is what she said: I bring a branch of the apple-tree from Emhain, from the far island around which are the shining horses of the Son of Lir. A delight of the eyes is the plain where the hosts hold their games: curragh ra...
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
The Criminal's Betrothed.
As on a waveless sea, a vessel strikesUpon a treacherous rock;Waking the sailors from their happy dreamsBy the swift, terrible shock.Dreaming of shaded village streets, and home,Forgetting the cruel seaTill the shock came - so woke I, yet I know'Twas Love, I loved, not he.'Tis not the star the wave so wildly clasps,Only its form reflected in the stream;'Tis not a broken heart I mourn,Only a broken dream.I should have died when he was brought so low,Had it been him I loved,Died clinging to him, as to the blasted oakThe ivy clings unmoved.'Twas Love that looked on me with strange, sweet eyesBurning with marvellous flame;Love was the idol that I worshipped, thoughI gave to it his name.I gave to...
Marietta Holley
St. Mary's
Back to where the roses restRound a shrine of holy name,(Yes -- they knew me when I came)More of peace and less of fameSuit my restless heart the best.Back to where long quiets brood,Where the calm is never stirredBy the harshness of a word,But instead the singing birdSweetens all my solitude.With the birds and with the flowersSongs and silences unite,From the morning unto night;And somehow a clearer lightShines along the quiet hours.God comes closer to me here --Back of ev'ry rose leaf thereHe is hiding -- and the airThrills with calls to holy prayer;Earth grows far, and heaven near.Every single flower is fraughtWith the very sweetest dreams,Under clouds or under gleamsChangeful...
Abram Joseph Ryan
See You Have Dancers
See you have dancers and wine and a girl like one of the angels (If they exist),And find a clear stream singing near its birth and a bed of moss (If moss exists),For loving and singing to the dancers and drinking and forgetting hell (If hell exists),Because this is a pastime better than paradise (If paradise exists).From the Persian of Omar Khayyam (eleventh century).
Edward Powys Mathers