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The Lodger
I cannot quite recallWhen first he came,So reticent and tall,With his eyes of flame.The neighbors used to say(They know so much!)He looked to them half waySpanish or Dutch.Outlandish certainlyHe is--and queer!He has been lodged with meThis thirty year;All the while (it seems absurd!)We hardly haveExchanged a single word.Mum as the grave!Minds only his own affairs,Goes out and in,And keeps himself upstairsWith his violin.Mum did I say? And yetThat talking smileYou never can forget,Is all the whileFull of such sweet reproofsThe darkest day,Like morning on the roofsIn flush of May.Like autumn on the hills;At four o'clockThe...
Bliss Carman
Youth.
Sweet empty sky of June without a stain, Faint, gray-blue dewy mists on far-off hills,Warm, yellow sunlight flooding mead and plain, That each dark copse and hollow overfills; The rippling laugh of unseen, rain-fed rills,Weeds delicate-flowered, white and pink and gold,A murmur and a singing manifold.The gray, austere old earth renews her youth With dew-lines, sunshine, gossamer, and haze.How still she lies and dreams, and veils the truth, While all is fresh as in the early days! What simple things be these the soul to raiseTo bounding joy, and make young pulses beat,With nameless pleasure finding life so sweet.On such a golden morning forth there floats, Between the soft earth and the softer sky,In ...
Emma Lazarus
Her Only Pilot The Soft Breeze, The Boat
Her only pilot the soft breeze, the boatLingers, but Fancy is well satisfied;With keen-eyed Hope, with Memory, at her side,And the glad Muse at liberty to noteAll that to each is precious, as we floatGently along; regardless who shall chideIf the heavens smile, and leave us free to glide,Happy Associates breathing air remoteFrom trivial cares. But, Fancy and the Muse,Why have I crowded this small bark with youAnd others of your kind, ideal crew!While here sits One whose brightness owes its huesTo flesh and blood; no Goddess from above,No fleeting Spirit, but my own true love?
William Wordsworth
Twilight
Dreamily over the roofsThe cold spring rain is falling;Out in the lonely treeA bird is calling, calling.Slowly over the earthThe wings of night are falling;My heart like the bird in the treeIs calling, calling, calling.
Sara Teasdale
Margery.
"Truth lights our minds as sunrise lights the world.The heart that shuts out truth, excludes the lightThat wakes the love of beauty in the soul;And being foe to these, despises God,The sole Dispenser of the gracious blissThat brings us nearer the celestial gate.They who might feed on rose-leaves of the True,And grow in loveliness of heart and soul,Catch at Deception's airy gossamers,As children clutch at stars. To some, the worldIs a bleak desert, parched with blinding sand,With here and there a mirage, fair to view,But insubstantial as the visions bornOf Folly and Despair. Could we but knowHow nigh we are to the true light of heaven;In what a world of love we live and breathe;On what a tide of truth our souls are borne!Yet we're bu...
Charles Sangster
Moonrise
And who has seen the moon, who has not seenHer rise from out the chamber of the deep,Flushed and grand and naked, as from the chamberOf finished bridegroom, seen her rise and throwConfession of delight upon the wave,Littering the waves with her own superscriptionOf bliss, till all her lambent beauty shakes towards usSpread out and known at last, and we are sureThat beauty is a thing beyond the grave,That perfect, bright experience never fallsTo nothingness, and time will dim the moonSooner than our full consummation hereIn this odd life will tarnish or pass away.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Human Lifes Mystery
We sow the glebe, we reap the corn,We build the house where we may rest,And then, at moments, suddenly,We look up to the great wide sky,Inquiring wherefore we were born For earnest or for jest?The senses folding thick and darkAbout the stifled soul within,We guess diviner things beyond,And yearn to them with yearning fond;We strike out blindly to a markBelieved in, but not seen.We vibrate to the pant and thrillWherewith Eternity has curledIn serpent-twine about Gods seat;While, freshening upward to His feet,In gradual growth His full-leaved willExpands from world to world.And, in the tumult and excessOf act and passion under sun,We sometimes hear, oh, soft and far,As silver star did touch with st...
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
The Flight
All through the deep blue nightThe fountain sang alone;It sang to the drowsy heartOf the satyr carved in stone.The fountain sang and sang,But the satyr never stirredOnly the great white moonIn the empty heaven heard.The fountain sang and sangWhile on the marble rimThe milk-white peacocks slept,And their dreams were strange and dim.Bright dew was on the grass,And on the ilex, dew,The dreamy milk-white birdsWere all a-glisten, too.The fountain sang and sangThe things one cannot tell;The dreaming peacocks stirredAnd the gleaming dew-drops fell.
The House Of Dust: Part 03: 12: Witches Sabbath
Now, when the moon slid under the cloudAnd the cold clear dark of starlight fell,He heard in his blood the well-known bellTolling slowly in heaves of sound,Slowly beating, slowly beating,Shaking its pulse on the stagnant air:Sometimes it swung completely round,Horribly gasping as if for breath;Falling down with an anguished cry . . .Now the red bat, he mused, will fly;Something is marked, this night, for death . . .And while he mused, along his bloodFlew ghostly voices, remote and thin,They rose in the cavern of his brain,Like ghosts they died away again;And hands upon his heart were laid,And music upon his flesh was played,Until, as he was bidden to do,He walked the wood he so well knew.Through the cold dew he moved his feet,...
Conrad Aiken
Sestina VII.
Non ha tanti animali il mar fra l' onde.HE DESPAIRS OF ESCAPE FROM THE TORMENTS BY WHICH HE IS SURROUNDED. Nor Ocean holds such swarms amid his waves,Not overhead, where circles the pale moon,Were stars so numerous ever seen by night,Nor dwell so many birds among the woods,Nor plants so many clothe the field or hill,As holds my tost heart busy thoughts each eve.Each day I hope that this my latest eveShall part from my quick clay the sad salt waves,And leave me in last sleep on some cold hill;So many torments man beneath the moonNe'er bore as I have borne; this know the woodsThrough which I wander lonely day and night.For never have I had a tranquil night,But ceaseless sighs instead from morn till eve,Sinc...
Francesco Petrarca
The Three Urgandas.
Cast on sleep there came to meThree Urgandas; and the seaIn lost lands of BriogneSounded moaning, moaning:Cloudy clad in awful white;And each face a lucid lightRayed and blossomed out of night, -And a wind was groaning.In my sleep I saw them rest,Each a long hand at her breast,A soft flame that lulls the West; -And the sea was moaning, moaning; -Hair like hoarded ingots rolledDown white shoulders glossy gold,Streaks of molten moonlight cold, -And a wind was groaning.Rosy 'round each high brow bentFour-fold starry gold that sentBarbs of fire redolent; -And the sea was moaning, moaning; -'Neath their burning crowns their eyesBurned like southern stars the skiesRock in shattered storm that flies, -
Madison Julius Cawein
A Song
Ask me no more where Jove bestows,When June is past, the fading rose;For in your beauty's orient deepThese flowers, as in their causes, sleep.Ask me no more whither doth strayThe golden atoms of the day;For in pure love heaven did prepareThose powders to enrich your hair.Ask me no more whither doth hasteThe nightingale, when May is past;For in your sweet, dividing throatShe winters, and keeps warm her note.Ask me no more where those stars light,That downwards fall in dead of night;For in your eyes they sit, and thereFixed become, as in their sphere.Ask me no more if east or westThe phoenix builds her spicy nest;For unto you at last she flies,And in your fragrant bosom dies.
Thomas Carew
The Open Door
O Mystery of life,That, after all our strife, Defeats, mistakes,Just as, at last, we seeThe road to victory, The tired heart breaks.Just as the long years giveKnowledge of how to live, Life's end draws near;As if, that gift being ours,God needed our new powers In worlds elsewhere.There, if the soul whose wingsWere won in suffering, springs To life anew,Justice would have some roomFor hope beyond the tomb, And mercy, too.And since, without this dreamNo light, no faintest gleam Answers our "why";But earth and all its raceMust pass and leave no trace On that blind sky;Shall reason close that doorOn all we struggled for, Seal the soul's do...
Alfred Noyes
Ibant Obscuae
To-night I saw three maidens on the beach,Dark-robed descending to the sea,So slow, so silent of all speech,And visible to meOnly by that strange drift-light, dim, forlorn,Of the sun's wreck and clashing surges born.Each after other went,And they were gathered to his breast,It seemed to me a sacramentOf some stern creed unblest:As when to rocks, that cheerless girt the bay,They bound thy holy limbs, Andromeda.
Thomas Edward Brown
To A Sleeping Boy.
Sleep on! Sleep on! beguiling The hours with happy rest.Sleep! - by that dreamy smiling, I know that thou art blest.Thy mother over thee hath leant To guard thee from annoy,And the angel of the innocent Was in that dream, my boy!The tinting of the summer rose Is on that pillowed cheek,And the quietness of summer thought Has made thy forehead meek.And yet that little ample brow, And arching lip, are fraughtWith pledges of high manliness, And promises of thought.Thy polished limbs are rounded out As is the Autumn fruit,And full and reedy is the voice That slumber hath made mute.And, looking on thy perfect form - Hearing thy pleasant tone -I almost weep for joy, my so...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
After Many Years
The song that once I dreamed about,The tender, touching thing,As radiant as the rose withoutThe love of wind and wingThe perfect verses, to the tuneOf woodland music set,As beautiful as afternoon,Remain unwritten yet.It is too late to write them nowThe ancient fire is cold;No ardent lights illume the brow,As in the days of old.I cannot dream the dream again;But when the happy birdsAre singing in the sunny rain,I think I hear its words.I think I hear the echo stillOf long-forgotten tones,When evening winds are on the hillAnd sunset fires the cones;But only in the hours supreme,With songs of land and sea,The lyrics of the leaf and stream,This echo comes to me.No longer doth the ear...
Henry Kendall
The Angel
I dreamt a dream! What can it mean?And that I was a maiden QueenGuarded by an Angel mild:Witless woe was ne'er beguiled!And I wept both night and day,And he wiped my tears away;And I wept both day and night,And hid from him my heart's delight.So he took his wings, and fled;Then the morn blushed rosy red.I dried my tears, and armed my fearsWith ten-thousand shields and spears.Soon my Angel came again;I was armed, he came in vain;For the time of youth was fled,And grey hairs were on my head.
William Blake
The Visit.
Fain had I to-day surprised my mistress,But soon found I that her door was fasten'd.Yet I had the key safe in my pocket,And the darling door I open'd softly!In the parlour found I not the maiden,Found the maiden not within her closet,Then her chamber-door I gently open'd,When I found her wrapp'd in pleasing slumbers,Fully dress'd, and lying on the sofa.While at work had slumber stolen o'er her;For her knitting and her needle found IResting in her folded bands so tender;And I placed myself beside her softly,And held counsel, whether I should wake her.Then I looked upon the beauteous quietThat on her sweet eyelids was reposingOn her lips was silent truth depicted,On her cheeks had loveliness its dwelling,And the pureness o...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe