Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 72 of 137
Previous
Next
Nature, For Nature's Sake.
White as white butterflies that each one dons Her face their wide white wings to shade withal,Many moon-daisies throng the water-spring. While couched in rising barley titlarks call,And bees alit upon their martagons Do hang a-murmuring, a-murmuring.They chide, it may be, alien tribes that flew And rifled their best blossom, counted onAnd dreamed on in the hive ere dangerous dew That clogs bee-wings had dried; but when outshoneLong shafts of gold (made all for them) of powerTo charm it away, those thieves had sucked the flower.Now must they go; a-murmuring they go, And little thrushes twitter in the nest;The world is made for them, and even so The clouds are; they have seen no stars, the breastOf their soft moth...
Jean Ingelow
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto XVII
Such as the youth, who came to ClymeneTo certify himself of that reproach,Which had been fasten'd on him, (he whose endStill makes the fathers chary to their sons),E'en such was I; nor unobserv'd was suchOf Beatrice, and that saintly lamp,Who had erewhile for me his station mov'd;When thus by lady: "Give thy wish free vent,That it may issue, bearing true reportOf the mind's impress; not that aught thy wordsMay to our knowledge add, but to the end,That thou mayst use thyself to own thy thirstAnd men may mingle for thee when they hear.""O plant! from whence I spring! rever'd and lov'd!Who soar'st so high a pitch, thou seest as clear,As earthly thought determines two obtuseIn one triangle not contain'd, so clearDost see contingencies, ...
Dante Alighieri
Sea Reverie
Strange Sea! why is it that you never rest?And tell me why you never go to sleep?Thou art like one so sad and sin-oppressed --(And the waves are the tears you weep) --And thou didst never sin -- what ails the sinless deep?To-night I hear you crying on the beach,Like a weary child on its mother's breast --A cry with an infinite and lonesome reachOf unutterably deep unrest;And thou didst never sin -- why art thou so distressed?But, ah, sad Sea! the mother's breast is warm,Where crieth the lone and the wearied child;And soft the arms that shield her own from harm;And her look is unutterably mild --But to-night, O Sea! thy cry is wild, so wild!What ails thee, Sea? The midnight stars are bright --How safe they lean on heaven's sinl...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Memory
Remembrance of the past will joy impartIf in that past the conscience was supreme;But if the soul be made an auction mart,And thoughts and deeds be sold for what you deemThe price of virtue, then the called-up pastWill be like hooks of steel to hold thee fast.Or like the stings those nettles left behindWhich I so fondly handled in my play;I deemed the friend who warned me true and kind,And in great haste I threw the weeds away,But soon the burning flesh reminded me'Twere safer far from all such weeds to flee.The cloud that flitted o'er the saintly browWhich now a crown of life so well adorns,When you by ways and means you know not now,Did what your soul with holy horror scorns,Will stay with you long as you live on earth,And b...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Moonset
Idles the night wind through the dreaming firs,That waking murmur low,As some lost melody returning stirsThe love of long ago;And through the far, cool distance, zephyr fanned.The moon is sinking into shadow-land.The troubled night-bird, calling plaintively,Wanders on restless wing;The cedars, chanting vespers to the sea,Await its answering,That comes in wash of waves along the strand,The while the moon slips into shadow-land.O! soft responsive voices of the nightI join your minstrelsy,And call across the fading silver lightAs something calls to me;I may not all your meaning understand,But I have touched your soul in shadow-land.
Emily Pauline Johnson
Revealment
A sense of sadness in the golden air;A pensiveness, that has no part in care,As if the Season, by some woodland pool,Braiding the early blossoms in her hair,Seeing her loveliness reflected there,Had sighed to find herself so beautiful.A breathlessness; a feeling as of fear;Holy and dim, as of a mystery near,As if the World, about us, whispering wentWith lifted finger and hand-hollowed ear,Hearkening a music, that we cannot hear,Haunting the quickening earth and firmament.A prescience of the soul that has no name;Expectancy that is both wild and tame,As if the Earth, from out its azure ringOf heavens, looked to see, as white as flame, -As Perseus once to chained Andromeda came, -The swift, divine revealment of the Spring.
Madison Julius Cawein
A Broken Prayer
0 Lord, my God, how longShall my poor heart pant for a boundless joy?How long, O mighty Spirit, shall I hearThe murmur of Truth's crystal waters slideFrom the deep caverns of their endless being,But my lips taste not, and the grosser airChoke each pure inspiration of thy will?I am a denseness 'twixt me and the light;1 cannot round myself; my purest thought,Ere it is thought, hath caught the taint of earth,And mocked me with hard thoughts beyond my will.I would be a windWhose smallest atom is a viewless wing,All busy with the pulsing life that throbsTo do thy bidding; yea, or the meanest thingThat has relation to a changeless truth,Could I but be instinct with thee--each thoughtThe lightning of a pure intelligence,And eve...
George MacDonald
Compensations
Not with a flash that rends the blue Shall fall the avenging sword.Gently as the evening dew Descends the mighty Lord.His dreadful balances are made To move with moon and tide;Yet shall not mercy be afraid Nor justice be denied.The dreams that seemed to waste away, The kindliness forgot,Were singing in your heart today Although you knew them not.The sun shall not forget his road, Nor the high stars their rhyme,The traveller with the heavier load Has one less hill to climb.And, though a darker shadow fall On every struggling age,How shall it be if, after all, He share our pilgrimage?The end we mourn is not the end. The dust has nimble wings.But tru...
Alfred Noyes
Immortal Sails
Now, in a breath, we'll burst those gates of gold, And ransack heaven before our moment fails.Now, in a breath, before we, too, grow old, We'll mount and sing and spread immortal sails.It is not time that makes eternity. Love and an hour may quite out-run the years,And give us more to hear and more to see Than life can wash away with all its tears.Dear, when we part, at last, that sunset sky Shall not be touched with deeper hues than this;But we shall ride the lightning ere we die And seize our brief infinitude of bliss,With time to spare for all that heaven can tell,While eyes meet eyes, and look their last farewell.
Night Song,
When on thy pillow lying,Half listen, I implore,And at my lute's soft sighing,Sleep on! what wouldst thou more?For at my lute's soft sighingThe stars their blessings pourOn feelings never-dying;Sleep on! what wouldst thou more?Those feelings never-dyingMy spirit aid to soarFrom earthly conflicts trying;Sleep on! what wouldst thou more?From earthly conflicts tryingThou driv'st me to this shore;Through thee I'm thither flying,Sleep on! what wouldst thou more?Through thee I'm hither flying,Thou wilt not list beforeIn slumbers thou art lying:Sleep on! what wouldst thou more?
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Epilogue to Emblems of Love
What shall we do for Love these days?How shall we make an altar-blazeTo smite the horny eyes of menWith the renown of our Heaven,And to the unbelievers proveOur service to our dear god, Love?What torches shall we lift aboveThe crowd that pushes through the mire,To amaze the dark heads with strange fire?I should think I were much to blame,If never I held some fragrant flameAbove the noises of the world,And openly 'mid men's hurrying stares,Worshipt before the sacred fearsThat are like flashing curtains furl'dAcross the presence of our lord Love.Nay, would that I could fill the gazeOf the whole earth with some great praiseMade in a marvel for men's eyes,Some tower of glittering masonries,Therein such a spirit flourishing
Lascelles Abercrombie
The Song Of The Happy Shepherd
The woods of Arcady are dead,And over is their antique joy;Of old the world on dreaming fed;Grey Truth is now her painted toy;Yet still she turns her restless head:But O, sick children of the world,Of all the many changing thingsIn dreary dancing past us whirled,To the cracked tune that Chronos sings,Words alone are certain good.Where are now the warring kings,Word be-mockers? -- By the Rood,Where are now the watering kings?An idle word is now their glory,By the stammering schoolboy said,Reading some entangled story:The kings of the old time are dead;The wandering earth herself may beOnly a sudden flaming word,In clanging space a moment heard,Troubling the endless reverie.Then nowise worship dusty deeds,Nor s...
William Butler Yeats
A Secret
A little baby went to sleep One night in his white bed, And the moon came by to take a peep At the little baby head. A wind, as wandering winds will do, Brought to the baby there Sweet smells from some quaint flower that grew Out on some hill somewhere. And wind and flower and pale moonbeam About the baby's bed Stirred and woke the funniest dream In the little sleepy head. He thought he was all sorts of things From a lion to a cat; Sometimes he thought he flew on wings, Or fell and fell, so that When morning broke he was right glad But much surprised to s...
John Charles McNeill
Five Criticisms - IV.
(On Certain Realists.)You with the quick sardonic eyeFor all the mockeries of life,Beware, in this dark masque of things that seem,Lest even that tragic irony,Which you discern in this our mortal strife,Trick you and trap you, also, with a dream.Last night I saw a dead man borne alongThe city streets, passing a boisterous throngThat never ceased to laugh and shout and dance:And yet, and yet,For all the poison bitter minds might brewFrom themes like this, I knewThat the stern Truth would not permit her glanceThus to be foiled by flying straws of chance,For her keen eyes on deeper skies are set,And laws that tragic ironists forget.She saw the dead man's life, from birth to death,--All that he knew of love and ...
Victor Rafolski On Art
You dull Goliaths clothed in coats of blue,Strained and half bursted by the swell of flesh,Topped by Gorilla heads. You Marmoset,Trained scoundrel, taught to question and ensnare,I hate you, hate your laws and hate your courts.Hands off, give me a chair, now let me be.I'll tell you more than you can think to ask me.I love this woman, but what is love to you?What is it to your laws or courts? I love her.She loves me, if you'd know. I entered her room -She stood before me naked, shrank a little,Cried out a little, calmed her sudden cryWhen she saw amiable passion in my eyes -She loves me, if you'd know. I saw in her eyesMore in those moments than whole hours of talkFrom witness stands exculpate could make clearMy innocence. But...
Edgar Lee Masters
Hesper
Not till the sun, that brings to birthThe myriad marvels of the earthAnd bids us look with wandering eyesOn all that here about us lies,Has gone behind the hill,Do you, O peaceful evening star,Gaze on the dusk in which we areAnd draw the heart of hope and loveTo infinite deep on deep aboveAnd bid our care be still.All glorious pleasures of the day,When every sense may have its wayAnd thought may touch the tiniest factAnd gauge the motive and the actAnd measure our delight,Depart, and leave us to the questOf quiet solitude and restAnd knowledge that the plotting brainWith all its science cannot gainBut from the soul of Night.
John Le Gay Brereton
The Years.
"Time in advance behind him hides his wings." - YOUNG. As comes amain the glossy flying raven, That with unwavering wing, breast on the view, Cleaves slow the lucid air beneath the blue, And seems scarce other than a figure graven - Ha! now the sweeping pinions flash as levin, And all their silken cordage whistles loud! - Lo, the departing flight, like fleck of cloud, Is swallowed quick by the awaiting heaven! So lag and tarry, to the youth, the years In their oncoming from the brooding sky, Till bursts at middle life their rushing speed All breathless with the world of hopes and fears; And, lo, departing, the Eternal Eye Winks them to moments in His e...
Theodore Harding Rand
The Forest Reverie
Tis said that whenThe hands of menTamed this primeval wood,And hoary trees with groans of woe,Like warriors by an unknown foe,Were in their strength subdued,The virgin EarthGave instant birthTo springs that neer did flowThat in the sunDid rivulets run,And all around rare flowers did blowThe wild rose palePerfumed the galeAnd the queenly lily adown the dale(Whom the sun and the dewAnd the winds did woo),With the gourd and the grape luxuriant grew.So when in tearsThe love of yearsIs wasted like the snow,And the fine fibrils of its lifeBy the rude wrong of instant strifeAre broken at a blowWithin the heartDo springs upstartOf which it doth now know,And strange, sweet dreams,...
Abijah Ide