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The Shade
Darker than night; and oh, much darker, she,Whose eyes in deep night darkness gaze on me.No stars surround her; yet the moon seems hidAfar somewhere, beneath that narrow lid.She darkens against the darkness; and her faceOnly by adding thought to thought I trace,Limned shadowily: O dream, return once moreTo gloomy Hades and the whispering shore!
Walter De La Mare
Launa Dee.
Weary, oh, so wearyWith it all!Sunny days or dreary--How they pall!Why should we be heroes,Launa Dee,Striving to no winning?Let the world be Zero's!As in the beginningLet it be!What good comes of toiling,When all's done?Frail green sprays for spoilingOf the sun;Laurel leaf or myrtle,Love or fame--Ah, what odds what spray, sweet?Time, that makes life fertile,Makes its blooms decay, sweet,As they came.Lie here with me dreaming,Cheek to cheek,Lithe limbs twined and gleaming,Brown and sleek;Like two serpents coilingIn their lair.Where's the good of wreathingSprays for Time's despoiling?Let me feel your breathingIn my hair.You and I together--...
Bliss Carman
Perversities II
Yet when I am alone my eyes say, Come.My hands cannot be still.In that first moment all my senses ache,Cells, that were empty fill,The clay walls shake,And unimprisoned thought runs where it will.Runs and is glad and listens and doubts, and gloomsBecause you are not here.Then once more rises and is clear againAs sense is never clear,And happy, though in vainThese eyes wait and these arms to bring you near.Yet spite of thought my arms and eyes say, Come,Pained with such discontent.For though thought have you all my senses ache--O, it was not meantMy body should never wakeBut on thought's tranquil bosom rest content.
John Frederick Freeman
Psyche, Before The Tribunal Of Venus.
Lift up thine eyes, sweet Psyche! What is sheThat those soft fringes timidly should fallBefore her, and thy spiritual browBe shadowed as her presence were a cloud?A loftier gift is thine than she can give -That queen of beauty. She may mould the browTo perfectness, and give unto the formA beautiful proportion; she may stainThe eye with a celestial blue - the cheekWith carmine of the sunset; she may breatheGrace into every motion, like the playOf the least visible tissue of a cloud;She may give all that is within her ownBright cestus - and one silent look of thine,Like stronger magic, will outcharm it all.Ay, for the soul is better than its frame,The spirit than its temple. What's the brow,Or the eye's lustre, or the step of air,
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Spirit Love.
How great my joy! How grand my recompense! I bow to thee; I keep thee in my sight. I call thee mine, in love though not in sense I share with thee the hermitage immense Of holy dreams which come to us at night, When, through the medium of the spirit-lens We see the soul, in its primeval light, And Reason spares the hopes it cannot blight. It is the soul of thee, and not the form, And not the face, I yearn-to in my sleep. It is thyself. The body is the storm, The soul the star beyond it in the deep Of Nature's calm. And yonder on the steep The Sun of Faith, quiescent, round, and warm!
Eric Mackay
Pain And Time Strive Not.
What part of the dread eternityAre those strange minutes that I gain,Mazed with the doubt of love and pain,When I thy delicate face may see,A little while before farewell?What share of the world's yearning-tideThat flash, when new day bare and whiteBlots out my half-dream's faint delight,And there is nothing by my side,And well remembered is farewell?What drop in the grey flood of tearsThat time, when the long day toiled through,Worn out, shows nought for me to do,And nothing worth my labour bearsThe longing of that last farewell?What pity from the heavens above,What heed from out eternity,What word from the swift world for me?Speak, heed, and pity, O tender love,Who knew'st the days before farewell!
William Morris
The Moonmen.
I stood in the forest on HURON HILLWhen the night was old and the world was still.The Wind was a wizard who muttering strodeIn a raven cloak on a haunted road.The Sound of Water, a witch who croonedHer spells to the rocks the rain had runed.And the Gleam of the Dew on the fern's green tipWas a sylvan passing with robe a-drip.The Light of the Stars was a glimmering maidWho stole, an elfin, from glade to glade.The Scent of the Woods in the delicate air,A wildflower shape with chilly hair.And Silence, a spirit who sat aloneWith a lifted finger and eyes of stone.And it seemed to me these six were metTo greet a greater who came not yet.And the speech they spoke, that I listened to,Was the archety...
Madison Julius Cawein
Lines Written In The Bay Of Lerici.
She left me at the silent timeWhen the moon had ceased to climbThe azure path of Heaven's steep,And like an albatross asleep,Balanced on her wings of light,Hovered in the purple night,Ere she sought her ocean nestIn the chambers of the West.She left me, and I stayed aloneThinking over every toneWhich, though silent to the ear,The enchanted heart could hear,Like notes which die when born, but stillHaunt the echoes of the hill;And feeling ever - oh, too much! -The soft vibration of her touch,As if her gentle hand, even now,Lightly trembled on my brow;And thus, although she absent were,Memory gave me all of herThat even Fancy dares to claim: -Her presence had made weak and tameAll passions, and I lived alone
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Surprise.
When the stunned soul can first lift tired eyes On her changed world of ruin, waste and wrack,Ah, what a pang of aching sharp surprise Brings all sweet memories of the lost past back,With wild self-pitying grief of one betrayed,Duped in a land of dreams where Truth is dead!Are these the heavens that she deemed were kind? Is this the world that yesterday was fair?What painted images of folk half-blind Be these who pass her by, as vague as air?What go they seeking? there is naught to find.Let them come nigh and hearken her despair.A mocking lie is all she once believed, And where her heart throbbed, is a cold dead stone.This is a doom we never preconceived, Yet now she cannot fancy it undone.Part of herse...
Emma Lazarus
In The Vales.
When from these vales I go, That slumber on in dreams, O, will the summer winds dance to and fro, And kiss the streams That play where roses scatter fond perfume And lilies burst with bloom? Glad children of the spring, They moan their music sweet Where tangled grasses wave, and softly sing Where meadows meet, And wildwood shadows drooping bless The groves with happiness. Their soothing songs I hear Among the granite hills, Above the elfin warbles rich and clear From rippling rills, As if they called my soul in future days To wander all their ways. Ah, moaning winds, you seem To fill my musing breast With lullabi...
Freeman Edwin Miller
Gypsy Songs
IThe faery beam upon you,The stars to glister on you;A moon of lightIn the noon of night,Till the fire-drake hath oergone you!The wheel of fortune guide you,The boy with the bow beside you;Run ay in the wayTill the bird of day,And the luckier lot betide you!IITo the old, long life and treasure!To the young all health and pleasure!To the fair, their faceWith eternal graceAnd the soul to be loved at leisure!To the witty, all clear mirrors;To the foolish, their dark errors;To the loving sprite,A secure delight;To the jealous, his own false terrors!
Ben Jonson
Memory
A treasured link of shining pearls, A by-gone melody,A shower of tears with smiles between-- And this is memory.A thing so light a breath of air May waft its life away;A thing so dark that moments of pain Seem like some endless day.A careless word may wound the heart, And quickly it may die;Yet in the seas of memory Forever it will lie.And sometimes when the tide rolls back Its waves of joy and pain,That careless word, though long forgot, Will wound the heart again.The restless seas of memory Are vast and deep and wide;And every deed that we can know Sleeps in that tireless tide.Upon the thoughtless lives of men Its waves in mockery roll;And sweep a might of bitter...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
L'envoi
God willed, who never needed speech, "Let all things be:" And, lo, the starry firmament And land and sea And his first thought of life that lives In you and me. His circle of eternity We see in part; Our spirits are his breath, our hearts Beat from his heart; Hence we have played as little gods And called it art. Lacking his power, we shared his dream Of perfect things; Between the tents of hope and sweet Rememberings Have sat in ashes, but our souls Went forth on wings. Where life fell short of some desire...
John Charles McNeill
Fighting
Here is a temple strangely wrought: Within it I can seeTwo spirits of a diverse thought Contend for mastery.One is an angel fair and bright, Adown the aisle comes he,Adown the aisle in raiment white, A creature fair to see.The other wears an evil mien, And he hath doubtless slipt,A fearful being dark and lean, Up from the mouldy crypt.Is that the roof that grows so black? Did some one call my name?Was it the bursting thunder crack That filled this place with flame?I move--I wake from out my sleep: Some one hath victor been!I see two radiant pinions sweep, And I am borne between.Beneath the clouds that under roll An upturned face I see--
George MacDonald
An Old Man To His Sleeping Young Bride
As when the old moon lighted by the tender And radiant crescent of the new is seen,And for a moment's space suggests the splendor Of what in its full prime it once has been,So on my waning years you cast the glory Of youth and pleasure, for a little hour;And life again seems like an unread story, And joy and hope both stir me with their power.Can blooming June be fond of bleak December? I dare not wait to hear my heart reply.I will forget the question -and remember Alone the priceless feast spread for mine eye,That radiant hair that flows across the pillows, Like shimmering sunbeams over drifts of snow;Those heaving breasts, like undulating billows, Whose dangers or delights but Love can know.That crimson mou...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Clouds
Down the blue night the unending columns pressIn noiseless tumult, break and wave and flow,Now tread the far South, or lift rounds of snowUp to the white moon's hidden loveliness.Some pause in their grave wandering comradeless,And turn with profound gesture vague and slow,As who would pray good for the world, but knowTheir benediction empty as they bless.They say that the Dead die not, but remainNear to the rich heirs of their grief and mirth.I think they ride the calm mid-heaven, as these,In wise majestic melancholy train,And watch the moon, and the still-raging seas,And men, coming and going on the earth.
Rupert Brooke
Alarm Clocks
When Dawn strides out to wake a dewy farm Across green fields and yellow hills of hay The little twittering birds laugh in his wayAnd poise triumphant on his shining arm.He bears a sword of flame but not to harm The wakened life that feels his quickening sway And barnyard voices shrilling "It is day!"Take by his grace a new and alien charm.But in the city, like a wounded thing That limps to cover from the angry chase,He steals down streets where sickly arc-lights sing, And wanly mock his young and shameful face;And tiny gongs with cruel fervor ring In many a high and dreary sleeping place.
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
The Answer
I made my bed beneath the pines Where the sea washed the sandy bars; I heard the music of the winds, And blest the aureate face of Mars. All night a lilac splendor throve Above the heaven's shadowy verge; And in my heart the voice of love Kept music with the dreaming surge. A little maid was at my side, She slept, I scarcely slept at all; Until toward the morning-tide A dream possessed me with its thrall. She sweetly breathed; around my breast I felt her warmth like drowsy bliss, Then came the vision of unrest, I saw your face and felt your kiss. I woke and knew with what dismay She read my secret and surprise; She only said, "Again 'tis day! How red your...
Edgar Lee Masters