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A Dawn Song
While the earth is dark and grey How I laugh within: I knowIn my breast what ardours gay From the morning overflow.Though the cheek be white and wet In my heart no fear may fall:There my chieftain leads, and yet Ancient battle-trumpets call.Bend on me no hasty frown If my spirit slight your cares:Sunlike still my joy looks down Changing tears to beamy airs.Think me not of fickle heart If with joy my bosom swellsThough your ways from mine depart: In the true are no farewells.What I love in you I find Everywhere. A friend I greetIn each flower and tree and wind-- Oh, but life is sweet, is sweet.What to you are bolts and bars Are to me the hands that...
George William Russell
Tri-colour
POPPIES, you try to tell me, glowing there in the wheat;Poppies! Ah no! You mock me: It's blood, I tell you, it's blood.It's gleaming wet in the grasses; it's glist'ning warm in the wheat;It dabbles the ferns and the clover; it brims in an angry flood;It leaps to the startled heavens; it smothers the sun; it criesWith scarlet voices of triumph from blossom and bough and blade.See the bright horror of it! It's roaring out of the skies,And the whole red world is a-welter. . . . Oh God! I'm afraid! I'm afraid!CORNFLOWERS, you say, just cornflowers, gemming the golden grain;Ah no! You can't deceive me. Can't I believe my eyes?Look! It's the dead, my comrades, stark on the dreadful plain,All in their dark-blue blouses, staring up at the skies.Comrades o...
Robert William Service
The Invitation: To Tom Hughes
Come away with me, Tom,Term and talk are done;My poor lads are reaping,Busy every one.Curates mind the parish,Sweepers mind the court;We'll away to SnowdonFor our ten days' sport;Fish the August eveningTill the eve is past,Whoop like boys, at poundersFairly played and grassed.When they cease to dimple,Lunge, and swerve, and leap,Then up over Siabod,Choose our nest, and sleep.Up a thousand feet, Tom,Round the lion's head,Find soft stones to leewardAnd make up our bed.Eat our bread and bacon,Smoke the pipe of peace,And, ere we be drowsy,Give our boots a grease.Homer's heroes did so,Why not such as we?What are sheets and servants?Superfluity!Pray for wives and childrenSa...
Charles Kingsley
Lines On Violets.
Once, while digging 'neath the snow, 'Mid Canadian winter, lo! To our joy and surprise We saw some violets in full bloom, Gazing at us with loving eyes, Thanking us for opening their tomb, Yet still they seemed so cozy and nice Enshrined in the crystal ice, While all else were drooping dead Gaily they held up their head.
James McIntyre
With The Seasons.
IYou will not love me, sweet.When this fair year is past;Or love now at my feetAt others' feet be cast.You will not love me, sweet,When this fair year is past.IINow 'tis the Springtide, dear,The crocus cups hold flameBrimmed to the pregnant year.Who crimsons as with shame.Now 'tis the Springtide, dear,The crocus cups hold flame.IIIAh, heart, the Summer's queen,At her brown throat one rose;The poppies now are seenWith seed-pods thrust in rows.Dear heart, the Summer's queen,At her brown throat one rose.IVNow Autumn reigns, a princeFierce, gipsy-dark; live goldWeighs down the fruited quince,The last chilled violet's told.The Autu...
Madison Julius Cawein
Upon Trencherman.
Tom shifts the trenchers; yet he never canEndure that lukewarm name of serving-man:Serve or not serve, let Tom do what he can,He is a serving, who's a trencher-man.
Robert Herrick
Love Of The Country.
Written At Clare-Hall, Herts. June 1804.Welcome silence! welcome peace!O most welcome, holy shade!Thus I prove as years increase,My heart and soul for quiet made.Thus I fix my firm beliefWhile rapture's gushing tears descend;That every flower and every leafIs moral Truth's unerring friend.I would not for a world of goldThat Nature's lovely face should tire;Fountain of blessings yet untold;Pure source of intellectual fire!Fancy's fair buds, the germs of song,Unquicken'd midst the world's rude strife,Shall sweet retirement render strong,And morning silence bring to life.Then tell me not that I shall growForlorn, that fields and woods will cloy;From Nature and her changes flowAn everlasting tide of joy...
Robert Bloomfield
A Sower
With sanguine looks And rolling walkAmong the rooks He loved to stalk,While on the land With gusty laughFrom a full hand He scattered chaff.Now that within His spirit sleepsA harvest thin The sickle reaps;But the dumb fields Desire his tread,And no earth yields A wheat more red.
Henry John Newbolt
Sestina III.
L' aere gravato, e l' importuna nebbia.HE COMPARES LAURA TO WINTER, AND FORESEES THAT SHE WILL ALWAYS BE THE SAME. The overcharged air, the impending cloud,Compress'd together by impetuous winds,Must presently discharge themselves in rain;Already as of crystal are the streams,And, for the fine grass late that clothed the vales,Is nothing now but the hoar frost and ice.And I, within my heart, more cold than ice,Of heavy thoughts have such a hovering cloud,As sometimes rears itself in these our vales,Lowly, and landlock'd against amorous winds,Environ'd everywhere with stagnant streams,When falls from soft'ning heaven the smaller rain.Lasts but a brief while every heavy rain;And summer melts away the snows and ic...
Francesco Petrarca
The Stirrup-Cup.
My short and happy day is done,The long and dreary night comes on;And at my door the Pale Horse stands,To carry me to unknown lands.His whinny shrill, his pawing hoof,Sound dreadful as a gathering storm;And I must leave this sheltering roof,And joys of life so soft and warm.Tender and warm the joys of life, -Good friends, the faithful and the true;My rosy children and my wife,So sweet to kiss, so fair to view.So sweet to kiss, so fair to view, -The night comes down, the lights burn blue;And at my door the Pale Horse stands,To bear me forth to unknown lands.
John Hay
The Shepherd's Dream: Or, Fairies' Masquerade.
I had folded my flock, and my heart was o'erflowing,I loiter'd beside the small lake on the heath;The red sun, though down, left his drapery glowing,And no sound was stirring, I heard not a breath:I sat on the turf, but I meant not to sleep,And gazed o'er that lake which for ever is new,Where clouds over clouds appear'd anxious to peepFrom this bright double sky with its pearl and its blue.Forgetfulness, rather than slumber, it seem'd,When in infinite thousands the fairies aroseAll over the heath, and their tiny crests gleam'dIn mock'ry of soldiers, our friends and our foes.There a stripling went forth, half a finger's length high,And led a huge host to the north with a dash;Silver birds upon poles went before their wild cry,While the monarch l...
Thalia
A Middle-Aged Lyrical Poet Is Supposed To Be Taking Final Leave Of The Muse Of Comedy. She Has Brought Him His Hat And Gloves, And Is Abstractedly Picking A Thread Of Gold Hair From His Coat Sleeve As He Begins To Speak:I say it under the rose--oh, thanks!--yes, under the laurel,We part lovers, not foes;we are not going to quarrel.We have too long been friendson foot and in gilded coaches,Now that the whole thing ends,to spoil our kiss with reproaches.I leave you; my soul is wrung;I pause, look back from the portal--Ah, I no more am young,and you, child, you are immortal!Mine is the glacier's way,yours is the blossom's weather--When were December and Mayknown to be happy together?Before my kisses grow tame,
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
Shelley's Skylark
(The neighbourhood of Leghorn: March, 1887)Somewhere afield here something liesIn Earth's oblivious eyeless trustThat moved a poet to prophecies -A pinch of unseen, unguarded dustThe dust of the lark that Shelley heard,And made immortal through times to be; -Though it only lived like another bird,And knew not its immortality.Lived its meek life; then, one day, fell -A little ball of feather and bone;And how it perished, when piped farewell,And where it wastes, are alike unknown.Maybe it rests in the loam I view,Maybe it throbs in a myrtle's green,Maybe it sleeps in the coming hueOf a grape on the slopes of yon inland scene.Go find it, faeries, go and findThat tiny pinch of priceless dust,
Thomas Hardy
Humility
What girl but, having gathered flowers,Stript the beds and spoilt the bowers,From the lapful light she carriesDrops a careless bud? nor tarriesTo regain the waif and stray:Store enough for home shell say.So say I too: give your loverHeaps of loving, under, over,Whelm him, make the one the wealthy!Am I all so poor who, stealthyWork it was! picked up what fell:Not the worst bud, who can tell?
Robert Browning
The Unfinished Dream
Rare-sweet the air in that unimagined country - My spirit had wandered farFrom its weary body close-enwrapt in slumber Where its home and earth-friends are;A milk-like air - and of light all abundance; And there a river clearPainting the scene like a picture on its bosom, Green foliage drifting near.No sign of life I saw, as I pressed onward, Fish, nor beast, nor bird,Till I came to a hill clothed in flowers to its summit, Then shrill small voices I heard.And I saw from concealment a company of elf-folk With faces strangely fair,Talking their unearthly scattered talk together, A bind of green-grasses in their hair,Marvellously gentle, feater far than children, In gesture, mien and speech,...
Walter De La Mare
Slain
You who are still and whiteAnd cold like stone;For whom the unfailing lightIs spent and done;For whom no more the breathOf dawn, nor evenfallNor Spring, nor love, nor deathMatter at all;Who were so strong and youngAnd brave and wise,And on the dark are flungWith darkened eyes;
Thomas William Hodgson Crosland
Sonnet CCV.
Fresco ambroso fiorito e verde colle.HE CONGRATULATES HIS HEART ON ITS REMAINING WITH HER. O hill with green o'erspread, with groves o'erhung!Where musing now, now trilling her sweet lay,Most like what bards of heavenly spirits say,Sits she by fame through every region sung:My heart, which wisely unto her has clung--More wise, if there, in absence blest, it stay!Notes now the turf o'er which her soft steps stray,Now where her angel-eyes' mild beam is flung;Then throbs and murmurs, as they onward rove,"Ah! were he here, that man of wretched lot,Doom'd but to taste the bitterness of love!"She, conscious, smiles: our feelings tally not:Heartless am I, mere stone; heaven is thy grove--O dear delightful shade, O consecrated spo...
Twilight.
Twilight no other thing is, poets say,Than the last part of night and first of day.