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Stanzas For Music
I loved a little maiden In the golden years gone by;She lived in a mill, as they all do (There is doubtless a reason why).But she faded in the autumn When the leaves began to fade,And the night before she faded, These words to me she said:'Do not forget me, Henry, Be noble and brave and true;But I must not bide, for the world is wide, And the sky above is blue.'So I said farewell to my darling, And sailed away and came back;And the good ship Jane was in port again, And I found that they all loved Jack.But Polly and I were sweethearts, As all the neighbours know,Before I met with the mill-girl Twenty years ago.So I thought I would go and see her, But alas, she had faded ...
Robert Fuller Murray
Rain In The Mountains
The Valley's full of misty cloud,Its tinted beauty drowning,The Eucalypti roar aloud,The mountain fronts are frowning.The mist is hanging like a pallFrom many granite ledges,And many a little waterfallStarts oer the valleys edges.The sky is of a leaden grey,Save where the north is surly,The driven daylight speeds away,And night comes oer us early.But, love, the rain will pass full soon,Far sooner than my sorrow,And in a golden afternoonThe sun may set to-morrow.
Henry Lawson
Pigeon Toes
A dusty clearing in the scrubsOf barren, western lands,Where, out of sight, or sign of hopeThe wretched school-house stands;A roof that glares at glaring days,A bare, unshaded wall,A fence that guards no blade of green,A dust-storm over all.The books and slates are packed away,The maps are rolled and tied,And for an hour I breathe, and layMy ghastly mask aside;I linger here to save my headFrom voices shrill and thin,That rasp for ever in the shed,The home Im boarding in.The heat and dirt and wretchednessWith which their lives began,Bush mother nagging day and night,And sullen, brooding man;The minds that harp on single strings,And never bright by chance,The rasping voice of paltry things,The ho...
Dirge
Gone is he now.One flower the lessIs left to makeFor thee less loneEarth's wilderness,Where thouMust still live on.What hath been, ne'erMay be again.Yet oft of old,To cheat despair,Tales false and fairIn vainOf death were told.O vain belief!O'erweening dreams!Trust not fond hope,Nor think that blissWhich neither seems,Nor is,Aught else than grief.
Robert Calverley Trevelyan
Prologue To Dipsychus
I hope it is in good plain verse, said my uncle, none of your hurry-scurry anapæsts, as you call them, in lines which sober people read for plain heroics. Nothing is more disagreeable than to say a line over two, or, it may be, three or four times, and at last not be sure that there are not three or four ways of reading, each as good and as much intended as another. Simplex duntaxat et unum. But you young people think Horace and your uncles old fools.Certainly, my dear sir, said I; that is, I mean, Horace and my uncle are perfectly right. Still, there is an instructed ear and an uninstructed. A rude taste for identical recurrences would exact sing-song from Paradise Lost, and grumble because Il Penseroso doesnt run like a nursery rhyme. Well, well, said my uncle, sunt certi denique fines, no doubt. So commence,...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Love And The Seasons
SPRINGA sudden softness in the wind; A glint of song, a-wing;A fragrant sound that trails behind, And joy in everything.A sudden flush upon the cheek, The teardrop quick to start;A hope too delicate to speak, And heaven within the heart.SUMMERA riotous dawn and the sea's great wonder; The red, red heart of a rose uncurled;And beauty tearing her veil asunder, In sight of a swooning world.A call of the soul, and the senses blended; The Springtime lost in the glow of the sun,And two lives rushing, as God intended, To meet and mingle as one.AUTUMNThe world is out in gala dress; And yet it is not gay.Its splendour hides a loneliness For someth...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
March.
Over the dripping roofs and sunk snow-barrowsThe bells are ringing loud and strangely near,The shout of children dins upon mine earShrilly, and like a flight of silvery arrowsShowers the sweet gossip of the British sparrows,Gathered in noisy knots of one or two,To joke and chatter just as mortals doOver the days long tale of joys and sorrows;Talk before bed-time of bold deeds togetherOf thefts and fights, of hard-times and the weather,Till sleep disarm them, to each little brainBringing tucked wings and many a blissful dream,Visions of wind and sun, of field and stream,And busy barn-yards with their scattered grain.
Archibald Lampman
To One Who Ran Down The English
You make our faults too gross, and thence maintainOur darker future. May your fears be vain!At times the small black fly upon the paneMay seem the black ox of the distant plain.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Drouth
The road is drowned in dust; the winds vibrateWith heat and noise of insect wings that stingThe stridulous noon with sound; no waters sing;Weeds crowd the path and barricade the gate.Within the garden Summer seems to wait:Among her flowers, dead or withering;About her skirts the teasel's bristles cling,And to her hair the hot burr holds like hate.The day burns downward, and with fiery crestFlames like a furnace; then the fierce night fallsDewless and dead, crowned with its thirsty stars:A dry breeze sweeps the firmament and westThe lightning leaps at flickering intervals,Like some caged beast that thunders at its bars.
Madison Julius Cawein
Birth-Day Ode, 1793.
Small is the new-born plant scarce seen Amid the soft encircling green, Where yonder budding acorn rears, Just o'er the waving grass, its tender head: Slow pass along the train of years, And on the growing plant, their dews and showers they shed. Anon it rears aloft its giant form, And spreads its broad-brown arms to meet the storm. Beneath its boughs far shadowing o'er the plain,From summer suns, repair the grateful village train. Nor BEDFORD will my friend survey The book of Nature with unheeding eye; For never beams the rising orb of day, For never dimly dies the refluent ray, But as the moralizer marks the sky,He broods with strange delight upon futurity. ...
Robert Southey
Summer Morning
The cocks have now the morn foretold,The sun again begins to peep,The shepherd, whistling to his fold,Unpens and frees the captive sheep.Oer pathless plains at early hoursThe sleepy rustic sloomy goes;The dews, brushed off from grass and flowers,Bemoistening sop his hardened shoesWhile every leaf that forms a shade,And every flowerets silken top,And every shivering bent and blade,Stoops, bowing with a diamond drop.But soon shall fly those diamond drops,The red round sun advances higher,And, stretching oer the mountain tops,Is gilding sweet the village-spire.Tis sweet to meet the morning breeze,Or list the gurgling of the brook;Or, stretched beneath the shade of trees,Peruse and pause on Natures book,When...
John Clare
During Wind And Rain
They sing their dearest songs -He, she, all of them - yea,Treble and tenor and bass,And one to play;With the candles mooning each face . . .Ah, no; the years O!How the sick leaves reel down in throngs!They clear the creeping moss -Elders and juniors - aye,Making the pathways neatAnd the garden gay;And they build a shady seat . . .Ah, no; the years, the years;See, the white storm-birds wing across!They are blithely breakfasting all -Men and maidens - yea,Under the summer tree,With a glimpse of the bay,While pet fowl come to the knee . . .Ah, no; the years O!And the rotten rose is ript from the wall.They change to a high new house,He, she, all of them - aye,Clocks and carpets and chairs<...
Thomas Hardy
Apology For The Foregoing Poems - From Yarrow Revisited, And Other Poems
No more: the end is sudden and abrupt,Abrupt, as without preconceived designWas the beginning; yet the several LaysHave moved in order, to each other boundBy a continuous and acknowledged tieThough unapparent, like those Shapes distinctThat yet survive ensculptured on the wallsOf palaces, or temples, 'mid the wreckOf famed Persepolis; each following each,As might beseem a stately embassy,In set array; these bearing in their handsEnsign of civil power, weapon of war,Or gift to be presented at the throneOf the Great King; and others, as they goIn priestly vest, with holy offerings charged,Or leading victims drest for sacrifice.Nor will the Power we serve, that sacred Power,The Spirit of humanity, disdainA ministration humble but since...
William Wordsworth
Autumn
The sad nights are here and the sad mornings,The air is filled with portents and with warnings,Clouds that vastly loom and winds that cry,A mournful prescienceOf bright things going hence;Red leaves are blown about the widowed sky,And late disconsolate bloomsDankly bestrewThe garden walks, as in deserted roomsThe parted guest, in haste to bid adieu,Trinklets and shreds forgotten left behind,Torn letters and a ribbon once so brave -Wreckage none cares to save,And hearts grow sad to find;And phantom echoes, as of old foot-falls,Wander and weary out in the thin air,And the last cricket calls -A tiny sorrow, shrilling "Where? ah! where?"
Richard Le Gallienne
The Green Mountain Boys.
I.Here we halt our march, and pitch our tentOn the rugged forest ground,And light our fire with the branches rentBy winds from the beeches round.Wild storms have torn this ancient wood,But a wilder is at hand,With hail of iron and rain of blood,To sweep and waste the land.II.How the dark wood rings with voices shrill,That startle the sleeping bird;To-morrow eve must the voice be still,And the step must fall unheard.The Briton lies by the blue Champlain,In Ticonderoga's towers,And ere the sun rise twice again,The towers and the lake are ours.III.Fill up the bowl from the brook that glidesWhere the fireflies light the brake;A ruddier juice the Briton hidesIn his fortress by the lak...
William Cullen Bryant
The Fens
Wandering by the river's edge,I love to rustle through the sedgeAnd through the woods of reed to tearAlmost as high as bushes are.Yet, turning quick with shudder chill,As danger ever does from ill,Fear's moment ague quakes the blood,While plop the snake coils in the floodAnd, hissing with a forked tongue,Across the river winds along.In coat of orange, green, and blueNow on a willow branch I view,Grey waving to the sunny gleam,Kingfishers watch the ripple streamFor little fish that nimble byeAnd in the gravel shallows lie.Eddies run before the boats,Gurgling where the fisher floats,Who takes advantage of the galeAnd hoists his handkerchief for sailOn osier twigs that form a mast--While idly lies, nor wanted mo...
To J. R.
Last Sunday night I read the saddening story Of the unanswered love of fair Elaine,The 'faith unfaithful' and the joyless glory Of Lancelot, 'groaning in remorseful pain.'I thought of all those nights in wintry weather, Those Sunday nights that seem not long ago,When we two read our Poet's words together, Till summer warmth within our hearts did glow.Ah, when shall we renew that bygone pleasure, Sit down together at our Merlin's feet,Drink from one cup the overflowing measure, And find, in sharing it, the draught more sweet?That time perchance is far, beyond divining. Till then we drain the 'magic cup' apart;Yet not apart, for hope and memory twining Smile upon each, uniting heart to heart.