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On A Musical Box.
Poor little sprite! in that dark, narrow cell Caged by the law of man's resistless might!With thy sweet liquid notes, by some strong spell, Compelled to minister to his delight!Whence, what art thou? art thou a fairy wight Caught sleeping in some lily's snowy bell,Where thou hadst crept, to rock in the moonlight, And drink the starry dew-drops, as they fell?Say, dost thou think, sometimes when thou art singing, Of thy wild haunt upon the mountain's brow,Where thou wert wont to list the heath-bells ringing, And sail upon the sunset's amber glow?When thou art weary of thy oft-told theme, Say, dost thou think of the clear pebbly stream,Upon whose mossy brink thy fellows play,Dancing in circles by the moon's soft beam,Hiding in...
Frances Anne Kemble
An Old-Time Lay.
("Jamais elle ne raille.")[Bk. III. xiii.]Where your brood seven lie,Float in calm heavenly,Life passing evenly,Waterfowl, waterfowl! often I dream For a rest Like your nest, Skirting the stream.Shine the sun tearfullyEre the clouds clear fully,Still you skim cheerfully,Swallow, oh! swallow swift! often I sigh For a home Where you roam Nearing the sky!Guileless of pondering;Swallow-eyes wandering;Seeking no fonder ringThan the rose-garland Love gives thee apart! Grant me soon - Blessed boon! Home in thy heart!
Victor-Marie Hugo
Jewels
If I should see your eyes again,I know how far their look would goBack to a morning in the parkWith sapphire shadows on the snow.Or back to oak trees in the springWhen you unloosed my hair and kissedThe head that lay against your kneesIn the leaf shadows amethyst.And still another shining placeWe would rememberhow the dunWild mountain held us on its crestOne diamond morning white with sun.But I will turn my eyes from youAs women turn to put awayThe jewels they have worn at nightAnd cannot wear in sober day.
Sara Teasdale
Old Ghosts
Clove-spicy pinks and phlox that fill the senseWith drowsy indolence;And in the evening skiesInterior splendor, pregnant with surprise,As if in some new wiseThe full moon soon would rise.Hung with the crimson aigrets of its seedsThe purple monkshood bleeds;The dewy crickets chirr,And everywhere are lights of lavender;And scents of musk and myrrhTo guide the foot of her.She passes like a misty glimmer onTo where the rose blooms wan,A twilight moth in flight,As in the west its streak of chrysoliteThe dusk erases quite,And ushers in the night.And now another shadow passes slow,With firefly light a-glow:The scent of a cigar,And two who kiss beneath the evening-star,Where, in a moonbeam bar,
Madison Julius Cawein
Rose And Redbird - A Faerytale.
I had the strangest dream last night:I dreamed the poppies, red and white,That over-run the flower-bed,Changed to wee women, white and red,Who, jeweled with the twinkling wet,Joined hands and danced a minuet.And there, beside the garden walk,I thought a red-rose stood at talkWith a black cricket; and I heardThe cricket say, "You are the bird,Red-crested, who comes every dayTo sing his lyric roundelay."The rose replied, "Nay! you must knowThat bird and I loved long-ago:I am a princess, he a prince:And we were parted ever sinceThe world of science made us donThe new disguises we have on."And then the rose put off disguiseAnd stood revealed before my eyes,A faery princess; and, in black,His tiny fidd...
Return To Nature
My song is of that city whichHas men too poor and men too rich;Where some are sick, too richly fed,While others take the sparrows' bread:Where some have beds to warm their bones,While others sleep on hard, cold stonesThat suck away their bodies' heat.Where men are drunk in every street;Men full of poison, like those fliesThat still attack the horses' eyes.Where some men freeze for want of cloth,While others show their jewels' worthAnd dress in satin, fur or silk;Where fine rich ladies wash in milk,While starving mothers have no foodTo make them fit in flesh and blood;So that their watery breasts can giveTheir babies milk and make them live.Where one man does the work of four,And dies worn out before his hour;While some s...
William Henry Davies
Ernest Hyde
My mind was a mirror: It saw what it saw, it knew what it knew. In youth my mind was just a mirror In a rapidly flying car, Which catches and loses bits of the landscape. Then in time Great scratches were made on the mirror, Letting the outside world come in, And letting my inner self look out. For this is the birth of the soul in sorrow, A birth with gains and losses. The mind sees the world as a thing apart, And the soul makes the world at one with itself. A mirror scratched reflects no image - And this is the silence of wisdom.
Edgar Lee Masters
Nocturne: In Provence.
The blue night, like an angel, came into the room,--Came through the open window from the silent skyDown trellised stairs of moonlight into the dear roomAs if a whisper breathed of some divine one nigh.The nightingales, like brooks of song in Paradise,Gurgled their serene rapture to the silent sky--Like springs of laughter bubbling up in Paradise,The serene nightingales along the riversidePurled low in every tree their star-cool melodiesOf joy--in every tree along the riverside.Did the vain garments melt in music from your side?Did you rise from them as a lily flowers i' the air?--But you were there before me like the Night's own bride--I dared not call you mine. So still and tall you were,I never dreamed that you were mine--I never dreamedI lo...
Bliss Carman
An Old Story
In the ancient house of ages, See, they cannot rest! With a hope, which awe assuages, Tremble all the blest. For the son and heir eternal, To be son yet more, Leaves his stately chair supernal For the earth's low floor; Leaves the room so high and old, Leaves the all-world hearth, Seeks the out-air, frosty-cold, Of the twilight earth-- To be throned in newer glory In a mother's lap, Gather up our broken story, And right every hap.II. There Earth's foster-baby lies, Sleep-dimmed all his graces, 'Neath four stars of parents' eyes, And two heavens of faces! See! the cow and ass, dumb-staring,...
George MacDonald
The Home Lights
"In my father's house!" The wordsBring sweet cadence to my ears.Wandering thoughts, like homing birds,Fly all swiftly down the years,To that wide casement, where I always seeBright love-lamps leaning out to welcome me.Sweet it was, how sweet to goTo the worn, familiar door.No need to stand a while, and wait,Outside the well-remembered gate;No need to knock;The easy lockTurned almost of itself, and soMy spirit was "at home" once more.And then, within, how good to findThe same cool atmosphere of peace,Where I, a tired child, might ceaseTo grieve, or dread,Or toil for bread.I could forgetThe dreary fret.The strivings after hopes too high,I let them every one go by.The ills of life, the blows unkind,<...
Fay Inchfawn
The House Of Dust: Part 04: 06: Cinema
As evening falls,The walls grow luminous and warm, the wallsTremble and glow with the lives within them moving,Moving like music, secret and rich and warm.How shall we live to-night, where shall we turn?To what new light or darkness yearn?A thousand winding stairs lead down before us;And one by one in myriads we descendBy lamplit flowered walls, long balustrades,Through half-lit halls which reach no end. . . .Take my arm, then, you or you or you,And let us walk abroad on the solid air:Look how the organists head, in silhouette,Leans to the lamplit musics orange square! . . .The dim-globed lamps illumine rows of faces,Rows of hands and arms and hungry eyes,They have hurried down from a myriad secret places,From windy chambers next ...
Conrad Aiken
Skin
Her emerald top phosphorescent candy glow stick candy, sno' cane - floss like the mane revealed beneath, spun hair matted/woven into icicle lengths & pubis mink. Her presence as a monk sliding under a cowl, jet-black velvet or midnight eye-liner shadow knotting strands of dark. She comes on waves - candelabra is a name deft movement of finger caressing storm, bare legs shining wet street lamps decantered ambered wine. Cigarette floating between lips, uncharted voyage of the smile where puffs of smoke are parrots' wings, incandescent show-girls in novelty across the flame.
Paul Cameron Brown
A Noonday Melody
Everything goes to its rest; The hills are asleep in the noon;And life is as still in its nest As the moon when she looks on a moonIn the depth of a calm river's breast As it steals through a midnight in June.The streams have forgotten the sea In the dream of their musical sound;The sunlight is thick on the tree, And the shadows lie warm on the ground,--So still, you may watch them and see Every breath that awakens around.The churchyard lies still in the heat, With its handful of mouldering bone,As still as the long stalk of wheat In the shadow that sits by the stone,As still as the grass at my feet When I walk in the meadows alone.The waves are asleep on the main, And the ships ...
Bright Moon.
Bright moon, that high in heaven art shining, All smiles, as if within thy bower to-nightThy own Endymion lay reclining, And thou wouldst wake him with a kiss of light!--By all the bliss thy beam discovers, By all those visions far too bright for day,Which dreaming bards and waking lovers Behold, this night, beneath thy lingering ray,--I pray thee, queen of that bright heaven, Quench not to-night thy love-lamp in the sea,Till Anthe, in this bower, hath given Beneath thy beam, her long-vowed kiss to me.Guide hither, guide her steps benighted, Ere thou, sweet moon, thy bashful crescent hide;Let Love but in this bower be lighted, Then shroud in darkness all the world beside.
Thomas Moore
The Red Sea
Our souls shall be LeviathansIn purple seas of wineWhen drunkenness is dead with death,And drink is all divine;Learning in those immortal vatsWhat mortal vineyards mean;For only in heaven we shall knowHow happy we have been.Like clouds that wallow in the windBe free to drift and drink;Tower without insolence when we rise,Without surrender sink:Dreams dizzy and crazy we shall knowAnd have no need to writeOur blameless blasphemies of praise,Our nightmares of delight.For so in such misshapen shapeThe vision came to me,Where such titanian dolphins darkRoll in a sunset sea:Dark with dense colours, strange and strongAs terrible true love,Haloed like fish in phospher lightThe holy monsters move.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Commemoration
I sat by the granite pillar, and sunlight fell Where the sunlight fell of old,And the hour was the hour my heart remembered well, And the sermon rolled and rolledAs it used to roll when the place was still unhaunted,And the strangest tale in the world was still untold.And I knew that of all this rushing of urgent sound That I so clearly heard,The green young forest of saplings clustered round Was heeding not one word:Their heads were bowed in a still serried patienceSuch as an angel's breath could never have stirred.For some were already away to the hazardous pitch, Or lining the parapet wall,And some were in glorious battle, or great and rich, Or throned in a college hall:And among the rest was one like my own you...
Henry John Newbolt
To Emma Abbott
There--let thy hands be foldedAwhile in sleep's repose;The patient hands that wearied not,But earnestly and nobly wroughtIn charity and faith;And let thy dear eyes close--The eyes that looked alway to God,Nor quailed beneath the chastening rodOf sorrow;Fold thou thy hands and eyesFor just a little while,And with a smileDream of the morrow.And, O white voiceless flower,The dream which thou shalt dreamShould be a glimpse of heavenly things,For yonder like a seraph singsThe sweetness of a lifeWith faith alway its theme;While speedeth from those realms aboveThe messenger of that dear loveThat healeth sorrow.So sleep a little while,For thou shalt wake and singBefore thy KingWhen cometh the ...
Eugene Field
Touches.
In heavens of riveted blue, that sunset dyesWith glaucous flame, deep in the west the DayStands Midas-like; or, wading on his way,Touches with splendor all the twilight skies.Each cloud that, like a stepping-stone, he triesWith rosy foot, transforms its sober grayTo burning gold; while, ray on crystal ray,Within his wake the stars like bubbles rise.So should the artist in his work accordAll things with beauty, and communicateHis soul's high magic and divinityTo all he does; and, hoping no reward,Toil onward, making darkness aureateWith light of worlds that are and worlds to be.