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For I Must Sing of All I Feel and Know
For I must sing of all I feel and know,Waiting with Memnon passive near the palms,Until the heavenly light doth dawn and growAnd thrill my silence into mystic psalms;From unknown realms the wind streams sad or gay,The trees give voice responsive to its sway.For I must sing: of mountains, deserts, seas,Of rivers ever flowing, ever flowing;Of beasts and birds, of grass and flowers and treesForever fading and forever growing;Of calm and storm, of night and eve and noon,Of boundless space, and sun and stars and moon;And of the secret sympathies that bindAll beings to their wondrous dwelling-place;And of the perfect Unity enshrinedIn omnipresence throughout time and space,Alike informing with its full controlThe dust, the stars, th...
James Thomson
To-Days
Brief while they last,Long when they are gone;They catch from the pastA light to still live on.Brief! yet I weenA day may be an age,The poet's pen may screenHeart-stories on one page.Brief! but in them,From eve back to morn,Some find the gem,Many find the thorn.Brief! minutes passSoft as flakes of snow,Shadows o'er the grassCould not swifter go.Brief! but alongAll the after-yearsTo-day will be a songOf smiles or of tears.
Abram Joseph Ryan
On The Portrait Of A Beautiful Woman, Carved On Her Monument.
Such wast thou: now in earth below, Dust and a skeleton thou art. Above thy bones and clay, Here vainly placed by loving hands, Sole guardian of memory and woe, The image of departed beauty stands. Mute, motionless, it seems with pensive gaze To watch the flight of the departing days. That gentle look, that, wheresoe'er it fell, As now it seems to fall, Held fast the gazer with its magic spell; That lip, from which as from some copious urn, Redundant pleasure seems to overflow; That neck, on which love once so fondly hung; That loving hand, whose tender pressure still The hand it clasped, with trembling joy would thrill; That bosom, whose transparent loveliness The color from t...
Giacomo Leopardi
The Rainbow
"These things are real," said one, and bade me gaze On black and mighty shapes of iron and stone, On murder, on madness, on lust, on towns ablaze, And on a thing made all of rattling bone: "What," said he, "will you bring to match with these?" "Yea! War is real," I said, "and real is Death, A little while - mortal realities; But Love and Hope draw an immortal breath." Think you the storm that wrecks a summer day, With funeral blackness and with leaping fire And boiling roar of rain, more real than they That, when the warring heavens begin to tire, With tender fingers on the tumult paint; Spanning the huddled wrack from base to cope With soft effulgence, like some haloed saint, ...
Richard Le Gallienne
The Vision Of Echard
The Benedictine EchardSat by the wayside well,Where Marsberg sees the bridalOf the Sarre and the Moselle.Fair with its sloping vineyardsAnd tawny chestnut bloom,The happy vale Ausonius sunkFor holy Treves made room.On the shrine Helena buildedTo keep the Christ coat well,On minster tower and kloster cross,The westering sunshine fell.There, where the rock-hewn circlesOerlooked the Romans game,The veil of sleep fell on him,And his thought a dream became.He felt the heart of silenceThrob with a soundless word,And by the inward ear aloneA spirits voice he heard.And the spoken word seemed writtenOn air and wave and sod,And the bending walls of sapphireBlazed with the thought ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
To My Mother Earth
0 Earth, Earth, Earth, I am dying for love of thee,For thou hast given me birth, And thy hands have tended me.I would fall asleep on thy breast When its swelling folds are bare,When the thrush dreams of its nest And the life of its joy in the air;When thy life is a vanished ghost, And the glory hath left thy waves,When thine eye is blind with frost, And the fog sits on the graves;When the blasts are shivering about, And the rain thy branches beats,When the damps of death are out, And the mourners are in the streets.Oh my sleep should be deep In the arms of thy swiftening motion,And my dirge the mystic sweep Of the winds that nurse the ocean.And my eye would slow...
George MacDonald
Fragment: 'Is It That In Some Brighter Sphere'.
Is it that in some brighter sphereWe part from friends we meet with here?Or do we see the Future passOver the Present's dusky glass?Or what is that that makes us seemTo patch up fragments of a dream,Part of which comes true, and partBeats and trembles in the heart?
Percy Bysshe Shelley
A Prayer For The Past.
Now far from my old northern land, I live where gentle winters pass; Where green seas lave a wealthy strand, And unsown is the grass; Where gorgeous sunsets claim the scope Of gazing heaven to spread their show, Hang scarlet clouds in the topmost cope, With fringes flaming low; With one beside me in whose eyes Once more old Nature finds a home; There treasures up her changeful skies, Her phosphorescent foam. O'er a new joy this day we bend, Soft power from heaven our souls to lift; A wondering wonder thou dost lend With loan outpassing gift-- A little child. She sees the sun-- Once more incarnates thy old law: One born of two, tw...
The Inquisitive Mans Dream
Do you know, as I do, delicious sadnessand make others say of you: Strange man!I was dying. In my soul, singular illness,desire and horror were mingled as one:anguish and living hope, no factious bile.The more the fatal sand ran out, the moreacute, delicious my torment: my heart entirewas tearing itself away from the world I saw.I was like a child eager for the spectacle,hating the curtain as one hates an obstacle at last the truth was chillingly revealed:Id died without surprise, dreadful morningenveloped me. Was this all there was to see?The curtain had risen, and I was still waiting.
Charles Baudelaire
Poems and Ballads - Dedication
The sea gives her shells to the shingle,The earth gives her streams to the sea;They are many, but my gift is single,My verses, the firstfruits of me.Let the wind take the green and the grey leaf,Cast forth without fruit upon air;Take rose-leaf and vine-leaf and bay-leafBlown loose from the hair.The night shakes them round me in legions,Dawn drives them before her like dreams;Time sheds them like snows on strange regions,Swept shoreward on infinite streams;Leaves pallid and sombre and ruddy,Dead fruits of the fugitive years;Some stained as with wine and made bloody,And some as with tears.Some scattered in seven years traces,As they fell from the boy that was then;Long left among idle green places,Or gathered but no...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
In Vita Minerva
Vex not the Muse with idle prayers, -She will not hear thy call;She steals upon thee unawares,Or seeks thee not at all.Soft as the moonbeams when they soughtEndymion's fragrant bower,She parts the whispering leaves of thoughtTo show her full-blown flower.For thee her wooing hour has passed,The singing birds have flown,And winter comes with icy blastTo chill thy buds unblown.Yet, though the woods no longer thrillAs once their arches rung,Sweet echoes hover round thee stillOf songs thy summer sung.Live in thy past; await no moreThe rush of heaven-sent wings;Earth still has music left in storeWhile Memory sighs and sings.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Jotunheim
IBeyond the Northern Lights, in regions hauntedOf twilight, where the world is glacier planted,And pale as Loki in his cavern whenThe serpent's slaver burns him to the bones,I saw the phantasms of gigantic men,The prototypes of vastness, quarrying stones;Great blocks of winter, glittering with the morn'sAnd evening's colors,--wild prismatic tonesOf boreal beauty.--Like the three gray Norns,Silence and solitude and terror loomedAround them where they labored. Walls arose,Vast as the Andes when creation boomedInsurgent fire; and through the rushing snowsEnormous battlements of tremendous ice,Bastioned and turreted, I saw arise.IIBut who can sing the workmanship giganticThat reared within its corusca...
Madison Julius Cawein
Philosophy
I.His eyes found nothing beautiful and bright,Nor wealth nor, honour, glory nor delight,Which he could grasp and keep with might and right.Flowers bloomed for maidens, swords outflashed for boys,The worlds big children had their various toys;He could not feel their sorrows and their joys.Hills held a secret they would not unfold,In careless scorn of him the ocean rolled,The stars were alien splendours high and cold.He felt himself a king bereft of crown,Defrauded from his birthright of renown,Bred up in littleness with churl and clown.II.How could he vindicate himself? His eyes,That found not anywhere their proper prize,Looked through and through the specious earth and skies,They prob...
Heri, Cras, Hodie
Shines the last age, the next with hope is seen,To-day slinks poorly off unmarked between:Future or Past no richer secret folds,O friendless Present! than thy bosom holds.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Sparrow
O Lord, I cannot but believeThe birds do sing thy praises then, when they sing to one another,And they are lying seed-sown land when the winter makes them grieve,Their little bosoms breeding songs for the summer to unsmother!If thou hadst finished me, O Lord,Nor left out of me part of that great gift that goes to singing,I sure had known the meaning high of the songster's praising word,Had known upon what thoughts of thee his pearly talk he was stringing!I should have read the wisdom hidIn the storm-inspired melody of thy thrush's bosom solemn:I should not then have understood what thy free spirit didTo make the lark-soprano mount like to a geyser-column!I think I almost understandThy owl, his muffled swiftness, moon-round eyes, and intoned hoo...
The Bull
See an old unhappy bull,Sick in soul and body both,Slouching in the undergrowthOf the forest beautiful,Banished from the herd he led,Bulls and cows a thousand head.Cranes and gaudy parrots goUp and down the burning sky;Tree-top cats purr drowsilyIn the dim-day green below;And troops of monkeys, nutting, some,All disputing, go and come;And things abominable sitPicking offal buck or swine,On the mess and over itBurnished flies and beetles shine,And spiders big as bladders lieUnder hemlocks ten foot high;And a dotted serpent curledRound and round and round a tree,Yellowing its greenery,Keeps a watch on all the world,All the world and this old bullIn the forest beautiful.Bravel...
Ralph Hodgson
The Circus Animal Desertion
I sought a theme and sought for it in vain,I sought it daily for six weeks or so.Maybe at last, being but a broken man,I must be satisfied with my heart, althoughWinter and summer till old age beganMy circus animals were all on show,Those stilted boys, that burnished chariot,Lion and woman and the Lord knows what.IIWhat can I but enumerate old themes?First that sea-rider Oisin led by the noseThrough three enchanted islands, allegorical dreams,Vain gaiety, vain battle, vain repose,Themes of the embittered heart, or so it seems,That might adorn old songs or courtly shows;But what cared I that set him on to ride,I, starved for the bosom of his faery bride?And then a counter-truth filled out its play,i(The Countess Cathleen) was t...
William Butler Yeats
Fragment: Milton's Spirit.
I dreamed that Milton's spirit rose, and tookFrom life's green tree his Uranian lute;And from his touch sweet thunder flowed, and shookAll human things built in contempt of man, -And sanguine thrones and impious altars quaked,Prisons and citadels...