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On Leaving Pine Cottage.
When our bosoms were lightest,And day-dreams were brightest,The gay vision melted away;By sorrow 'twas shaded,Too quickly it faded;How transient its halcyon sway!From my heart would you sever,(Harsh fate!) and forever,The friends who to life gave a charm,What oblivion effacesFond mem'ry retraces,And pictures each well-beloved form.Some accent well known,Some melodious tone,Through my bosom like witchery shed,Shall awake the sad sigh,To the hours gone by,And the friends, like a fairy dream, fled.Long remembrance shall treasureThose moments of pleasure,When time flew unheeded away;Joy's light skiff was near us,Hope ventured to steer us,And brighten our path with her ray.We sa...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
The Ghost
Peace in thy hands, Peace in thine eyes, Peace on thy brow;Flower of a moment in the eternal hour, Peace with me now. Not a wave breaks, Not a bird calls, My heart, like a sea,Silent after a storm that hath died, Sleeps within me. All the night's dews, All the world's leaves, All winter's snowSeem with their quiet to have stilled in life's dream All sorrowing now.
Walter De La Mare
July 9th, 1872
Between two pillared clouds of goldThe beautiful gates of evening swung --And far and wide from flashing foldThe half-furled banners of light, that hungO'er green of wood and gray of woldAnd over the blue where the river rolled,The fading gleams of their glory flung.The sky wore not a frown all dayTo mar the smile of the morning tide;The soft-voiced winds sang joyous lay --You never would think they had ever sighed;The stream went on its sunlit wayIn ripples of laughter; happy theyAs the hearts that met at Riverside.No cloudlet in the sky serene!Not a silver speck in the golden hue!But where the woods waved low and green,And seldom would let the sunlight through,Sweet shadows fell, and in their screen,The faces of ...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Memory's River
In Nature's bright blossoms not always reposes That strange subtle essence more rare than their bloom,Which lies in the hearts of carnations and roses, That unexplained something by men called perfume.Though modest the flower, yet great is its power And pregnant with meaning each pistil and leaf,If only it hides there, if only abides there, The fragrance suggestive of love, joy, and grief.Not always the air that a master composes Can stir human heart-strings with pleasure or pain.But strange, subtle chords, like the scent of the roses, Breathe out of some measures, though simple the strain.And lo! when you hear them, you love them and fear them, You tremble with anguish, you thrill with delight,For back of them slumber old dreams...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Symphony
Wonder in happy eyes Fades, fades away:And the angel-coloured skies Whisper farewell.Loveliness over the strings of the heart may stray In fugitive melodies;But Oh, the hand of the Master must not stay, Even for a breath;For to prolong one joy, or even to dwell On one rich chord of pain,Beyond the pulse of the song, would untune heaven And drown the stars in death.So youth with its love-note dies; And beauty fades in the air,To make the master-symphony immortal, And find new life and deeper wonder there.
Alfred Noyes
The Fish
In a cool curving world he liesAnd ripples with dark ecstasies.The kind luxurious lapse and stealShapes all his universe to feelAnd know and be; the clinging streamCloses his memory, glooms his dream,Who lips the roots o' the shore, and glidesSuperb on unreturning tides.Those silent waters weave for himA fluctuant mutable world and dim,Where wavering masses bulge and gapeMysterious, and shape to shapeDies momently through whorl and hollow,And form and line and solid followSolid and line and form to dreamFantastic down the eternal stream;An obscure world, a shifting world,Bulbous, or pulled to thin, or curled,Or serpentine, or driving arrows,Or serene slidings, or March narrows.There slipping wave and shore are one,...
Rupert Brooke
The Lost Soul.
Brothers, look there!What! see ye nothing yet?Knit your eyebrows close, and stare;Send your souls forth in the gaze,As my finger-point is set,Through the thick of the foggy air.Beyond the air, you see the dark;(For the darkness hedges still our ways;)And beyond the dark, oh, lives away!Dim and far down, surely you markA huge world-heap of withered yearsDropt from the boughs of eternity?See ye not something lying there,Shapeless as a dumb despair,Yet a something that spirits can recogniseWith the vision dwelling in their eyes?It hath the form of a man!As a huge moss-rock in a valley green,When the light to freeze began,Thickening with crystals of dark between,Might look like a sleeping man.What think ye it, br...
George MacDonald
God; Not Gift
Gray clouds my heaven have covered o'er; My sea ebbs fast, no more to flow; Ghastly and dry, my desert shore Parched, bare, unsightly things doth show. 'Tis thou, Lord, cloudest up my sky; Stillest the heart-throb of my sea; Tellest the sad wind not to sigh, Yea, life itself to wait for thee! Lord, here I am, empty enough! My music but a soundless moan! Blind hope, of all my household stuff, Leaves me, blind hope, not quite alone! Shall hope too go, that I may trust Purely in thee, and spite of all? Then turn my very heart to dust-- On thee, on thee, I yet will call. List! list! his wind among the pines Hark! hark! that rushi...
Reverence Waking Hope
A power is on me, and my soul must speakTo thee, thou grey, grey man, whom I beholdWith those white-headed children. I am boldTo commune with thy setting, and to wreakMy doubts on thy grey hair; for I would seekThee in that other world, but I am toldThou goest elsewhere and wilt never holdThy head so high as now. Oh I were weak,Weak even to despair, could I foregoThe tender vision which will give somehowThee standing brightly one day even as now!Thou art a very grey old man, and soI may not pass thee darkly, but bestowA look of reverence on thy wrinkled brow.
Give All To Love
Give all to love;Obey thy heart;Friends, kindred, days,Estate, good-fame,Plans, credit and the Muse,--Nothing refuse.'T is a brave master;Let it have scope:Follow it utterly,Hope beyond hope:High and more highIt dives into noon,With wing unspent,Untold intent;But it is a god,Knows its own pathAnd the outlets of the sky.It was never for the mean;It requireth courage stout.Souls above doubt,Valor unbending,It will reward,--They shall returnMore than they were,And ever ascending.Leave all for love;Yet, hear me, yet,One word more thy heart behoved,One pulse more of firm endeavor,--Keep thee to-day,To-morrow, forever,Free as an ArabOf th...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Revealment
A Sense of sadness in the golden air,A pensiveness, that has no part in care,As if the Season, by some woodland pool,Braiding the early blossoms in her hair,Seeing her loveliness reflected there,Had sighed to find herself so beautiful.A breathlessness, a feeling as of fear,Holy and dim as of a mystery near,As if the World about us listening went,With lifted finger, and hand-hollowed ear,Hearkening a music that we cannot hear,Haunting the quickening earth and firmament.A prescience of the soul that has no name,Expectancy that is both wild and tame,As if the Earth, from out its azure ringOf heavens, looked to see, as white as flame,As Perseus once to chained Andromeda came,The swift, divine revealment of the Spring.
Madison Julius Cawein
Romance
When I was but thirteen or soI went into a golden land,Chimborazo, CotopaxiTook me by the hand.My father died, my brother too,They passed like fleeting dreams,I stood where PopocatapetlIn the sunlight gleams.I dimly heard the master's voiceAnd boys far-off at play,Chimborazo, CotopaxiHad stolen me away.I walked in a great golden dreamTo and fro from school -Shining PopocatapetlThe dusty streets did rule.I walked home with a gold dark boyAnd never a word I'd say,Chimborazo, CotopaxiHad taken my speech away:I gazed entranced upon his faceFairer than any flower -O shining PopocatapetlIt was thy magic hour:The houses, people, traffic seemedThin fading dreams b...
W.J. Turner
In Youth I Have Known One
IIn youth I have known one with whom the EarthIn secret communing held, as he with it,In daylight, and in beauty, from his birth:Whose fervid, flickering torch of life was litFrom the sun and stars, whence he had drawn forthA passionate light such for his spirit was fit,And yet that spirit knew, not in the hourOf its own fervor, what had oer it power.IIPerhaps it may be that my mind is wroughtTo a ferver by the moonbeam that hangs oer,But I will half believe that wild light fraughtWith more of sovereignty than ancient loreHath ever told, or is it of a thoughtThe unembodied essence, and no moreThat with a quickening spell doth oer us passAs dew of the night-time, oer the summer grass?III<...
Edgar Allan Poe
Bourkes Dream
Lonely and sadly one night in November I laid down my weary head in search of reposeOn my wallet of straw, which I long shall remember, Tired and weary I fell into a doze. Tired from working hard Down in the labour yard,Night brought relief to my sad, aching brain. Locked in my prison cell, Surely an earthly hell,I fell asleep and began for to dream.I dreamt that I stood on the green fields of Erin, In joyous meditation that victory was won.Surrounded by comrades, no enemy fearing. Stand, was the cry, every man to his gun. On came the Saxons then, Fighting our Fenian men,Soon theyll reel back from our piked volunteers. Loud was the fight an...
Andrew Barton Paterson
Life
Our lives seem filled with things of little worth;A thousand petty cares arise each dayWhich bring our soaring thoughts from heaven to earth,Reminding us that we have feet of clay;Yet we will not from path of duty strayIf we amidst them all cleave to the right;Nor great nor small are actions in His sight;Through lowly vale He shows our feet the way.Our early dreams may not be realized;The roseate sky now proves quite commonplace;The constellations we so highly prizedHave vanished all--nor left the slightest traceOf former glory in its azure face,But high o'er all beams out the polar starTo guide us safe through rock and sandy bar;Life is complete and its cap-stone is grace.
Joseph Horatio Chant
Lament XIX. The Dream
Long through the night hours sorrow was my guestAnd would not let my fainting body rest,Till just ere dawn from out its slow dominionsFlew sleep to wrap me in its dear dusk pinions.And then it was my mother did appearBefore mine eyes in vision doubly dear;For in her arms she held my darling one,My Ursula, just as she used to runTo me at dawn to say her morning prayer,In her white nightgown, with her curling hairFraming her rosy face, her eyes aboutTo laugh, like flowers only halfway out. "Art thou still sorrowing, my son?" Thus spokeMy mother. Sighing bitterly, I woke,Or seemed to wake, and heard her say once more: "It is thy weeping brings me to this shore:Thy lamentations, long uncomforted,Have reached the hidden chambers ...
Jan Kochanowski
Regret.
Thin summer rain on grass and bush and hedge, Reddening the road and deepening the greenOn wide, blurred lawn, and in close-tangled sedge; Veiling in gray the landscape stretched between These low broad meadows and the pale hills seenBut dimly on the far horizon's edge.In these transparent-clouded, gentle skies, Wherethrough the moist beams of the soft June sunMight any moment break, no sorrow lies, No note of grief in swollen brooks that run, No hint of woe in this subdued, calm toneOf all the prospect unto dreamy eyes.Only a tender, unnamed half-regret For the lost beauty of the gracious morn;A yearning aspiration, fainter yet, For brighter suns in joyous days unborn, Now while brief showers ...
Emma Lazarus
The House Of Dust: Part 02: 05: Retrospect
Round white clouds roll slowly above the housetops,Over the clear red roofs they flow and pass.A flock of pigeons rises with blue wings flashing,Rises with whistle of wings, hovers an instant,And settles slowly again on the tarnished grass.And one old man looks down from a dusty windowAnd sees the pigeons circling about the fountainAnd desires once more to walk among those trees.Lovers walk in the noontime by that fountain.Pigeons dip their beaks to drink from the water.And soon the pond must freeze.The light wind blows to his ears a sound of laughter,Young men shuffle their feet, loaf in the sunlight;A girls laugh rings like a silver bell.But clearer than all these sounds is a sound he hearsMore in his secret heart than in his ears,
Conrad Aiken