Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 82 of 525
Previous
Next
Work.
Mine is the shape forever set betweenThe thought and form, the vision and the deed;The hidden light, the glory all unseen,I bring to mortal senses, mortal need.Who loves me not, my sorrowing slave is he,Bent with the burden, knowing oft the rod;But he who loves me shall my master be,And use me with the joyance of a god.Man's lord or servant, still I am his friend;Desire for me is simple as his breath;Yea, waiting, old and patient, for the end,He prays that he may find me after death!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Song.
Low laughed the Columbine,Trembled her petals fine As the breeze blew;In her dove-heart there stirredMurmurs the dull bee heard,And Love, Life's wild white bird, Straightway she knew.Resting her lilac cheekGently, in aspect meek, On the gray stone,The morning-glory, free,Welcomed the yellow bee,Heard the near-rolling sea Murmur and moan.Calm lay the tawny sandStretching a long wet hand To the far wave.Swift to her warm waiting breastLonging to be possessedLeaps 'neath his billowy crest Her Lover brave.
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Servant Girl and Grocer's Boy
Her lips' remark was: "Oh, you kid!"Her soul spoke thus (I know it did):"O king of realms of endless joy,My own, my golden grocer's boy,I am a princess forced to dwellWithin a lonely kitchen cell,While you go dashing through the landWith loveliness on every hand.Your whistle strikes my eager earsLike music of the choiring spheres.The mighty earth grows faint and reelsBeneath your thundering wagon wheels.How keenly, perilously sweetTo cling upon that swaying seat!How happy she who by your sideMay share the splendors of that ride!Ah, if you will not take my handAnd bear me off across the land,Then, traveller from Arcady,Remain awhile and comfort me.What other m...
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
Lines: 'We Meet Not As We Parted'.
1.We meet not as we parted,We feel more than all may see;My bosom is heavy-hearted,And thine full of doubt for me: -One moment has bound the free.2.That moment is gone for ever,Like lightning that flashed and died -Like a snowflake upon the river -Like a sunbeam upon the tide,Which the dark shadows hide.3.That moment from time was singledAs the first of a life of pain;The cup of its joy was mingled- Delusion too sweet though vain!Too sweet to be mine again.4.Sweet lips, could my heart have hiddenThat its life was crushed by you,Ye would not have then forbiddenThe death which a heart so trueSought in your briny dew.5..........Methinks too little cost<...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Epilogue to Emblems of Love
What shall we do for Love these days?How shall we make an altar-blazeTo smite the horny eyes of menWith the renown of our Heaven,And to the unbelievers proveOur service to our dear god, Love?What torches shall we lift aboveThe crowd that pushes through the mire,To amaze the dark heads with strange fire?I should think I were much to blame,If never I held some fragrant flameAbove the noises of the world,And openly 'mid men's hurrying stares,Worshipt before the sacred fearsThat are like flashing curtains furl'dAcross the presence of our lord Love.Nay, would that I could fill the gazeOf the whole earth with some great praiseMade in a marvel for men's eyes,Some tower of glittering masonries,Therein such a spirit flourishing
Lascelles Abercrombie
Sonnet. To ............
Thou bud of early promise, may the roseWhich time, methinks, will rear in envied bloom,By friendship nurs'd, its grateful sweets disclose,Nor e'er be nipt in life's disast'rous gloom.For much thou ow'st to him whose studious mindRear'd thy young years, and all thy wants supplied;Whose every precept breath'd affection kind,And to the friend's, a father's love allied.Oh! how 'twill glad him in life's evening day,To see that mind, parental care adorn'd,With grateful love the debt immense repay,And realize each hope affection form'd.The deed be thine 'twill many a care assuage,Exalt thy worth, and blunt the thorns of age.
Thomas Gent
Afternoon At A Parsonage.
(THE PARSON'S BROTHER, SISTER, AND TWO CHILDREN)Preface.What wonder man should fail to stayA nursling wafted from above,The growth celestial come astray,That tender growth whose name is Love!It is as if high winds in heavenHad shaken the celestial trees,And to this earth below had givenSome feathered seeds from one of these.O perfect love that 'dureth long!Dear growth, that shaded by the palms.And breathed on by the angel's song,Blooms on in heaven's eternal calms!How great the task to guard thee here,Where wind is rough and frost is keen,And all the ground with doubt and fearIs checkered, birth and death between!Space is against thee - it can part;Time is against thee - it can ...
Jean Ingelow
To My Lady Of The Hills
'... O she,To me myself, for some three careless moons,The summer pilot of an empty heartUnto the shores of Nothing.' - Tennyson.'Tis the hour when golden slumbersThrough th' Hesperian portals creep,And the youth who lisps in numbersDreams of novel rhymes to 'sleep';I shall merely note, at starting,That responsive Nature thrillsTo the twilight hour of partingFrom my Lady of the Hills.Lady, 'neath the deepening umbrageWe have wandered near and far,To the ludicrously dumb rageOf your truculent Mamma;We have urged the long-tailed gallop;Lightly danced the still night through;Smacked the ball, and oared the shallop(In a vis-à-vis canoe);We have walked this fair Oasis,Keeping...
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
To Helen
Helen, thy beauty is to meLike those Nicean barks of yore,That gently, o'er a perfumed sea,The weary, wayworn wanderer boreTo his own native shore.On desperate seas long wont to roam,Thy hyacinth hair, thy classic face,Thy Naiad airs have brought me homeTo the glory that was GreeceAnd the grandeur that was Rome.Lo! in yon brilliant window-nicheHow statue-like I see thee stand,The agate lamp within thy hand!Ah, Psyche, from the regions whichAre Holy Land!
Edgar Allan Poe
A Love Song
My love it should be silent, being deep--And being very peaceful should be still--Still as the utmost depths of ocean keep--Serenely silent as some mighty hill.Yet is my love so great it needs must fillWith very joy the inmost heart of me,The joy of dancing branches on the hill,The joy of leaping waves upon the sea.
Theodosia Garrison
Pairing Time Anticipated. A Fable.
I shall not ask Jean Jaques Rousseau[1]If birds confabulate or no;Tis clear, that they were always ableTo hold discourse, at least in fable;And een the child who knows no betterThan to interpret, by the letter,A story of a cock and bull,Must have a most uncommon skull.It chanced then on a winters day,But warm, and bright, and calm as May,The birds, conceiving a designTo forestall sweet St. Valentine,In many an orchard, copse, and grove,Assembled on affairs of love,And with much twitter and much chatterBegan to agitate the matter.At length a Bullfinch, who could boastMore years and wisdom than the most,Entreated, opening wide his beak,A moments liberty to speak;And, silence publicly enjoind,Deliverd...
William Cowper
Summer Rain.
Oh, what is so pure as the glad summer rain,That falls on the grass where the sunlight has lain?And what is so fair as the flowers that lieAll bathed in the tears of the soft summer sky?The blue of the heavens is dimmed by the rainThat wears away sorrow and washes out pain;But we know that the flowers we cherish would dieWere it not for the tears of the cloud-laden sky.The rose is the sweeter when kissed by the rain,And hearts are the dearer where sorrow has lain;The sky is the fairer that rain-clouds have swept,And no eyes are so bright as the eyes that have wept.Oh, they are so happy, these flowers that die,They laugh in the sunshine, oh, why cannot I?They droop in the shadow, they smile in the sun,Yet they die in the winter when ...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Love Is Strength
Love alone is great in might,Makes the heavy burden light,Smooths rough ways to weary feet,Makes the bitter morsel sweet:Love alone is strength!Might that is not born of LoveIs not Might born from above,Has its birthplace down belowWhere they neither reap nor sow:Love alone is strength!Love is stronger than all force,Is its own eternal source;Might is always in decay,Love grows fresher every day:Love alone is strength!Little ones, no ill can chance;Fear ye not, but sing and dance;Though the high-heaved heaven should fallGod is plenty for us all:God is Love and Strength!
George MacDonald
To Isabel.
(ISABELLA STEWART)Since ere I left my native isle,My childhood's home, life's happy smileAnd crossed the separating seas,Nothing my lonely heart could pleaseTill now--and oh, I cannot tellHow I admire thee, Isabel!There are, in my dear island green,Most lovely faces to be seen,Beautiful eyes, with kindly glee,Beamed there in laughing love on meNow I'm alone from day to day,They're all three thousand miles away.A stranger's face each face I see,And every eye is cold to me,No friendly voice, no kind caress,No spell to break the loneliness,Until I fell beneath the spellOf thy rare beauty, IsabelI watch thee from my window paneIn hopes a stolen glimpse to gainI know that purely lovely face...
Nora Pembroke
Barcaroles.
I.Over the lapsing lagune all the dayUrging my gondola with oar-strokes light,Always beside one shadowy waterwayI pause and peer, with eager, jealous sight,Toward the Piazza where Pepita stands,Wooing the hungry pigeons from their flight.Dark the canal; but she shines like the sun,With yellow hair and dreaming, wine-brown eyes.Thick crowd the doves for food. She gives ME none.She sees and will not see. Vain are my sighs.One slow, reluctant stroke. Aha! she turns,Gestures and smiles, with coy and feigned surprise.Shifting and baffling is our Lido track,Blind and bewildering all the currents flow.Me they perplex not. In the midnight blackI hold my way secure and fearless row,But ah! what chart have I to her, my Sea,W...
Susan Coolidge
Winter Roses
My garden roses long agoHave perished from the leaf-strewn walks;Their pale, fair sisters smile no moreUpon the sweet-brier stalks.Gone with the flower-time of my life,Spring's violets, summer's blooming pride,And Nature's winter and my ownStand, flowerless, side by side.So might I yesterday have sung;To-day, in bleak December's noon,Come sweetest fragrance, shapes, and hues,The rosy wealth of June!Bless the young bands that culled the gift,And bless the hearts that prompted it;If undeserved it comes, at leastIt seems not all unfit.Of old my Quaker ancestorsHad gifts of forty stripes save one;To-day as many roses crownThe gray head of their son.And with them, to my fancy's eye,The fres...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Sonnet XIV
It may be for the world of weeds and taresAnd dearth in Nature of sweet Beauty's roseThat oft as Fortune from ten thousand showsOne from the train of Love's true courtiersStraightway on him who gazes, unawares,Deep wonder seizes and swift trembling grows,Reft by that sight of purpose and repose,Hardly its weight his fainting breast upbears.Then on the soul from some ancestral placeFloods back remembrance of its heavenly birth,When, in the light of that serener sphere,It saw ideal beauty face to faceThat through the forms of this our meaner EarthShines with a beam less steadfast and less clear.
Alan Seeger
To Chloe Jealous
Dear Chloe, how blubber'd is that pretty face;Thy cheek all on fire, and thy hair all uncurl'd:Prythee quit this caprice; and (as old Falstaff says)Let us e'en talk a little like folks of this world.How canst thou presume, thou hast leave to destroyThe beauties, which Venus but lent to thy keeping?Those looks were design'd to inspire love and joy:More ord'nary eyes may serve people for weeping.To be vext at a trifle or two that I writ,Your judgment at once, and my passion you wrong:You take that for fact, which will scarce be found wit:Odds life! must one swear to the truth of a song?What I speak, my fair Chloe, and what I write, showsThe diff'rence there is betwixt nature and art:I court others in verse; but I love thee in prose:An...
Matthew Prior