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I Sometimes Think
I sometimes think as here I sitOf things I have done,Which seemed in doing not unfitTo face the sun:Yet never a soul has paused a whitOn such not one.There was that eager strenuous pressTo sow good seed;There was that saving from distressIn the nick of need;There were those words in the wilderness:Who cared to heed?Yet can this be full true, or no?For one did care,And, spiriting into my house, to, fro,Like wind on the stair,Cares still, heeds all, and will, even thoughI may despair.
Thomas Hardy
Alcyone
In the silent depth of space,Immeasurably old, immeasurably far,Glittering with a silver flameThrough eternity,Rolls a great and burning star,With a noble name,Alcyone!In the glorious chart of heavenIt is marked the first of seven;'Tis a Pleiad:And a hundred years of earthWith their long-forgotten deeds have come and gone,Since that tiny point of light,Once a splendour fierce and bright,Had its birthIn the star we gaze upon.It has travelled all that time -Thought has not a swifter flight -Through a region where no faintest gustOf life comes ever, but the power of nightDwells stupendous and sublime,Limitless and void and lonely,A region mute with age, and peopled onlyWith the dead and ruined ...
Archibald Lampman
Lucy II
She dwelt among the untrodden waysBeside the springs of Dove,A Maid whom there were none to praiseAnd very few to love:A violet by a mossy stoneHalf hidden from the eye!Fair as a star, when only oneIs shining in the sky.She lived unknown, and few could knowWhen Lucy ceased to be;But she is in her grave, and oh,The difference to me!
William Wordsworth
A Dream
In visions of the dark nightI have dreamed of joy departedBut a waking dream of life and lightHath left me broken-hearted.Ah! what is not a dream by dayTo him whose eyes are castOn things around him with a rayTurned back upon the past?That holy dream that holy dream,While all the world were chiding,Hath cheered me as a lovely beam,A lonely spirit guiding.What though that light, thro' storm and night,So trembled from afarWhat could there be more purely brightIn Truth's day star?
Edgar Allan Poe
Kenotaphion.
O wanderer! whoever thou mayest be, I beg of thee to pass in silence here And leave me with my empty sepulchreBeside the ceaseless turmoil of the sea;Pass me as one whom life's old tragedy Hath made distraught--who now in dreams doth keep His cherished dead, unmindful of her sleepIn ocean's bosom locked eternally!Scorn not the foolish grave that I have made Beside the deep sea of my soul's unrest,But let me hope that when the storms are stayed My phantom ship shall sail from out the westBringing the boon for which I long have prayed-- The broken vigil and the ended quest.
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
Sonnet XII.
Chill'd by unkind Honora's alter'd eye, "Why droops my heart with fruitless woes forlorn," Thankless for much of good? - what thousands, born To ceaseless toil beneath this wintry sky,Or to brave deathful Oceans surging high, Or fell Disease's fever'd rage to mourn, How blest to them wou'd seem my destiny! How dear the comforts my rash sorrows scorn! -Affection is repaid by causeless hate! A plighted love is chang'd to cold disdain! Yet suffer not thy wrongs to shroud thy fate,But turn, my Soul, to blessings which remain; And let this truth the wise resolve create, THE HEART ESTRANGED NO ANGUISH CAN REGAIN.July 1773.
Anna Seward
Lilith. The Legend Of The First Woman. Book II.
Soft stealing through the shade, and skirting swiftThe walls of Paradise, through night's dark riftLilith fled far; nor stopped lest deadly snareOr peril by the wayside lurked.The airGrew chill. Loud beat her heart, as through the windEchoed, unseen, pursuing feet, behind.Adown the pathway of the mist she passed,And reached a weird, strange land at last.When morning flecked the dappled sky with red,And odors sweet from waking flowers were shed,Lilith beheld a plain, outstretching wide,With distant mountains seamed.Afar, a silvery tideThe blue shore kissed. And in that tropic glowDim islands shone, palm-fringed, and low.In nearer space, like scarlet arrows flewStrange birds, or 'mong the reedy fens, or throughTall trees, of ...
Ada Langworthy Collier
The Paradox
I am the mother of sorrows,I am the ender of grief;I am the bud and the blossom,I am the late-falling leaf.I am thy priest and thy poet,I am thy serf and thy king;I cure the tears of the heartsick,When I come near they shall sing.White are my hands as the snowdrop;Swart are my fingers as clay;Dark is my frown as the midnight,Fair is my brow as the day.Battle and war are my minions,Doing my will as divine;I am the calmer of passions,Peace is a nursling of mine.Speak to me gently or curse me,Seek me or fly from my sight;I am thy fool in the morning,Thou art my slave in the night.Down to the grave will I take thee,Out from the noise of the strife;Then shalt thou see me and know me--...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Wrinkles
When Helen first saw wrinkles in her face(T was when some fifty long had settled thereAnd intermarried and branchd off awide)She threw herself upon her couch and wept:On this side hung her head, and over that Listlessly she let fall the faithless brassThat made the men as faithless.But when youFound them, or fancied them, and would not hearThat they were only vestiges of smiles, Or the impression of some amorous hairAstray from cloisterd curls and roseate band,Which had been lying there all night perhapsUpon a skin so soft, No, no, you said,Sure, they are coming, yes, are come, are here: Well, and what matters it, while thou art too!
Walter Savage Landor
Not In The Lucid Intervals Of Life
Not in the lucid intervals of lifeThat come but as a curse to party-strife;Not in some hour when Pleasure with a sighOf languor puts his rosy garland by;Not in the breathing-times of that poor slaveWho daily piles up wealth in Mammon's caveIs Nature felt, or can be; nor do words,Which practiced talent readily affords,Prove that her hand has touched responsive chords;Nor has her gentle beauty power to moveWith genuine rapture and with fervent loveThe soul of Genius, if he dare to takeLife's rule from passion craved for passion's sake;Untaught that meekness is the cherished bentOf all the truly great and all the innocent.But who is innocent? By grace divine,Not otherwise, O Nature! we are thine,Through good and evil thine, in just deg...
Tears, Idle Tears
Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean,Tears from the depth of some divine despairRise in the heart, and gather to the eyes,In looking on the happy Autumn-fields,And thinking of the days that are no more.Fresh as the first beam glittering on a sail,That brings our friends up from the underworld,Sad as the last which reddens over oneThat sinks with all we love below the verge;So sad, so fresh, the days that are no more.Ah, sad and strange as in dark summer dawnsThe earliest pipe of half-awakened birdsTo dying ears, when unto dying eyesThe casement slowly grows a glimmering square;So sad, so strange, the days that are no more.Dear as remembered kisses after death,And sweet as those by hopeless fancy feignedOn lips th...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Wraith
"Thin Rain, whom are you haunting, That you haunt my door?" --Surely it is not I she's wanting; Someone living here before-- "Nobody's in the house but me: You may come in if you like and see." Thin as thread, with exquisite fingers,-- Have you seen her, any of you?-- Grey shawl, and leaning on the wind, And the garden showing through? Glimmering eyes,--and silent, mostly, Sort of a whisper, sort of a purr, Asking something, asking it over, If you get a sound from her.-- Ever see her, any of you?-- Strangest thing I've ever known,-- Every night since I moved in, An...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
My Cicely
"Alive?" And I leapt in my wonder,Was faint of my joyance,And grasses and grove shone in garmentsOf glory to me."She lives, in a plenteous well-being,To-day as aforehand;The dead bore the name though a rare one -The name that bore she."She lived . . . I, afar in the cityOf frenzy-led factions,Had squandered green years and maturerIn bowing the kneeTo Baals illusive and specious,Till chance had there voiced meThat one I loved vainly in nonageHad ceased her to be.The passion the planets had scowled on,And change had let dwindle,Her death-rumour smartly reliftedTo full apogee.I mounted a steed in the dawningWith acheful remembrance,And made for the ancient West HighwayTo far E...
Concentration
The age is too diffusive. Time and Force Are frittered out and bring no satisfaction. The way seems lost to straight determined action. Like shooting stars that zig-zag from their course We wander from our orbit's pathway; spoilThe role we're fitted for, to fail in twenty.Bring empty measures, that were shaped for plenty, At last as guerdon for a life of toil.There's lack of greatness in this generation Because no more man centres on one thought. We know this truth, and yet we heed it not:The secret of success is Concentration.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Vision And Echo
I have seen that which sweeter isThan happy dreams come true.I have heard that which echo isOf speech past all I ever knew.Vision and echo, come again,Nor let me grieve in easeless pain!It was a hill I saw, that roseLike smoke over the street,Whose greening rampires were uprearedSuddenly almost at my feet;And tall trees nodded tremblinglyMaking the plain day visionary.But ah, the song, the song I heardAnd grieve to hear no more!It was not angel-voice, nor child'sSinging alone and happy, norNote of the wise prophetic thrushAs lonely in the leafless bush.It was not these, and yet I knewThat song; but now, alas,My unpurged ears prove all too grossTo keep the nameless air that wasAnd is not; and...
John Frederick Freeman
Sleep
Oh! is it Death that comesTo have a foretaste of the whole? To-night the planets and the stars Will glimmer through my window-barsBut will not shine upon my soul!For I shall lie as deadThough yet I am above the ground; All passionless, with scarce a breath, With hands of rest and eyes of death,I shall be carried swiftly round.Or if my life should breakThe idle night with doubtful gleams, Through mossy arches will I go, Through arches ruinous and low,And chase the true and false in dreams.Why should I fall asleep?When I am still upon my bed The moon will shine, the winds will rise And all around and through the skiesThe light clouds travel o'er my head!O busy, busy things,
George MacDonald
Various the roads of life; in one
Various the roads of life; in oneAll terminate, one lonely wayWe go; and 'Is he gone?'Is all our best friends say.
Nuns Fret Not At Their Convent's Narrow Room
Nuns fret not at their convent's narrow room;And hermits are contented with their cells;And students with their pensive citadels;Maids at the wheel, the weaver at his loom,Sit blithe and happy; bees that soar for bloom,High as the highest Peak of Furness-fells,Will murmur by the hour in foxglove bells:In truth the prison, unto which we doomOurselves, no prison is: and hence for me,In sundry moods, 'twas pastime to be boundWithin the Sonnet's scanty plot of ground;Pleased if some Souls (for such there needs must be)Who have felt the weight of too much liberty,Should find brief solace there, as I have found.