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Twilight.
Draped in shadows stands the mountainAgainst the eastern sky,Above it the fair summer moonLooks downward tenderly;And Venus in the glowing west,Opens her languid eye.Now the winds breathe softer music,Half a song, and half a sigh;While twilight wraps her purple veilAround us silently,And our thoughts appear like pictures,Pictures shaded wondrously.Quiet landscapes, sweet and lonely,Silvery sea, and shadowy glade,Forest lakes by man forsaken,Where the white fawn's steps are stayed;And contadinos straying'Neath the Pantheon's solemn shade.And we see the wave bridged overBy the moonlight's mystic link,Desert wells by tall palms shaded,Where dusky camels drink;While dark-eyed Arab maidensF...
Marietta Holley
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto XIII
We reach'd the summit of the scale, and stoodUpon the second buttress of that mountWhich healeth him who climbs. A cornice there,Like to the former, girdles round the hill;Save that its arch with sweep less ample bends.Shadow nor image there is seen; all smoothThe rampart and the path, reflecting noughtBut the rock's sullen hue. "If here we waitFor some to question," said the bard, "I fearOur choice may haply meet too long delay."Then fixedly upon the sun his eyesHe fastn'd, made his right the central pointFrom whence to move, and turn'd the left aside."O pleasant light, my confidence and hope,Conduct us thou," he cried, "on this new way,Where now I venture, leading to the bournWe seek. The universal world to theeOwes warmth a...
Dante Alighieri
Translations. - Die Heimkehr. (From Heine.)
LX.They have company this evening,And the house is full of light;Up there at the shining windowMoves a shadowy form in white.Thou seest me not--in the darknessI stand here below, apart;Yet less, ah less thou seestInto my gloomy heart!My gloomy heart it loves thee,Loves thee in every spot:It breaks, it bleeds, it shudders--Butinto it thou seest not!LXII.Diamonds hast thou, and pearls,And all by which men lay store;And of eyes thou hast the fairest--Darling, what wouldst thou more?Upon thine eyes so lovelyHave I a whole army-corpsOf undying songs composed--Dearest, what wouldst thou more?And with thine eyes so lovelyThou hast tortured me very sore,And ...
George MacDonald
Uncertainty.
Oh dread uncertainty!Life-wasting agony!How dost thou pain the heart,Causing such tears to start,As sorrow never shedO'er hopes for ever fled.For memory hoards up joyBeyond Time's dull alloy;Pleasures that once have beenShed light upon the scene,As setting suns fling backA bright and glowing track,To show they once have castA glory o'er the past;But thou, tormenting fiend,Beneath Hope's pinions screened,Leagued with distrust and pain,Makest her promise vain;Weaving in life's fair crownThistles instead of down.Who would not rather knowPresent than coming woe?For certain sorrow bringsA healing in its wings.The softening touch of yearsStill dries the mourner's tears;For human minds ...
Susanna Moodie
Knowledge
Would you believe in Presences Unseen - In life beyond this earthly life?BE STILL: Be stiller yet; and listen. Set the screen Of silence at the portal of your will.Relax, and let the world go by unheard.And seal your lips with some all-sacred word.Breathe 'God,' in any tongue - it means the same; LOVE ABSOLUTE: Think, feel, absorb the thought;Shut out all else; until a subtle flame (A spark from God's creative centre caught)Shall permeate your being, and shall glow,Increasing in its splendour, till, YOU KNOW.Not in a moment, or an hour, or day The knowledge comes; the power is far too great,To win in any desultory way. No soul is worthy till it learns to wait.Day after day be patient, then, oh, soul;...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Phantasmagoria
Rigid sleeps the house in darkness, I aloneLike a thing unwarrantable cross the hallAnd climb the stairs to find the group of doorsStanding angel-stern and tall.I want my own room's shelter. But what is thisThrong of startled beings suddenly thrownIn confusion against my entry? Is it only the trees'Large shadows from the outside street lamp blown?Phantom to phantom leaning; strange women weepAloud, suddenly on my mindStartling a fear unspeakable, as the shuddering windBreaks and sobs in the blind.So like to women, tall strange women weeping!Why continually do they cross the bed?Why does my soul contract with unnatural fear?I am listening! Is anything said?Ever the long black figures swoop by the bed;They seem to be...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
From Monte Pincio
Evening is coming, the sun waxes red,Radiant colors from heaven are beamingLife's lustrous longings in infinite streaming; -Glory in death o'er the mountains is spread.Cupolas burn, but the fog in far massesOver the bluish-black fields softly passes,Rolling as whilom oblivion pale;Hid is yon valley 'neath thousand years' veil. Evening so red and warm Glows as the people swarm, Notes of the cornet flare, Flowers and brown eyes fair.Great men of old stand in marble erected,Waiting, scarce known and neglected.Vespers are ringing, through roseate airNebulous floating of tone-sacrifices,Twilight in churches now broadens and rises,Incense and word fill the evening with prayer.Over the Sabines the flame-belt is knotted,
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Landscape
In order to write my chaste verses Ill lielike an astrologer near to the skyand, by the bell-towers, listen in dreamto their solemn hymns on the air-stream.Hands on chin, from my attics heightIll see the workshops of song and light,the gutters, the belfries those masts of the city,the vast skies that yield dreams of eternityIt is sweet to see stars being born in the blue,through the mists, the lamps at the windows, too,the rivers of smoke climbing the firmament,and the moon pouring out her pale enchantment.Ill see the springs, summers, autumns glow,and when winter brings the monotonous snowIll close all my doors and shutters tightand build palaces of faery in the night.Then Ill dream of blue-wet horizons,weeping fountains of ...
Charles Baudelaire
At William Maclennan's Grave
Here where the cypress tallShadows the stucco wall,Bronze and deep,Where the chrysanthemums blow,And the roses - blood and snow -He lies asleep.Florence dreameth afar;Memories of foray and war,Murmur still;The Certosa crowns with a coldCloud of snow and goldThe olive hill.What has he now for the streamsBorn sweet and deep with dreamsFrom the cedar meres?Only the Arno's flow,Turbid, and weary, and slowWith wrath and tears.What has he now for the songOf the boatmen, joyous and long,Where the rapids shine?Only the sound of toil,Where the peasants press the soilFor the oil and wine.Spirit-fellow in soothWith bold La Salle and Duluth,And La Vérandrye, -Nothing ...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Conference Between Christ, The Saints, And The Soul
(Lyra Eucharistica, 1863.)I am pale with sick desire, For my heart is far awayFrom this world's fitful fire And this world's waning day;In a dream it overleaps A world of tedious illsTo where the sunshine sleeps On th' everlasting hills. Say the Saints - There Angels ease us Glorified and white. They say - We rest in Jesus, Where is not day nor night.My Soul saith - I have sought For a home that is not gained,I have spent yet nothing bought, Have laboured but not attained;My pride strove to rise and grow, And hath but dwindled down;My love sought love, and lo! Hath not attained its crown. Say the Saints - Fresh Souls increase us, None languish...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Treasures. (Little Poems In Prose.)
1. Through cycles of darkness the diamond sleeps in its coal-black prison.2. Purely incrusted in its scaly casket, the breath-tarnished pearl slumbers in mud and ooze.3. Buried in the bowels of earth, rugged and obscure, lies the ingot of gold.4. Long hast thou been buried, O Israel, in the bowels of earth; long hast thou slumbered beneath the overwhelming waves; long hast thou slept in the rayless house of darkness.5. Rejoice and sing, for only thus couldst thou rightly guard the golden knowledge, Truth, the delicate pearl and the adamantine jewel of the Law.
Emma Lazarus
Amour 7
Stay, stay, sweet Time; behold, or ere thou passeFrom world to world, thou long hast sought to see,That wonder now wherein all wonders be,Where heauen beholds her in a mortall glasse.Nay, looke thee, Time, in this Celesteall glasse,And thy youth past in this faire mirror see:Behold worlds Beautie in her infancie,What shee was then, and thou, or ere shee was.Now passe on, Time: to after-worlds tell this,Tell truelie, Time, what in thy time hath beene,That they may tel more worlds what Time hath seene,And heauen may ioy to think on past worlds blisse. Heere make a Period, Time, and saie for mee, She was the like that neuer was, nor neuer more shalbe.
Michael Drayton
Nocturne Of Remembered Spring
I.Moonlight silvers the tops of trees,Moonlight whitens the lilac shadowed wallAnd through the evening fall,Clearly, as if through enchanted seas,Footsteps passing, an infinite distance away,In another world and another day.Moonlight turns the purple lilacs blue,Moonlight leaves the fountain hoar and old,And the boughs of elms grow green and cold,Our footsteps echo on gleaming stones,The leaves are stirred to a jargon of muted tones.This is the night we have kept, you say:This is the moonlit night that will never die.Through the grey streets our memories retainLet us go back again.II.Mist goes up from the river to dim the stars,The river is black and cold; so let us danceTo flare of horns, and clang of cymbal...
Conrad Aiken
The Spirits For Good
We come with peace and reason,We come with love and light,To banish black self-treasonAnd everlasting night.We know no god nor devil,We neither drive nor lead,We come to banish evilIn thought as well as deed.And this our grandest mission,And this our purest worth;To banish superstition,The blackest curse on earth.We come to pass no sentence,For ours is not the power,The cowards vain repentanceBut wastes the waiting hour.Tis not for us to lengthenThe years of wasted lives;We come to help and strengthenThe goodness that survives.We promise nought hereafter,We cannot conquer pain,But work, and rest, and laughter,Will soothe the tortured brain.That which is lost, ...
Henry Lawson
The Higher Brotherhood.
To come in touch with mysteriesOf beauty idealizing Earth,Go seek the hills, grown old with trees,The old hills wise with death and birth.There you may hear the heart that beatsIn streams, where music has its source;And in wild rocks of green retreatsBehold the silent soul of force.Above the love that emanatesFrom human passion, and reflectsThe flesh, must be the love that waitsOn Nature, whose high call electsNone to her secrets save the fewWho hold that facts are far less realThan dreams, with which all facts indueThemselves approaching the Ideal.
Madison Julius Cawein
Half-Waking
I thought it was the little bedI slept in long ago;A straight white curtain at the head,And two smooth knobs below.I thought I saw the nursery fire,And in a chair well-knownMy mother sat, and did not tireWith reading all alone.If I should make the slightest soundTo show that I'm awake,She'd rise, and lap the blankets round,My pillow softly shake;Kiss me, and turn my face to seeThe shadows on the wall,And then sing Rousseau's Dream to me,Till fast asleep I fall.But this is not my little bed;That time is far away;With strangers now I live instead,From dreary day to day.
William Allingham
The Lost Path.
Air--Grádh mo chroidhe.I.Sweet thoughts, bright dreams, my comfort be,All comfort else has flown;For every hope was false to me,And here I am, alone.What thoughts were mine in early youth!Like some old Irish song,Brimful of love, and life, and truth,My spirit gushed along.II.I hoped to right my native isle,I hoped a soldier's fame,I hoped to rest in woman's smileAnd win a minstrel's name--Oh! little have I served my land,No laurels press my brow,I have no woman's heart or hand,Nor minstrel honours now.III.But fancy has a magic power,It brings me wreath and crown,And woman's love, the self-same hourIt smites oppression down.Sweet thoughts...
Thomas Osborne Davis
Voyaging
for Maxime du CampI.The wide-eyed child in love with maps and plansFinds the world equal to his appetite.How grand the universe by light of lamps,How petty in the memory's clear sight.One day we leave, with fire in the brain,Heart great with rancour, bitter in its mood;Outward we travel on the rolling main,Lulling infinity in finitude:Some gladly flee their homelands gripped in vice,Some, horrors of their childhood, others stillAstrologers lost in a woman's eyesSome perfumed Circe with a tyrant's will.Not to become a beast, each desperate oneMakes himself drunk on space and blazing skies;The gnawing ice, the copper-burning sunEfface the scars of kisses and of lies.But the true voyagers set out to ...