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Italy
There is a country in my mind,Lovelier than a poet blindCould dream of, who had never knownThis world of drought and dust and stoneIn all its ugliness: a placeFull of an all but human grace;Whose dells retain the printed formOf heavenly sleep, and seem yet warmFrom some pure body newly risen;Where matter is no more a prison,But freedom for the soul to knowIts native beauty. For things glowThere with an inward truth and areAll fire and colour like a star.And in that land are domes and towersThat hang as light and bright as flowersUpon the sky, and seem a birthRather of air than solid earth.Sometimes I dream that walking thereIn the green shade, all unawareAt a new turn of the golden glade,I shall see her, and ...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
?????? ???? ??? ?????? (Greek Poems)
If, when in cheerless wanderings, dull and cold,A sense of human kindliness hath found us,We seem to have around usAn atmosphere all gold,Midst darkest shades a halo rich of shine,An element, that while the bleak wind bloweth,On the rich heart bestowethImbreathed draughts of wine;Heaven guide, the cup be not, as chance may be,To some vain mate given up as soon as tasted!No, nor on thee be wasted,Thou trifler, Poesy!Heaven grant the manlier heart, that timely, ereYouth fly, with lifes real tempest would be coping:The fruit of dreamy hopingIs, waking, blank despair.
Arthur Hugh Clough
Amor Profanus
Beyond the pale of memory,In some mysterious dusky grove;A place of shadows utterly,Where never coos the turtle-dove,A world forgotten of the sun:I dreamed we met when day was done,And marvelled at our ancient love.Met there by chance, long kept apart,We wandered through the darkling glades;And that old language of the heartWe sought to speak: alas! poor shades!Over our pallid lips had runThe waters of oblivion,Which crown all loves of men or maids.In vain we stammered: from afarOur old desire shone cold and dead:That time was distant as a star,When eyes were bright and lips were red.And still we went with downcast eyeAnd no delight in being nigh,Poor shadows most uncomforted.Ah, Lalage! while lif...
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Behind The Arras
I like the old house tolerably well,Where I must dwellLike a familiar gnome;And yet I never shall feel quite at home:I love to roam.Day after day I loiter and exploreFrom door to door;So many treasures lureThe curious mind. What histories obscureThey must immure!I hardly know which room I care for best;This fronting west,With the strange hills in view,Where the great sun goes,--where I may go too,When my lease is through,--Or this one for the morning and the east,Where a man may feastHis eyes on looming sails,And be the first to catch their foreign hailsOr spy their bales.Then the pale summer twilights towards the pole!It thrills my soulWith wonder and delight,When gold-green sha...
Bliss Carman
And there shall be no night there and they
"And there shall be no night there and theyneed no candle, and neither light of the sun;for the Lord God giveth them Light."Your place is Heaven, a stormless nightless home?Then we twain never more shall live togetherSuch days of gladdest thought as here, whilom,We spent amid the change of earthly weather.No white young day like hope smiles in yon east,Or, westering, cleaves wild-omened scarlet glooms;No frosty breezes wreathe your woods in mist;No breaker o'er Heaven's glassy ocean booms.No scents of delvéd dewy soil arise;No storm-blue pall in state hangs hill or lea;No nightly seas swirl in grey agonies;Nor old Earth's sweet decays dye herb or tree.Do wan gold tints shot on the midnight airHerald the moon...
Thomas Runciman
The Wishing Gate
[In the vale of Grasmere, by the side of an old highwayleading to Ambleside, is a gate, which, from time out ofmind, has been called the Wishing-gate, from a belief thatwishes formed or indulged there have a favorable issue.]Hope rules a land forever green:All powers that serve the bright-eyed QueenAre confident and gay;Clouds at her bidding disappear;Points she to aught? the bliss draws near,And Fancy smooths the way.Not such the land of Wishes thereDwell fruitless day-dreams, lawless prayer,And thoughts with things at strife;Yet how forlorn, should ye departYe superstitions of the heart,How poor, were human life!When magic lore abjured its might,Ye did not forfeit one dear right,One tender claim abate;Witne...
William Wordsworth
The Old Man
Days of darkness, of dreariness, have come.... Thy own infirmities, the sufferings of those dear to thee, the chill and gloom of old age. All that thou hast loved, to which thou hast given thyself irrevocably, is falling, going to pieces. The way is all down-hill.What canst thou do? Grieve? Complain? Thou wilt aid not thyself nor others that way....On the bowed and withering tree the leaves are smaller and fewer, but its green is yet the same.Do thou too shrink within, withdraw into thyself, into thy memories, and there, deep down, in the very depths of the soul turned inwards on itself, thy old life, to which thou alone hast the key, will be bright again for thee, in all the fragrance, all the fresh green, and the grace and power of its spring!But beware ... look not forward, poor old man!<...
Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev
The Flight Of The Crows
The autumn afternoon is dying o'er The quiet western valley where I lieBeneath the maples on the river shore, Where tinted leaves, blue waters and fair sky Environ all; and far above some birds are flying byTo seek their evening haven in the breast And calm embrace of silence, while they singTe Deums to the night, invoking rest For busy chirping voice and tired wing - And in the hush of sleeping trees their sleeping cradles swing.In forest arms the night will soonest creep, Where sombre pines a lullaby intone,Where Nature's children curl themselves to sleep, And all is still at last, save where alone A band of black, belated crows arrive from lands unknown.Strange sojourn has been theirs since waking day,<...
Emily Pauline Johnson
Sorrow
Sorrow like a ceaseless rain Beats upon my heart. People twist and scream in pain,-- Dawn will find them still again; This has neither wax nor wane, Neither stop nor start. People dress and go to town; I sit in my chair. All my thoughts are slow and brown: Standing up or sitting down Little matters, or what gown Or what shoes I wear.
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Friendship
A ruddy drop of manly bloodThe surging sea outweighs,The world uncertain comes and goes;The lover rooted stays.I fancied he was fled,--And, after many a year,Glowed unexhausted kindliness,Like daily sunrise there.My careful heart was free again,O friend, my bosom said,Through thee alone the sky is arched,Through thee the rose is red;All things through thee take nobler form,And look beyond the earth,The mill-round of our fate appearsA sun-path in thy worth.Me too thy nobleness has taughtTo master my despair;The fountains of my hidden lifeAre through thy friendship fair.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Peter's Field
[Knows he who tills this lonely fieldTo reap its scanty corn,What mystic fruit his acres yieldAt midnight and at morn?]That field by spirits bad and good,By Hell and Heaven is haunted,And every rood in the hemlock woodI know is ground enchanted.[In the long sunny afternoonThe plain was full of ghosts:I wandered up, I wandered down,Beset by pensive hosts.]For in those lonely grounds the sunShines not as on the town,In nearer arcs his journeys run,And nearer stoops the moon.There in a moment I have seenThe buried Past arise;The fields of Thessaly grew green,Old gods forsook the skies.I cannot publish in my rhymeWhat pranks the greenwood played;It was the Carnival of time,And ...
Love Fulfilled.
Hast thou longed through weary daysFor the sight of one loved face?Mast thou cried aloud for rest,Mid the pain of sundering hours;Cried aloud for sleep and death,Since the sweet unhoped for bestWas a shadow and a breath?O, long now, for no fear lowersO'er these faint feet-kissing flowers.O, rest now; and yet in sleepAll thy longing shalt thou keep.Thou shalt rest and have no fearOf a dull awaking near,Of a life for ever blind,Uncontent and waste and wide.Thou shalt wake and think it sweetThat thy love is near and kind.Sweeter still for lips to meet;Sweetest that thine heart doth hideLonging all unsatisfiedWith all longing's answeringHowsoever close ye cling.Thou rememberest how of oldE'en th...
William Morris
A Rich Man's Reverie.
The years go by, but they little seemLike those within our dream;The years that stood in such luring guise,Beckoning us into Paradise,To jailers turn as time goes byGuarding that fair land, By-and-By,Where we thought to blissfully rest,The sound of whose forests' balmy leavesSwaying to dream winds strangely sweet,We heard in our bed 'neath the cottage eaves,Whose towers we saw in the western skiesWhen with eager eyes and tremulous lip,We watched the silent, silver shipOf the crescent moon, sailing out and awayO'er the land we would reach some day, some day.But years have flown, and our weary feetHave never reached that Isle of the Blest;But care we have felt, and an aching breast,A lifelong struggle, grief, unrest,That h...
Marietta Holley
The Wind Over The Chimney
See, the fire is sinking low,Dusky red the embers glow, While above them still I cower,While a moment more I linger,Though the clock, with lifted finger, Points beyond the midnight hour.Sings the blackened log a tuneLearned in some forgotten June From a school-boy at his play,When they both were young together,Heart of youth and summer weather Making all their holiday.And the night-wind rising, hark!How above there in the dark, In the midnight and the snow,Ever wilder, fiercer, grander,Like the trumpets of Iskander, All the noisy chimneys blow!Every quivering tongue of flameSeems to murmur some great name, Seems to say to me, "Aspire!"But the night-wind answers, "HollowA...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
No Coward Soul Is Mine
No coward soul is mine,No trembler in the world,s storm-troubled sphere:I see Heaven's glories shine,And Faith shines equal arming me from Fear.O God within my breast.Almighty ever-present Deity!Life , that in me has rest,As I Undying Life, have power in thee!Vain are the thousand creedsThat move men's hearts, unutterably vain;Worthless as withered weeds,Or idlest froth amid the boundless main,To waken doubt in oneHolding so fast by Thy infinity;So surely anchored onThe steadfast rock of Immortality.With wide-embracing loveThy Spirit animates eternal years,Pervades and broods above,Changes, sustains, dissolves, creates, and rears.Though Earth and moon were gone,And suns and universes c...
Emily Bronte
Forevermore.
IO heart that vainly followsThe flight of summer swallows,Far over holts and hollows,O'er frozen buds and flowers;To violet seas and levels,Where Love Time's locks dishevelsWith merry mimes and revelsOf aphrodisiac Hours.IIO Love who, dreaming, borrowsDead love from sad to-morrows,The broken heart that sorrows,The blighted hopes that weep;Pale faces pale with sleeping;Red eyelids red with weeping;Dead lips dead secrets keeping,That shake the deeps of sleep!IIIO Memory that showersAbout the withered hoursWhite, ruined, sodden flowers,Dead dust and bitter rain;Dead loves with faces teary;Dead passions wan and dreary;The weary, weary, weary,Dead h...
Madison Julius Cawein
Assurances
I need no assurances--I am a man who is preoccupied, of his own Soul;I do not doubt that from under the feet, and beside the hands and face I am cognizant of, are now looking faces I am not cognizant of--calm and actual faces;I do not doubt but the majesty and beauty of the world are latent in any iota of the world;I do not doubt I am limitless, and that the universes are limitless-- in vain I try to think how limitless;I do not doubt that the orbs, and the systems of orbs, play their swift sports through the air on purpose--and that I shall one day be eligible to do as much as they, and more than they;I do not doubt that temporary affairs keep on and on, millions of years;I do not doubt interiors have their interiors, and exteriors have their exteriors--and that the eye-sight has another eye-sight, and...
Walt Whitman
Lines Suggested By A Portrait From The Pencil Of F. Stone
Beguiled into forgetfulness of careDue to the day's unfinished task; of penOr book regardless, and of that fair sceneIn Nature's prodigality displayedBefore my window, oftentimes and longI gaze upon a Portrait whose mild gleamOf beauty never ceases to enrichThe common light; whose stillness charms the air,Or seems to charm it, into like repose;Whose silence, for the pleasure of the ear,Surpasses sweetest music. There she sitsWith emblematic purity attiredIn a white vest, white as her marble neckIs, and the pillar of the throat would beBut for the shadow by the drooping chinCast into that recess, the tender shade,The shade and light, both there and everywhere,And through the very atmosphere she breathes,Broad, clear, and toned harmon...