Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 86 of 117
Previous
Next
The Vail
He only sees both sides of that dark vailThat hangs before men's eyes--He only. It is well!Hope ever stands unseenBehind the screen,For knowledge would bring Hope to sudden death,And cloud the present with the coming ill.I would lie still, Dear Lord,I would lie still,And stay my troubled heart on Thee,Obedient to Thy will.
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Installation Ode.
Blest Ruler, at whose wordThe universe was stirred, And there was light;Look now with gracious loveFrom Thy bright home above,Direct in every move, Each proved, Sir Knight.In mysteries well skilled,Their hearts with courage filled, Behold they stand;Strengthen their faith in thee,Let hope their anchor be,And heaven-born charity Mark their command.Endure with holy lightEach suppliant, Sir Knight; May each one proveFaithful in watch and word;Strong the oppressed, to guardAnd win the just reward Of Faith and Love.
Harriet Annie Wilkins
A Man And His Image
All day the nations climb and crawl and prayIn one long pilgrimage to one white shrine,Where sleeps a saint whose pardon, like his peace,Is wide as death, as common, as divine.His statue in an aureole fills the shrine,The reckless nightingale, the roaming fawn,Share the broad blessing of his lifted hands,Under the canopy, above the lawn.But one strange night, a night of gale and flood,A sound came louder than the wild wind's tone;The grave-gates shook and opened: and one stoodBlue in the moonlight, rotten to the bone.Then on the statue, graven with holy smiles,There came another smile--tremendous--oneOf an Egyptian god. 'Why should you rise?'Do I not guard your secret from the sun?The nations come; they kneel among the f...
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
The Avenger Of Blood.
There were two sons of Ashur at work in the field,And one to the other his passion revealed--As the white barley bowed to the stroke of his scythe,He burst out in accents exultingly blithe-- "I have wooed a young maid!--I have wooed and I've won,On a lovelier face never glanced yon bright sun;To the tall stately cedar my love I'll compare,With her eyes' shaded glory, her long raven hair,And her bosom as white as the snow when it gleamsOn Lebanon's heights, ere washed down by the streams.She has ravished and filled my rapt soul with delight;She's more dear to my heart than yon heavens to my sight."-- "And who is the chosen?" his comrade replied,Whilst the deepest of crimson his swarthy cheek dyed,His severed lips trembled, his eagle eye fe...
Susanna Moodie
The Wasp And The Hornet
The two proud sisters of the sea,In glory and in doom! -Well may the eternal waters beTheir broad, unsculptured tomb!The wind that rings along the wave,The clear, unshadowed sun,Are torch and trumpet o'er the brave,Whose last green wreath is won!No stranger-hand their banners furled,No victor's shout they heard;Unseen, above them ocean curled,Safe by his own pale bird;The gnashing billows heaved and fell;Wild shrieked the midnight gale;Far, far beneath the morning swellWere pennon, spar, and sail.The land of Freedom! Sea and shoreAre guarded now, as whenHer ebbing waves to victory boreFair barks and gallant men;Oh, many a ship of prouder nameMay wave her starry fold,Nor trail, with deeper light of...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Charge At Balaklava.
Nolan halted where the squadrons,Stood impatient of delay,Out he drew his brief dispatches,Which their leader quickly snatches,At a glance their meaning catches;They are ordered to the fray!All that morning they had waited--As their frowning faces showed,Horses stamping, riders fretting,And their teeth together setting;Not a single sword-blade wettingAs the battle ebbed and flowed.Now the fevered spell is broken,Every man feels twice as large,Every heart is fiercely leaping,As a lion roused from sleeping,For they know they will be sweepingIn a moment to the charge.Brightly gleam six hundred sabres,And the brazen trumpets ring;Steeds are gathered, spurs are driven,And the heavens widely riven...
James Barron Hope
The Iroquois Side Of The Story.
I, an Iroquois brave,Speak from my forest grave,Where by Utawa's wave I sleep in glory.Listen, pale faces, then,Let years roll back again,While of Iroquois men I tell the story,We were the foremost race,That roamed the forest space;None stood before our face, Rousing our fierce wrath;By Stadacona's steep,Where Santee's waters sleep,Prairie broad, valley deep, Have been our war path.Eries by inland seas,Mountain bred Cherokees,Of us, Hodenosaunees, With fear grew frantic;Feared us who made their home,Under the pinetrees lone,Where the winds lash to foam, The wild Atlantic.Tribute from east and west,Of what we ...
Nora Pembroke
Even the Winds and the Sea obey
Said the Poet, I wouldnt maintain,As the mystical German has done,That the land, inexistent till then,To reward him then first saw the sun;And yet I could deem it was so,As oer the new waters he sailed,That his soul made the breezes to blow,With his courage the breezes had failed;His strong quiet purpose had stillThe hurricanes fury withheld;The resolve of his conquering willThe lingering vessel impelled:For the beings, the powers that rangeIn the air, on the earth, at our sides,Can modify, temper and changeStronger things than the winds and the tides,By forces occult can the lawsAs we style them of nature oerrule;Can cause, so to say, every cause,And our best mathematics befool;Can defeat calculation and plan,...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Destiny
Why each is striving, from of old,To love more deeply than he can?Still would be true, yet still grows cold?Ask of the Powers that sport with man!They yokd in him, for endless strife,A heart of ice, a soul of fire;And hurld him on the Field of Life,An aimless unallayd Desire.
Matthew Arnold
Epilogue To "Albion And Albanius."
After our Æsop's fable shown to-day, I come to give the moral of the play. Feign'd Zeal, you saw, set out the speedier pace: But the last heat, Plain Dealing won the race: Plain Dealing for a jewel has been known; But ne'er till now the jewel of a crown. When Heaven made man, to show the work divine, Truth was His image stamp'd upon the coin: And when a king is to a god refined, On all he says and does he stamps his mind: This proves a soul without alloy, and pure; Kings, like their gold, should every touch endure. To dare in fields is valour; but how few Dare be so thoroughly valiant,--to be true! The name of great let other kings affect: He's great indeed, the prince that is direct. His subj...
John Dryden
The Fascination Of Whats Difficult
The Fascination of whats difficultHas dried the sap out of my veins, and rentSpontaneous joy and natural contentOut of my heart. Theres something ails our coltThat must, as if it had not holy blood,Nor on an Olympus leaped from cloud to cloud,Shiver under the lash, strain, sweat and joltAs though it dragged road metal. My curse on playsThat have to be set up in fifty ways,On the days war with every knave and dolt,Theatre business, management of men.I swear before the dawn comes round againIll find the stable and pull out the bolt.
William Butler Yeats
Be In Earnest
Be in earnest, Christian toilers, Life is not the summer, dreamOf the careless, child that gathers Daisies in the noontide beam!It hath conflict, it hath danger, It hath sorrow, toil, and strife;Yet the weak alone will falter In the battle-field of life.There are burdens you may lighten, Toiling, struggling ones may cheer,Tear-dimmed eyes that you may brighten, Thorny paths that you may clear; -Erring ones, despised, neglected, You may lead to duty back, -Beacon-lights to be erected, All along life's crowded track.There are wrongs that must be righted, Sacred rights to be sustained,Truths, though trampled long and slighted, 'Mid the strife to be maintained; -Heavy, brooding mists...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Cuba.
As one long struggling to be free,O suffering isle! we look to thee In sympathy and deep desireThat thy fair borders yet shall holdA people happy, self-controlled, Saved and exalted - as by fire.Burning like thine own tropic heatThousands of lips afar repeat The story of thy wrongs and woes;While argosies to thee shall bear,Of men and money everywhere, Strength to withstand thy stubborn foes.Hispaniola waves her plumeDefiant over many a tomb Where sleep thy sons, the true and brave;But, lo! an army coming onThe places fill of heroes gone, For liberty their lives who gave.The nations wait to hear thy shoutOf "Independence!" ringing out, Chief of the Antilles, what wilt thou?Buf...
Hattie Howard
His Praise Of Finn
It is a week from yesterday I last saw Finn; I never saw a braver man. A king of heavy blows; my law, my adviser, my sense and my wisdom, prince and poet, braver than kings, King of the Fenians, brave in all countries; golden salmon of the sea, clean hawk of the air, rightly taught, avoiding lies; strong in his doings, a right judge, ready in courage, a high messenger in bravery and in music.His skin lime-white, his hair golden; ready to work, gentle to women; his great green vessels full of rough sharp wine. It is rich the king was, the head of his people.Seven sides Finn's house had, and seven score shields on every side. Fifty fighting men he had about him having woollen cloaks; ten bright drinking-cups in his hall, ten blue vessels, ten golden horns.It is a good household Finn had, without grudging,...
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
Look Now On That Adventurer Who Hath Paid
Look now on that Adventurer who hath paidHis vows to Fortune; who, in cruel slightOf virtuous hope, of liberty, and right,Hath followed wheresoe'er a way was madeBy the blind Goddess, ruthless, undismayed;And so hath gained at length a prosperous height,Round which the elements of worldly mightBeneath his haughty feet, like clouds, are laid.O joyless power that stands by lawless force!Curses are 'his' dire portion, scorn, and hate,Internal darkness and unquiet breath;And, if old judgments keep their sacred course,Him from that height shall Heaven precipitateBy violent and ignominious death.
William Wordsworth
Patience Taught By Nature
'O dreary life,' we cry, 'O dreary life!'And still the generations of the birdsSing through our sighing, and the flocks and herdsSerenely live while we are keeping strifeWith Heaven's true purpose in us, as a knifeAgainst which we may struggle! Ocean girdsUnslackened the dry land, savannah-swardsUnweary sweep, hills watch unworn, and rifeMeek leaves drop yearly from the forest-treesTo show, above, the unwasted stars that passIn their old glory: O thou God of old,Grant me some smaller grace than comes to these!But so much patience as a blade of grassGrows by, contented through the heat and cold.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - September.
1. WE are a shadow and a shining, we! One moment nothing seems but what we see, Nor aught to rule but common circumstance-- Nought is to seek but praise, to shun but chance; A moment more, and God is all in all, And not a sparrow from its nest can fall But from the ground its chirp goes up into his hall. 2. I know at least which is the better mood. When on a heap of cares I sit and brood, Like Job upon his ashes, sorely vext, I feel a lower thing than when I stood The world's true heir, fearless as, on its stalk, A lily meeting Jesus in his walk: I am not all mood--I can judge betwixt. 3. ...
George MacDonald
Under One Blanket.
The sun went down in flame and smoke,The cold night passed without alarms,And when the bitter morning brokeOur men stood to their arms.But not a foe in front was foundAfter the long and stubborn fight.The enemy had left the groundWhere we had lain that night.In hollows where the sun was lostUnthawed still lay the shining snow,And on the rugged ground the frostIn slender spears did grow.Close to us, where our final rushWas made at closing in of day,We saw, amid an awful hush,The rigid shapes of clay:Things, which but yesterday had life,And answered to the trumpet's call,Remained as victims of the strife,Clods of the Valley all!Then, the grim detail marched awayA grave from the hard soil...