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The Old Tune - Thirty-Sixth Variation
This shred of song you bid me bringIs snatched from fancy's embers;Ah, when the lips forget to sing,The faithful heart remembers!Too swift the wings of envious TimeTo wait for dallying phrases,Or woven strands of labored rhymeTo thread their cunning mazes.A word, a sigh, and lo, how plainIts magic breath disclosesOur life's long vista through a laneOf threescore summers' roses!One language years alone can teachIts roots are young affectionsThat feel their way to simplest speechThrough silent recollections.That tongue is ours. How few the wordsWe need to know a brother!As simple are the notes of birds,Yet well they know each other.This freezing month of ice and snowThat brings our lives...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Winter Nightfall
The old yellow stucco Of the time of the Regent Is flaking and peeling: The rows of square windows In the straight yellow building Are empty and still; And the dusty dark evergreens Guarding the wicket Are draped with wet cobwebs, And above this poor wilderness Toneless and sombre Is the flat of the hill. They said that a colonel Who long ago died here Was the last one to live here: An old retired colonel, Some Fraser or Murray, I don't know his name; Death came here and summoned him, And the shells of him vanished Beyond all speculation; And silence resumed here, Silence and emptiness, And nobody came. Was it ...
John Collings Squire, Sir
The Old Byway
Its rotting fence one scarcely seesThrough sumac and wild blackberries,Thick elder and the bramble-rose,Big ox-eyed daisies where the beesHang droning in repose.The little lizards lie all dayGray on its rocks of lichen-gray;And, insect-Ariels of the sun,The butterflies make bright its way,Its path where chipmunks run.A lyric there the redbird lifts,While, twittering, the swallow drifts'Neath wandering clouds of sleepy cream, -In which the wind makes azure rifts, -O'er dells where wood-doves dream.The brown grasshoppers rasp and boundMid weeds and briers that hedge it round;And in its grass-grown ruts, - where stirsThe harmless snake, - mole-crickets soundTheir faery dulcimers.At evening, when the ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Wild Asters
In the spring I asked the daisiesIf his words were true,And the clever, clear-eyed daisiesAlways knew.Now the fields are brown and barren,Bitter autumn blows,And of all the stupid astersNot one knows.
Sara Teasdale
Ode To Autumn
1.Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness,Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun;Conspiring with him how to load and blessWith fruit the vines that round the thatch-eves run;To bend with apples the moss'd cottage-trees,And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core;To swell the gourd, and plump the hazel shellsWith a sweet kernel; to set budding more,And still more, later flowers for the bees,Until they think warm days will never cease,For Summer has o'er-brimm'd their clammy cells.2.Who hath not seen thee oft amid thy store?Sometimes whoever seeks abroad may findThee sitting careless on a granary floor,Thy hair soft-lifted by the winnowing wind;Or on a half-reap'd furrow sound asleep,Drows'd with the fume of poppies...
John Keats
Going to Tobog.
Into my disappointment-cup The snowflakes fell and blocked the road,And so I thought I'd finish up The latest style of Christmas ode;When she, the charming little lass With eyes as bright as isinglass,Before a line my pen had wrought In strange attire came bounding in,As if she had with Bruno fought, And robbed him of his shaggy skin.She came to me robed cap-à-pie In her bewitching "blanket-suit,"In moccasin and toggery, All ready for "that icy chute,"And asked me if I thought she'd do; I shake with love of mischief true:"For what? - a polar bear? - why, yes!" "No, no!" she said, with half a pout."Why, one would think so, by your dress - Say, does your mother know you're out?"
Hattie Howard
John Horace Burleson
I won the prize essay at school Here in the village, And published a novel before I was twenty-five. I went to the city for themes and to enrich my art; There married the banker's daughter, And later became president of the bank - Always looking forward to some leisure To write an epic novel of the war. Meanwhile friend of the great, and lover of letters, And host to Matthew Arnold and to Emerson. An after dinner speaker, writing essays For local clubs. At last brought here - My boyhood home, you know - Not even a little tablet in Chicago To keep my name alive. How great it is to write the single line: "Roll on, thou deep and dark blue Ocean, roll!"
Edgar Lee Masters
Verse-Making Was Least Of My Virtues
Verse-making was least of my virtues: I viewed with despairWealth that never yet was but might be, all that verse-making wereIf the life would but lengthen to wish, let the mind be laid bare.So I said, "To do little is bad, to do nothing is worse",And made verse.Love-making, how simple a matter! No depths to explore,No heights in a life to ascend! No disheartening Before,No affrighting Hereafter, love now will be love ever more.So I felt "To keep silence were folly:" all language above,I made love.
Robert Browning
Barter
There is a long thin line of fading gold In the far West, and the transfigured leaves On some slight, topmost bough that sways and heavesHang limp and tremulous. Nor warm, nor cold The pungent air, and, 'neath the yellow haze, Show flushed and glad the wild, October ways.There is a soft enchantment in the air, A mystery the Summer knows not, nor The sturdy, frost-crowned Winter. Nature woreHer blandest smile to-day, as here and there I wandered, elf-beset, through wood and field And gleaned the glories of the autumn yield.A bunch of purple aster, golden-rod Darkened by the first frost, a drooping spray Of scarlet barberry, and tall and grayThe silk-cored cotton with its bursting pod, Some tarnished m...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
A Year's Windfalls
On the wind of January Down flits the snow,Travelling from the frozen North As cold as it can blow.Poor robin redbreast, Look where he comes;Let him in to feel your fire, And toss him of your crumbs.On the wind in February Snowflakes float still,Half inclined to turn to rain, Nipping, dripping, chill.Then the thaws swell the streams, And swollen rivers swell the sea: -If the winter ever ends How pleasant it will be!In the wind of windy March The catkins drop down,Curly, caterpillar-like, Curious green and brown.With concourse of nest-building birds And leaf-buds by the way,We begin to think of flowers And life and nuts some day.With the gusts o...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
His Dream.
I dreamt, last night, Thou didst transfuseOil from Thy jar into my cruse;And pouring still Thy wealthy store,The vessel full did then run o'er;Methought I did Thy bounty chideTo see the waste; but 'twas repliedBy Thee, dear God, God gives man seedOfttimes for waste, as for his need.Then I could say that house is bareThat has not bread and some to spare.
Robert Herrick
Samuel Butler Et Al.
Let me consider your emergenceFrom the milieu of our youth:We have played all the afternoon, grown hungry.No meal has been prepared, where have you been?Toward sun's decline we see you down the path,And run to meet you, and perhaps you smile,Or take us in your arms. Perhaps againYou look at us, say nothing, are absorbed,Or chide us for our dirty frocks or faces.Of running wild without our mealsYou do not speak.Then in the house, seized with a sudden joy,After removing gloves and hat, you run,As with a winged descending flight, and cry,Half song, half exclamation,Seize one of us,Crush one of us with mad embraces, biteEars of us in a rapture of affection."You shall have supper," then you say.The stove lids rattle, wood's p...
Margaret
I.O sweet pale Margaret,O rare pale Margaret,What lit your eyes with tearful power,Like moonlight on a falling shower?Who lent you, love, your mortal dowerOf pensive thought and aspect pale,Your melancholy sweet and frailAs perfume of the cuckoo-flower?From the westward-winding flood,From the evening-lighted wood,From all things outward you have wonA tearful grace, as tho you stoodBetween the rainbow and the sun.The very smile before you speak,That dimples your transparent cheek,Encircles all the heart, and feedethThe senses with a still delightOf dainty sorrow without sound,Like the tender amber round,Which the moon about her spreadeth,Moving thro a fleecy night.II.You love, remaining peacefull...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
A Rolling Stone
There's sunshine in the heart of me, My blood sings in the breeze; The mountains are a part of me, I'm fellow to the trees. My golden youth I'm squandering, Sun-libertine am I; A-wandering, a-wandering, Until the day I die. I was once, I declare, a Stone-Age man, And I roomed in the cool of a cave; I have known, I will swear, in a new life-span, The fret and the sweat of a slave: For far over all that folks hold worth, There lives and there leaps in me A love of the lowly things of earth, And a passion to be free. To pitch my tent with no prosy plan, To range and to change at will; To mock at the mastership of man, To seek Adventure's thrill....
Robert William Service
Cotton-Wool
Shun the brush and shun the pen,Shun the ways of clever men,When they prove that black is white,Whey they swear that wrong is right,When they roast the singing starsLike chestnuts, in between the bars, Children, let a wandering fool Stuff your ears with cotton-wool.When you see a clever manRun as quickly as you can.You must never, never, neverThink that Socrates was clever.The cleverest thing I ever knewNow cracks walnuts at the Zoo. Children, let a wandering fool Stuff your ears with cotton-wool.Homer could not scintillate.Milton, too, was merely great.That's a very different matterFrom talking like a frantic hatter.Keats and Shelley had no tricks.Wordsworth never climbed up s...
Alfred Noyes
Lines, Sent To A Gentleman Whom He Had Offended.
The friend whom wild from wisdom's way, The fumes of wine infuriate send; (Not moony madness more astray;) Who but deplores that hapless friend? Mine was th' insensate frenzied part, Ah, why should I such scenes outlive Scenes so abhorrent to my heart! 'Tis thine to pity and forgive.
Robert Burns
Summer Evening
The sinking sun is taking leave,And sweetly gilds the edge of Eve,While huddling clouds of purple dyeGloomy hang the western sky.Crows crowd croaking over head,Hastening to the woods to bed.Cooing sits the lonely dove,Calling home her absent love.With "Kirchup! Kirchup!" mong the wheatsPartridge distant partridge greets;Beckoning hints to those that roam,That guide the squandered covey home.Swallows check their winding flight,And twittering on the chimney light.Round the pond the martins flirt,Their snowy breasts bedaubed with dirt,While the mason, neath the slates,Each mortar-bearing bird awaits:By art untaught, each labouring spouseCurious daubs his hanging house.Bats flit by in hood and cowl;Through the ba...
John Clare
The Truants
Ere my heart beats too coldly and faintly To remember sad things, yet be gay,I would sing a brief song of the world's little children Magic hath stolen away.The primroses scattered by April, The stars of the wide Milky Way,Cannot outnumber the hosts of the children Magic hath stolen away.The buttercup green of the meadows, The snow of the blossoming may,Lovelier are not than the legions of children Magic hath stolen away.The waves tossing surf in the moonbeam, The albatross lone on the spray,Alone know the tears wept in vain for the children Magic hath stolen away.In vain: for at hush of the evening When the stars twinkle into the grey,Seems to echo the far-away calling of children<...
Walter De La Mare