Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 89 of 137
Previous
Next
Invocation
The burning fire shakes in the night,On high her silver candles gleam,With far-flung arms enflamed with light,The trees are lost in dream.Come in thy beauty! 'tis my love,Lost in far-wandering desire,Hath in the darkling deep aboveSet stars and kindled fire.
Walter De La Mare
Evening Hymn.
Sinking now in floods of light,The sun resigns the world to night;When a lingering glance he turns,The glowing west with glory burns,And the blushing heavens awhileLong retain his parting smile.Ere gray evening's sullen eye,Bids those tints of beauty die;Ere her tears have washed awayThe footsteps of departing day,Nature from her verdant bowersHer last long strain of rapture pours;Shrouded in her misty vest,She sings a drowsy world to rest,And tells to man, in thrilling strains,That the Lord Jehovah reigns! Lingering twilight dies away,Night resumes her ancient sway,Round her sable tresses twiningCountless hosts of stars are shining;Weaving round the brow of nightA coronet of living light:O'er the co...
Susanna Moodie
Of Memory. From Proverbial Philosophy
Where art thou, storehouse of the mind, gamer of facts and fancies, In what strange firmament are laid the beams of thine airy chambers?Or art thou that small cavern, the centre of the rolling brain,Where still one sandy morsel testifieth man's original?Or hast thou some grand globe, some common hall of intellect,Some spacious market-place for thought, where all do bring their wares.And gladly rescued from the littleness, the narrow closet of a self,The privileged soul hath large access, coming in the livery of learning?Live we as isolated worlds, perfect in substance and spirit,Each a sphere, with a special mind, prisoned in its shell of matter?Or rather, as converging radiations, parts of one majestic whole.Beams of the Sun, streams from the River, branches of the mighty...
Martin Farquhar Tupper
Love Eternal
The human heart will never change,The human dream will still go on,The enchanted earth be ever strangeWith moonlight and the morning sun,And still the seas shall shout for joy,And swing the stars as in a glass,The girl be angel for the boy,The lad be hero for the lass.The fashions of our mortal brainsNew names for dead men's thoughts shall give,But we find not for all our painsWhy 'tis so wonderful to live;The beauty of a meadow-flowerShall make a mock of all our skill,And God, upon his lonely towerShall keep his secret - secret still.The old magician of the skies,With coloured and sweet-smelling things,Shall charm the sense and trance the eyes,Still onward through a million springs;And nothing old and nothin...
Richard Le Gallienne
New Year's Night, 1916
The Earth moans in her sleepLike an old motherWhose sons have gone to the war,Who weeps silently in her heartTill dreams comfort her.The Earth tossesAs if she would shake off humanity,A burden too heavy to be borne,And free of the pest of intolerable men,Spin with woods and watersJoyously in the clear heavensIn the beautiful cool rains,Bearing gladly the dumb animals,And sleep when the time comesGlistening in the remains of sunlightWith marmoreal innocency.Be comforted, old mother,Whose sons have gone to the war;And be assured, O Earth,Of your burden of passionate men,For without them who would dream the dreamsThat encompass you with glory,Who would gather your youthAnd store it in the jar o...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Song.
Songs that could span the earth,When leaping thought had stirred them,In many an hour since birth,We heard or dreamed we heard them.Sometimes to all their swayWe yield ourselves half fearing,Sometimes with hearts grown greyWe curse ourselves for hearing.We toil and but begin;In vain our spirits fret them,We strive, and cannot win,Nor evermore forget them.A light that will not stand,That comes and goes in flashes,Fair fruits that in the handAre turned to dust and ashes.Yet still the deep thoughts ringAround and through and through us,Sweet mights that make us sing,But bring no resting to us.
Archibald Lampman
Reconciliation
I begin through the grass once again to be bound to the Lord;I can see, through a face that has faded, the face full of restOf the Earth, of the Mother, my heart with her heart in accord:As I lie mid the cool green tresses that mantle her breastI begin with the grass once again to be bound to the Lord.By the hand of a child I am led to the throne of the King,For a touch that now fevers me not is forgotten and far,And His infinite sceptred hands that sway us can bringMe in dreams from the laugh of a child to the song of a star.On the laugh of a child I am borne to the joy of the King.Well, when all is said and doneBest within my narrow way,May some angel of the sunMuse memorial o'er my clay:'Here was beauty all betrayedFrom the freed...
George William Russell
The Slumber Angel
When day is ended, and grey twilight fliesOn silent wings across the tired land,The slumber angel cometh from the skies -The slumber angel of the peaceful eyes,And with the scarlet poppies in his hand.His robes are dappled like the moonlit seas,His hair in waves of silver floats afar;He weareth lotus-bloom and sweet heartsease,With tassels of the rustling green fir trees,As down the dusk he steps from star to star.Above the world he swings his curfew bell,And sleep falls soft on golden heads and white;The daisies curl their leaves beneath his spell,The prisoner who wearies in his cellForgets awhile, and dreams throughout the night.* * * * *Even so, in peace, comes that great Lord of restWho crowneth men...
Virna Sheard
Insomnia.
It seems that dawn will never climbThe eastern hills;And, clad in mist and flame and rime,Make flashing highways of the rills.The night is as an ancient wayThrough some dead land,Whereon the ghosts of MemoryAnd Sorrow wander hand in hand.By which man's works ignoble seem,Unbeautiful;And grandeur, but the ruined dreamOf some proud queen, crowned with a skull.A way past-peopled, dark and old,That stretches farIts only real thing, the coldVague light of sleep's one fitful star.
Madison Julius Cawein
A Reflection At Sea.
See how, beneath the moonbeam's smile, Yon little billow heaves its breast,And foams and sparkles for awhile,-- Then murmuring subsides to rest.Thus man, the sport of bliss and care, Rises on time's eventful sea:And, having swelled a moment there, Thus melts into eternity!
Thomas Moore
Fragment.
I.Tuscara! thou art lovely now,Thy woods, that frown'd in sullen strengthLike plumage on a giant's brow,Have bowed their massy pride at length.The rustling maize is green around,The sheep is in the Congar's bed;And clear the ploughman's whistlings soundWhere war-whoop's pealed o'er mangled dead.Fair cots around thy breast are set,Like pearls upon a coronet;And in Aluga's vale belowThe gilded grain is moving slowLike yellow moonlight on the sea,Where waves are swelling peacefully;As beauty's breast, when quiet dreamsCome tranquilly and gently by;When all she loves and hopes for seemsTo float in smiles before her eye.II.And hast thou lost the grandeur rudeThat made me breathless, when at first...
Joseph Rodman Drake
On Death
ICan death be sleep, when life is but a dream,And scenes of bliss pass as a phantom by?The transient pleasures as a vision seem,And yet we think the greatest pain's to die.IIHow strange it is that man on earth should roam,And lead a life of woe, but not forsakeHis rugged path; nor dare he view aloneHis future doom which is but to awake.
John Keats
The Dancing Serpent
How I adore, dear indolent,Your lovely body, whenLike silken cloth it shimmersYour sleek and glimmering skin!Within the ocean of your hair,All pungent with perfumes,A fragrant and a wayward seaOf waves of browns and blues,Like a brave ship awakeningTo winds at break of day,My dreamy soul sets forth on courseFor skies so far away.Your eyes, where nothing is revealed,The bitter nor the sweet,Are two cold stones, in which the tincturesGold and iron meet.Viewing the rhythm of your walk,Beautifully dissolute,One seems to see a serpent danceBefore a wand and flute.Your childlike head lolls with the weightOf all your idleness,And sways with all the slackness ofA baby elephant's,
Charles Baudelaire
The World Of Dying Love
The long finger of blackness is holding its head for us.Dingy bue is its shade,comatose in movement, hazarding a slow swiftness,it inches toward us.Relief comes fitfully.The dragon alone, an upstartcrowned with drunken spending,has horse colours as ribbons with his eyes.It cradles a breast of trembling bone.Misercorde, Misercorde.I dreamt I saw skeletal slacknessdangling;the poverty of touch is a casketwith love in rumbling sockets.Craziness is the passion of the engulfed,dribbling pleasantly.Presentations extended beyond and into themselves.Slackness schemes with invalid awarenessin a brothel of hope.
Paul Cameron Brown
Lavender
A mind is a ray of light running to the sea; an arch of wood upon which birds rest. Minds roam the ocean's crest, sit as antlers upon a beach, watch eddies of water trap themselves in the sand. And minds are in anything but a state of rest - they violate physics, make mockery of other bodies not in ready motion. I have seen a mind enclosed above fresh air and sunshine, frolicking on its own strength, the elasticity of its thought lassoing all the stars assembled. Golden points of light caught in this sand with an oval sun marching blue legions across the sky bring more harmony than all the stars assembled. Admiral. Fakir. Harem. They are all here as is batik, geisha, sarong, teak and gingha...
Chiarascuro: Rose
HeFill your bowl with roses: the bowl, too, have of crystal.Sit at the western window. Take the sunBetween your hands like a ball of flaming crystal,Poise it to let it fall, but hold it still,And meditate on the beauty of your existence;The beauty of this, that you exist at all.SheThe sun goes down, but without lamentation.I close my eyes, and the stream of my sensationIn this, at least, grows clear to me:Beauty is a word that has no meaning.Beauty is naught to me.HeThe last blurred raindrops fall from the half-clear sky,Eddying lightly, rose-tinged, in the windless wake of the sun.The swallow ascending against cold waves of cloudSeems winging upward over huge bleak stairs of stone.The raindrop finds...
Conrad Aiken
What Lasts?
The words we speak on the empty air,Are never lost, but recorded there;The process we may not comprehend,Nor how the words with the air may blend,But science shows what results may be;Accept the fact, is enough for me.The waves of sound may have died awayAs ripples faint on a sheltered bay;But though now faint will be heard again,By God, ourselves, and the sons of men.As sound e'en now may be multiplied;The faintest moan like the roaring tide;The housefly's tread with its tiny feetLike tramp of horse on the stone-paved street.So, though now faint, will those voices be,When Christ shall come in His majesty;Our quicken'd sense will the echo hear,Like blast of horn to the timid deer.In pleasant tones will the echoes b...
Joseph Horatio Chant
The Legend Of The New Year.
I dreamed, and lo, I saw in my dream a beautiful gateway, Arched at the top, and crowned with turrets lance-windowed and olden, And sculptured in arabesque, all knotted and woven and spangled; A wonderful legend ran, in letters purple and golden Written in leaves and blossoms, inextricably intertangled,A legend I could not resolve, crowning the gate so stately.Like statues carven and niched in the front of some old cathedral, Four angels stood each in his turret, immovable warders, The first with reverend locks snow-white, and a silver volume Of beard that twinkled with frost, and hung to the icicled borders That fringed his girdle beneath: ancient his look was, and solemn,Like a wrinkled and bearded saint blessing some worshipping bedral.
Kate Seymour Maclean