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A Beatrice
One day in ashy, cindery terrains,As I meandered, making my complaintTo nature, slowly sharpening the knifeOf thought against the whetstone of my heart,In plainest day I saw around my headA lowering cloud as weighty as a storm,Which bore within a vicious demon throngWho showed themselves as cruel and curious dwarfs.Disdainfully they circled and observedAnd, as a madman draws a crowd to jokes,I heard them laugh and whisper each to each,Giving their telling nudges and their winks:'Now is the time to roast this comic sketch,This shadow-Hamlet, who takes the poseThe indecisive stare and straying hair.A pity, isn't it, to see this fraud,This posturer, this actor on relief?Because he plays his role with some slight artHe thinks his shabby...
Charles Baudelaire
The Hares And The Frogs
Timid Hares, from the trumpeting wind,Fled as swift as the fear in their mind;Till in fright from their fear,From the green sedges near,Leaping Frogs left their terror behind.Our Own Are Not The Only Troubles
Walter Crane
Reconciliation
When you are standing at your hero's grave,Or near some homeless village where he died,Remember, through your heart's rekindling pride,The German soldiers who were loyal and brave.Men fought like brutes; and hideous things were done:And you have nourished hatred, harsh and blind.But in that Golgotha perhaps you'll findThe mothers of the men who killed your son.November, 1918.
Siegfried Sassoon
Love, Not Duty
Thought may well be ever ranging,And opinion ever changing,Task-work be, though ill begun,Dealt with by experience better;By the law and by the letterDuty done is duty doneDo it, Time is on the wing!Hearts, tis quite another thing,Must or once for all be given,Or must not at all be given;Hearts, tis quite another thing!To bestow the soul awayIs an idle duty-play!Why, to trust a life-long blissTo caprices of a day,Scarce were more depraved than this!Men and maidens, see you mind it;Show of love, whereer you find it,Look if duty lurk behind it!Duty-fancies, urging onWhither love had never gone!Loving if the answering breastSeem not to be thus possessed,Still in hoping have a car...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Communion.
What is it to commune?It is when soul meets soul, and they embraceAs souls may, stooping from each separate sphereFor a brief moment's space.What is it to commune?It is to lay the veil of custom by,To be all unafraid of truth to talk,Face to face, eye to eye.Not face to face, dear Lord;That is the joy of brighter worlds to be;And yet, Thy bidden guests about Thy board,We do commune with Thee.Behind the white-robed priestOur eyes, anointed with a sudden grace,Dare to conjecture of a mighty guest,A dim beloved Face.And is it Thou, indeed?And dost Thou lay Thy glory all awayTo visit us, and with Thy grace to feedOur hungering hearts to-day?And can a thing so sweet,And can such heavenly co...
Susan Coolidge
Signing The Pledge.
To comfort hearts that sigh and break, To dry the falling tear,Wilt thou forego the music sweet Entrancing now thy ear?I must return, I firmly said, The strugglers in that seaShall not reach out beseeching hands In vain for help to me.I turned to go; but as I turned The gloomy sea grew bright,And from my heart there seemed to flow Ten thousand cords of light.And sin-wrecked men, with eager hands Did grasp each golden cord;And with my heart I drew them on To see my gracious Lord.Again I stood beside the gate. My heart was glad and free;For with me stood a rescued throng The Lord had given me.
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
In Trafalgar Square.
The stars shone faint through the smoky blue; The church-bells were ringing;Three girls, arms laced, were passing through, Tramping and singing.Their heads were bare; their short skirts swung As they went along;Their scarf-covered breasts heaved up, as they sung Their defiant song.It was not too clean, their feminine lay, But it thrilled me quiteWith its challenge to task-master villainous day And infamous night,With its threat to the robber rich, the proud, The respectable free.And I laughed and shouted to them aloud, And they shouted to me!"Girls, that's the shout, the shout we shall utter When with rifles and spades,We stand, with the old Red...
Francis William Lauderdale Adams
Malcolm.
Boy! this world has ever beenA bright, glad world to me;Through each dark and checkered sceneGod's sun shone lovingly.But Content I've never known;Hoping, trusting that the years,With their April smiles and tears,Would yet bring me one like thee That I could call my own.With thy soft and heavenly eyesIn deep and pensive calm,I seem looking at the skies,And wonder where I am!Something more than princely bloodCourses in thy tranquil face:When she lent thee such a grace,Nature lit life's earnest flame In her most queenly mood.Such a sweet intelligenceIs stamped on every line,Banqueting our craving senseWith minist'rings divine.If thy Boyhood be so great,What will be the coming Man,C...
Charles Sangster
Elegy IV. - Anno Aetates 18. - To My Tutor, Thomas Young,1 Chaplain of the English Merchants Resident at Hamburg.
Hence, my epistle skim the Deep fly o'erYon smooth expanse to the Teutonic shore!Haste lest a friend should grieve for thy delayAnd the Gods grant that nothing thwart thy way!I will myself invoke the King2 who bindsIn his Sicanian ecchoing vault the winds,With Doris3 and her Nymphs, and all the throngOf azure Gods, to speed thee safe along.But rather, to insure thy happier haste,Ascend Medea's chariot,4 if thou may'st,Or that whence young Triptolemus5 of yoreDescended welcome on the Scythian shore.The sands that line the German coast descried,To opulent Hamburg turn aside,So call'd, if legendary fame be true,From Hama,6 whom a club-arm'd Cimbrian slew.There lives, deep-learn'd and primitive...
John Milton
The Expert
Youth that trafficked long with Death,And to second life returns,Squanders little time or breathOn his fellow man's concerns.Earned peace is all he asksTo fulfill his broken tasks.Yet, if he find war at home(Waspish and importunate),He hath means to overcomeAny warrior at his gate;For the past he buried bringsBack unburiable things.Nights that he lay out to spy,Whence and when the raid might start;Or prepared in secrecySudden blows to break its heart,All the lore of No-Man's LandSteels his soul and arms his hand.So, if conflict vex his lifeWhere he thought all conflict done,He, resuming ancient strife,Springs his mine or trains his gun;And, in mirth more dread than wrath,Wipes the nuis...
Rudyard
Bryan's Station
We tightened stirrup; buckled rein;Looked to our saddle-girths again;Shook hands all round; then mounted.The gate swung wide: we said, "Good-bye."No time for talk had Bell and I.One cried, "God speed!" another, "Fly!"As out we rode to do or die,And every minute counted.The trail, the buffaloes had worn,Stretched broad before us through the cornAnd cane with which it blended.We knew for miles around the gateHid Indian guile and Tory hate.There was no time to hesitate.We galloped on. We spurred like Fate,As morn broke red and splendid.No rifle cracked. No arrow whirred.Above us piped a forest bird,Then two and three together.We 'd reached the woods. And still no shoutOf all the wild Wyandotte routAnd Shawanese had ye...
Madison Julius Cawein
To Albert Dürer.
("Dans les vieilles forêts.")[X., April 20, 1837.]Through ancient forests - where like flowing tideThe rising sap shoots vigor far and wide,Mounting the column of the alder darkAnd silv'ring o'er the birch's shining bark -Hast thou not often, Albert Dürer, strayedPond'ring, awe-stricken - through the half-lit glade,Pallid and trembling - glancing not behindFrom mystic fear that did thy senses bind,Yet made thee hasten with unsteady pace?Oh, Master grave! whose musings lone we traceThroughout thy works we look on reverently.Amidst the gloomy umbrage thy mind's eyeSaw clearly, 'mong the shadows soft yet deep,The web-toed faun, and Pan the green-eyed peep,Who deck'd with flowers the cave where thou might'st rest,Leaf...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Impromptu, To Oriana. On Attending With Her, As Sponsors, At A Christening
Lady! who didst--with angel-look and smile,And the sweet lustre of those dear, dark eyes,Gracefully bend before the font of Christ,In humble adoration, faith, and prayer!Oh!--as the infant pledge of friends belovedReceived from thy pure lips its future name,Sweetly unconscious look'd the baby-boy!How beautifully helpless--and how mild!--Methought, a seraph spread her shelt'ring wingsOver the solemn scene; and as the sun,In its full splendour, on the altar came,God's blessing seem'd to sanctify the deed.
Thomas Gent
Good Fellowship
May good humor preside when good fellows meet,And reason prescribe when'tis time to retreat.
Unknown
Grant. At Rest - August 8, 1885
Sir Launcelot rode overthwart and endlong in a wide forest, and held no path but as wild adventure led him... And he returned and came again to his horse, and took off his saddle and his bridle, and let him pasture; and unlaced his helm, and ungirdled his sword, and laid him down to sleep upon his shield before the cross.- Age of ChivalaryGrantWhat shall we say of the soldier. Grant,His sword put by and his great soul free?How shall we cheer him now or chantHis requiem befittingly?The fields of his conquest now are seenRanged no more with his armed men -But the rank and file of the gold and greenOf the waving grain is there again.Though his valiant life is a nation's pride,And his death heroic and half divine,And our grief as great as the worl...
James Whitcomb Riley
A Man Young And Old:- Human Dignity
Like the moon her kindness is,If kindness I may callWhat has no comprehension int,But is the same for allAs though my sorrow were a sceneUpon a painted wall.So like a bit of stone I lieUnder a broken tree.I could recover if I shriekedMy hearts agonyTo passing bird, but I am dumbFrom human dignity.
William Butler Yeats
The Needless Alarm. A Tale.
There is a field, through which I often pass,Thick overspread with moss and silky grass,Adjoining close to Kilwicks echoing wood,Where oft the bitch-fox hides her hapless brood,Reserved to solace many a neighbouring squire,That he may follow them through brake and brier,Contusion hazarding of neck, or spine,Which rural gentlemen call sport divine.A narrow brook, by rushy banks conceald,Runs in a bottom, and divides the field;Oaks intersperse it, that had once a head,But now wear crests of oven-wood instead;And where the land slopes to its watery bournWide yawns a gulf beside a ragged thorn;Bricks line the sides, but shiverd long ago,And horrid brambles intertwine below;A hollow scoopd, I judge, in ancient time,For baking earth, or bur...
William Cowper
Behind The Scenes
The actor struts his little hour,Between the limelight and the band;The public feel the actor's power,Yet nothing do they understandOf all the touches here and thereThat make or mar the actor's part,They never see, beneath the glare,The artist striving after art.To them it seems a labour slightWhere nought of study intervenes;You see it in another lightWhen once you've been behind the scenes.For though the actor at his bestIs, like a poet, born not made,He still must study with a zestAnd practice hard to learn his trade.So, whether on the actor's formThe stately robes of Hamlet sit,Or as Macbeth he rave and storm,Or plays burlesque to please the pit,'Tis each and all a work of art,That constant ca...
Andrew Barton Paterson