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I'll Not Confer With Sorrow
I'll not confer with SorrowTill to-morrow;But Joy shall have her wayThis very day.Ho, eglantine and cressesFor her tresses!--Let Care, the beggar, waitOutside the gate.Tears if you will--but afterMirth and laughter;Then, folded hands on breastAnd endless rest.
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
Dirge
Place this bunch of mignonetteIn her cold, dead hand;When the golden sun is set,Where the poplars stand,Bury her from sun and day,Lay my little love awayFrom my sight.She was like a modest flowerBlown in sunny June,Warm as sun at noon's high hour,Chaster than the moon.Ah, her day was brief and bright,Earth has lost a star of light;She is dead.Softly breathe her name to me,--Ah, I loved her so.Gentle let your tribute be;None may better knowHer true worth than I who weepO'er her as she lies asleep--Soft asleep.Lay these lilies on her breast,They are not more whiteThan the soul of her, at rest'Neath their petals bright.Chant your aves soft and low,Solemn be your tread an...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
A Burial
To-day I had a burial of my dead. There was no shroud, no coffin, and no pall,No prayers were uttered and no tears were shed - I only turned a picture to the wall.A picture that had hung within my room For years and years; a relic of my youth.It kept the rose of love in constant bloom To see those eyes of earnestness and truth.At hours wherein no other dared intrude, I had drawn comfort from its smiling grace.Silent companion of my solitude, My soul held sweet communion with that face.I lived again the dream so bright, so brief, Though wakened as we all are by some Fate;This picture gave me infinite relief, And did not leave me wholly desolate.To-day I saw an item, quite by chance, That r...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Feast of the Assumption. - "A Night Prayer"
Dark! Dark! Dark!The sun is set; the day is dead: Thy Feast has fled;My eyes are wet with tears unshed; I bow my head;Where the star-fringed shadows softly sway I bend my knee,And, like a homesick child, I pray, Mary, to thee. Dark! Dark! Dark!And, all the day -- since white-robed priest In farthest East,In dawn's first ray -- began the Feast, I -- I the least --Thy least, and last, and lowest child, I called on thee!Virgin! didst hear? my words were wild; Didst think of me? Dark! Dark! Dark!Alas! and no! The angels bright, With wings as whiteAs a dream of snow in love and light, Flashe...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Perle Des Jardins.
What am I, and what is heWho can cull and tear a heart,As one might a rose for sportIn its royalty?What am I, that he has madeAll this love a bitter foam,Blown about a life of loamThat must break and fade?He who of my heart could makeHollow crystal where his faceLike a passion had its placeHoly and then break!Shatter with insensate jeers! -But these weary eyes are dry,Tearless clear, and if I dieThey shall know no tears.Yet my heart weeps; - let it weep!Let it weep in sullen pain,And this anguish in my brainCry itself to sleep.Ah! the afternoon is warm,And yon fields are glad and fair;Many happy creatures thereThro' the woodland swarm.All the summer land is stil...
Madison Julius Cawein
Bright Scenes Must All Depart.
Bright scenes must all depart as they've departed,Unshadowed years will fly as they have flown,And fairer visions leave us silent-hearted,Keen, lashing blasts must blow as they have blown.Old mem'ries must grow dim and fade away,Across the world's wide wastes the sun shall set,Thou shalt press forward on thy toil-trod way,Nor leave me one, just one, one sad regret.Ah, where shall I be then?--forgot--estranged,When years have rolled their glory at thy feet,When friends and kindred all, yea, all have changedAnd others come their chosen one to greet.And yet what prayer from me could now implore,Could crave for all it would, for words have fled?May Heaven preserve thee as thou wast before,And multiply all blessings on thy head.
Lennox Amott
The Adieu. Written Under The Impression That The Author Would Soon Die.
1.Adieu, thou Hill! [1] where early joySpread roses o'er my brow;Where Science seeks each loitering boyWith knowledge to endow.Adieu, my youthful friends or foes,Partners of former bliss or woes;No more through Ida's paths we stray;Soon must I share the gloomy cell,Whose ever-slumbering inmates dwellUnconscious of the day.2.Adieu, ye hoary Regal Fanes,Ye spires of Granta's vale,Where Learning robed in sable reigns.And Melancholy pale.Ye comrades of the jovial hour,Ye tenants of the classic bower,On Cama's verdant margin plac'd,Adieu! while memory still is mine,For offerings on Oblivion's shrine,These scenes must be effac'd.3Adieu, ye mountains of the clime<...
George Gordon Byron
Sing Me The Old Songs, Mother.
Our souls are the deserts of sorrow, Our hearts are the ashes of hope, And madly from gladness we borrow The brightness where sadness may grope; My raptures in wretchedness vanish, My bosom is weeping with wrongs; Then sing me the old songs, mother, Then sing me the dear old songs. My joys are in memory lying, Still ardently happy with youth, When smiles in ambition were dying, And life was the vision of youth; My brow for your gentle caresses And kisses of tenderness longs; Then sing me the old songs, mother, Then sing me the dear old songs. Sweet murmurs in mystical measures Come soothingly over my soul, Where voices of babyis...
Freeman Edwin Miller
The Song Of Hiawatha - XX - The Famine
Oh the long and dreary Winter!Oh the cold and cruel Winter!Ever thicker, thicker, thickerFroze the ice on lake and river,Ever deeper, deeper, deeperFell the snow o'er all the landscape,Fell the covering snow, and driftedThrough the forest, round the village.Hardly from his buried wigwamCould the hunter force a passage;With his mittens and his snow-shoesVainly walked he through the forest,Sought for bird or beast and found none,Saw no track of deer or rabbit,In the snow beheld no footprints,In the ghastly, gleaming forestFell, and could not rise from weakness,Perished there from cold and hunger. Oh the famine and the fever!Oh the wasting of the famine!Oh the blasting of the fever!Oh the wailing of the children!
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Regrets
As, when the seaward ebbing tide doth pour Out by the low sand spaces,The parting waves slip back to clasp the shore With lingering embraces,-So in the tide of life that carries me From where thy true heart dwells,Waves of my thoughts and memories turn to thee With lessening farewells;Waving of hands; dreams, when the day forgets; A care half lost in cares;The saddest of my verses; dim regrets; Thy name among my prayers.I would the day might come, so waited for, So patiently besought,When I, returning, should fill up once more Thy desolated thought;And fill thy loneliness that lies apart In still, persistent pain.Shall I content thee, O thou broken heart, As the tide comes ...
Alice Meynell
Sonnet - On An Old Book With Uncut Leaves
Emblem of blasted hope and lost desire,No finger ever traced thy yellow pageSave Time's. Thou hast not wrought to noble rageThe hearts thou wouldst have stirred. Not any fireSave sad flames set to light a funeral pyreDost thou suggest. Nay,--impotent in age,Unsought, thou holdst a corner of the stageAnd ceasest even dumbly to aspire.How different was the thought of him that writ.What promised he to love of ease and wealth,When men should read and kindle at his wit.But here decay eats up the book by stealth,While it, like some old maiden, solemnly,Hugs its incongruous virginity!
My Dream
In my dream, methought I trod,Yesternight, a mountain road;Narrow as Al Sirat's span,High as eagle's flight, it ran.Overhead, a roof of cloudWith its weight of thunder bowed;Underneath, to left and right,Blankness and abysmal night.Here and there a wild-flower blushed,Now and then a bird-song gushed;Now and then, through rifts of shade,Stars shone out, and sunbeams played.But the goodly company,Walking in that path with me,One by one the brink o'erslid,One by one the darkness hid.Some with wailing and lament,Some with cheerful courage went;But, of all who smiled or mourned,Never one to us returned.Anxiously, with eye and ear,Questioning that shadow drear,Never hand in token stirr...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Remembrance.
"Once they were lovers," says the world, "with young hearts all aglow; They have forgotten," says the world, "forgotten long ago." Between ourselves - just whisper it - the old world does not know. They walk their lone, divided ways, but ever with them goes Remembrance, the subtle breath of love's sweet thorny rose.
Jean Blewett
Kiama
Towards the hills of JamberooSome few fantastic shadows haste,Uplit with firesLike castle spiresOutshining through a mirage waste.Behold, a mournful glory sitsOn feathered ferns and woven brakes,Where sobbing wild like restless childThe gusty breeze of evening wakes!Methinks I hear on every breathA lofty tone go passing by,That whispers Weave,Though wood winds grieve,The fadeless blooms of Poesy!A spirit hand has been abroadAn evil hand to pluck the flowersA world of wealth,And blooming healthHas gone from fragrant seaside bowers.The twilight waxeth dim and dark,The sad waves mutter sounds of woe,But the evergreen retains its sheen,And happy hearts exist below;But pleasure sparkles on the sward,...
Henry Kendall
Lines On A Sleeping Child.
Oh child! who to this evil world art come, Led by the unseen hand of Him who guards thee,Welcome unto this dungeon-house, thy home! Welcome to all the woe this life awards thee!Upon thy forehead yet the badge of sin Hath worn no trace; thou look'st as though from heaven,But pain, and guilt, and misery lie within; Poor exile! from thy happy birth-land driven.Thine eyes are sealed by the soft hand of sleep, And like unruffled waves thy slumber seems;The time's at hand when thou must wake to weep, Or sleeping, walk a restless world of dreams.How oft, as day by day life's burthen lies Heavier and darker on thy fainting soul,Wilt thou towards heaven turn thy weary eyes, And long in bitterness to reach the goal!
Frances Anne Kemble
He Bids His Beloved Be At Peace
I hear the Shadowy Horses, their long manes a-shake,Their hoofs heavy with tumult, their eyes glimmeringwhite;The North unfolds above them clinging, creepingnight,The East her hidden joy before the morning break,The West weeps in pale dew and sighs passing away,The South is pouring down roses of crimson fire:O vanity of Sleep, Hope, Dream, endless Desire,The Horses of Disaster plunge in the heavy clay:Beloved, let your eyes half close, and your heart beatOver my heart, and your hair fall over my breast,Drowning love's lonely hour in deep twilight of rest,And hiding their tossing manes and their tumultuousfeet.
William Butler Yeats
The Lost Garden
Roses, brier on brier,Like a hedge of fire,Walled it from the world and rolledCrimson 'round it; manifoldBlossoms, 'mid which once of oldWalked my Heart's Desire.There the golden HoursDwelt; and 'mid the bowersBeauty wandered like a maid;And the Dreams that never fadeSat within its haunted shadeGazing at the flowers.There the winds that varyMelody and marryPerfume unto perfume, went,Whispering to the buds, that bent,Messages whose wondermentMade them sweet to carry.There the waters hoaryMurmured many a storyTo the leaves that leaned above,Listening to their tales of love,While the happiness thereofFlushed their green with glory.There the sunset's shimmer'Mid the bower...
The Stag-Eyed Lady. - A Moorish Tale.
Scheherazade immediately began the following story.I.Ali Ben Ali (did you never readHis wond'rous acts that chronicles relate, -How there was one in pity might exceedThe Sack of Troy?) Magnificent he sateUpon the throne of greatness - great indeed!For those that he had under him were great -The horse he rode on, shod with silver nails,Was a Bashaw - Bashaws have horses' tails.II.Ali was cruel - a most cruel one!'Tis rumored he had strangled his own mother -Howbeit such deeds of darkness he had done,'Tis thought he would have slain his elder brotherAnd sister too - but happily that noneDid live within harm's length of one another,Else he had sent the Sun in all its blazeTo endless night, and shorte...
Thomas Hood