FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   >>  
r the wise upon Him wait; Early they sorrow, suffer late, Yet at the last have their reward. Shall then the very King sublime Keep thee and me in constant thought, Out of the countless names of naught Swept on the surging stream of time? Ah, but the glorious sun on high, Searching the sea, fold on fold, Gladdens with coronals of gold Each troubled billow heaving by. Though he remove him for a space, Though gloom resume the sleeping sea, Yet of his beams her dreams shall be, Yet shall his face renew her grace. Then when sorrow is outpoured, Pain chokes the channels of thy blood, Think upon the sun and the flood, Tarry thou the leisure of the Lord. SPRING IS NOT DEAD Snow on the earth, though March is wellnigh over; Ice on the flood; Fingers of frost where late the hawthorn cover Burgeoned with bud. Yet in the drift the patient primrose hiding, Yet in the stream the glittering troutlet gliding, Yet from the root the sap still upward springing, Yet overhead one faithful skylark singing, "Spring is not dead!" Brows fringed with snow, the furrowed brows of sorrow, Cheeks pale with care: Pulses of pain that throb from night till morrow; Hearts of despair! O, yet take comfort, still your joy approaches, Dark is the hour that on the dawn encroaches, April's own smile shall yet succeed your sighing, April's own voice set every song-bird crying, "Spring is not dead!" AIM NOT TOO HIGH (To an Old English air) Aim not too high at things beyond thy reach Nor give the rein to reckless thought or speech. Is it not better all thy life to bide Lord of thyself than all the earth beside? Then if high Fortune far from thee take wing, Why shouldst thou envy Counsellor or King? Purple or buckram--wherefore make ado What coat may cover, so the heart be true? But if at last thou gather wealth at will, Thou best shalt succour those that need it still; Since he who best doth poverty endure, Should prove when rich heart's brother to the poor. WILD WINE OF NATURE IN PRAISE OF WATER-DRINKING (After Duncan Ban McIntyre) Wild Wine of Nature, honey tasted, Ever streaming, never wasted, From long and long and long ago In limpid, cool, life-giving flow Up-bubbling with its cordial bland Even from the thirsty desert sand-- O
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   >>  



Top keywords:

sorrow

 
Though
 

Spring

 

thought

 

stream

 

Fortune

 

shouldst

 

Purple

 

buckram

 

wherefore


Counsellor

 

thyself

 

things

 

reckless

 

speech

 

crying

 

English

 

succour

 

tasted

 

streaming


wasted

 

Nature

 

Duncan

 

McIntyre

 

cordial

 

thirsty

 

desert

 

bubbling

 

limpid

 

giving


DRINKING

 

sighing

 
wealth
 
gather
 

NATURE

 

PRAISE

 

brother

 

poverty

 

endure

 

Should


remove

 

heaving

 

billow

 

coronals

 

Gladdens

 

troubled

 

resume

 

chokes

 

channels

 
outpoured