FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   >>  
sea: A day so bright Methought the very shadow, from its light Thrown, were enough to bless (Albeit with but a shadow's benison) The unborn days its dark posterity. Methought our love, though dead, should be Fair as in life, by memory Embalmed, a rose with bloom for aye unblown. But lo the forest is with faded leaves And our two hearts with faded loves bestrown, And in mine ear the weak wind grieves And uttereth moan: "Shed leaves and fallen, fallen loves and shed, And those are dead and these are more than dead; And those have known The springtime, these the lovetime, overthrown, With all fair times and pleasureful that be." And shall not we, O Time, and shall not we Thy strong self see Brought low and vanquished, And made to bow the knee And bow the head To one that is when thou and thine are fled, The silent-eyed austere Eternity? III Behold a new song still the lark doth sing Each morning when he riseth from the grass, And no man sigheth for the song that was, The melody that yestermorn did bring. The rose dies and the lily, and no man mourns That nevermore the selfsame flower returns: For well we know a thousand flowers will spring, A thousand birds make music on the wing. Ay me! fair things and sweet are birds and flowers, The scent of lily and rose in gardens still, The babble of beaked mouths that speak no ill: And love is sweeter yet than flower or bird, Or any odor smelled or ditty heard-- Love is another and a sweeter thing. But when the music ceaseth in Love's bowers, Who listeneth well shall hear the silence stirred With aftermoan of many a fretful string: For when Love harpeth to the hollow hours, His gladdest notes make saddest echoing. VANISHINGS As one whose eyes have watched the stricken day Swoon to its crimson death adown the sea, Turning his face to eastward suddenly Sees a lack-lustre world all chill and gray,-- Then, wandering sunless whitherso he may, Feels the first dubious dumb obscurity, And vague foregloomings of the Dark to be, Close like a sadness round his glimmering way; So I, from drifting dreambound on and on About strange isles of utter bliss, in seas Whose waves are unimagined melodies, Rose and beheld the dreamless world anew: Sad were the fields, and dim with splendours gone The strait sky-glimpses fugitive and few. BEETHOVEN O Master, if immortals suffer aught Of sadness like to ours, and i
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   >>  



Top keywords:

flower

 
leaves
 
fallen
 

sadness

 
thousand
 
Methought
 
shadow
 

sweeter

 

flowers

 

watched


eastward
 

stricken

 

Turning

 

crimson

 
fretful
 
bowers
 

ceaseth

 

listeneth

 

silence

 
smelled

stirred
 

aftermoan

 

gladdest

 

saddest

 
echoing
 

VANISHINGS

 

suddenly

 
string
 

harpeth

 
hollow

dreamless
 

fields

 

splendours

 

beheld

 

unimagined

 
melodies
 

strait

 

suffer

 

immortals

 
Master

glimpses

 

fugitive

 

BEETHOVEN

 

whitherso

 
dubious
 

sunless

 

wandering

 
lustre
 

obscurity

 

drifting