FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48  
49   >>  
Want's awful sting; While laughing plenty from sweet hands would throw Delightful raptures over all below, And gladness bring. If Love were king, The nations would eternal sunshine borrow, And conquer all the heavy clouds of sorrow And every thing That binds the race in groans and agony; Life's changing seasons would forever be Unvaried spring. If Love were king! O, broken feet that wander worn and weary Beneath the crags and awful mountains dreary, With rapture cling Your anguished arms about him; drink delight Upon his perfect bosom soft and white And comforting! "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 babyish pleasures And echoes of lullabies roll; The struggles of all my endeavor Are bound in the darkest of thongs; Then sing me the old songs, mother, Then sing me the dear old songs. I fain would return in my dreaming To years that proclaimed me a boy, When gladness was happily beaming And life was a musical toy; My sorrow has never Nepenthe, My woe in its bitterness throngs; Then sing me the old songs, mother, Then sing me the dear old songs. TWO LIVES. Two infants in their cradles lie, Where lullabies of peace In gentle strains of tender music die. And carols never cease. Two urchins o'er the meadow lands Are bounding in their plays, Where sweet enjoyment with angelic hands Winds gladness o'er the days. Two boys, where golden fancies bless, Repose in sunny beams, And muse away the hours of happiness On couches made of dreams. Two men upon a summer sea Are toiling, brave and strong, Wher
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48  
49   >>  



Top keywords:

gladness

 

mother

 

sorrow

 

gentle

 

lullabies

 

borrow

 

raptures

 

musical

 

happily

 

proclaimed


beaming

 

throngs

 

bitterness

 

Nepenthe

 

nations

 

voices

 

babyish

 

eternal

 

soothingly

 

mystical


measures

 
pleasures
 

echoes

 

thongs

 

infants

 

return

 
darkest
 
struggles
 
endeavor
 
dreaming

happiness

 

fancies

 

Repose

 

couches

 

toiling

 
strong
 
summer
 

dreams

 

golden

 

tender


carols

 

strains

 

cradles

 

murmurs

 
urchins
 

enjoyment

 

angelic

 
bounding
 

meadow

 

Delightful