FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   217   218   219   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   >>  
On which was carved a name unknown! ON THE RIVER The sun is low, The waters flow, My boat is dancing to and fro. The eve is still, Yet from the hill The killdeer echoes loud and shrill. The paddles plash, The wavelets dash, We see the summer lightning flash; While now and then, In marsh and fen Too muddy for the feet of men, Where neither bird Nor beast has stirred, The spotted bullfrog's croak is heard. The wind is high, The grasses sigh, The sluggish stream goes sobbing by. And far away The dying day Has cast its last effulgent ray; While on the land The shadows stand Proclaiming that the eve's at hand. POOR WITHERED ROSE _A Song_ Poor withered rose, she gave it me, Half in revenge and half in glee; Its petals not so pink by half As are her lips when curled to laugh, As are her cheeks when dimples gay In merry mischief o'er them play. _Chorus_ Forgive, forgive, it seems unkind To cast thy petals to the wind; But it is right, and lest I err So scatter I all thought of her. Poor withered rose, so like my heart, That wilts at sorrow's cruel dart. Who hath not felt the winter's blight When every hope seemed warm and bright? Who doth not know love unreturned, E'en when the heart most wildly burned? Poor withered rose, thou liest dead; Too soon thy beauty's bloom hath fled. 'Tis not without a tearful ruth I watch decay thy blushing youth; And though thy life goes out in dole, Thy perfume lingers in my soul. WORN OUT You bid me hold my peace And dry my fruitless tears, Forgetting that I bear A pain beyond my years. You say that I should smile And drive the gloom away; I would, but sun and smiles Have left my life's dark day. All time seems cold and void, And naught but tears remain; Life's music beats for me A melancholy strain. I used at first to hope, But hope is past and, gone; And now without a ray My cheerless life drags on. Like to an ash-stained hearth When all its fires are spent; Like to an autumn wood By storm winds rudely shent,-- So sadly goes my heart, Unclothed of hope and peace; It asks not joy again, But only seeks release. JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY (From a Westerner's Point of View.) No matter what you call it, Whether genius, or art,
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   217   218   219   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   >>  



Top keywords:
withered
 

petals

 

fruitless

 
Forgetting
 
beauty
 
burned
 

unreturned

 

wildly

 

tearful

 

perfume


lingers
 
blushing
 

release

 

rudely

 

Unclothed

 

WHITCOMB

 

Whether

 

genius

 

matter

 

Westerner


naught
 

remain

 

smiles

 
melancholy
 

strain

 
hearth
 
stained
 

autumn

 

cheerless

 

sobbing


stream

 

sluggish

 
grasses
 
WITHERED
 

effulgent

 
shadows
 

Proclaiming

 

bullfrog

 

summer

 

lightning


shrill

 

paddles

 
wavelets
 

stirred

 
spotted
 
killdeer
 

dancing

 

scatter

 
thought
 

carved