Edward Rowland Sill

  • The Royal feast was done; the King
      Sought some new sport to banish care,
    And to his jester cried: “Sir Fool,
      Kneel now, and make for us a prayer!”

    The jester doffed his cap and bells,
      And stood the mocking court before;
    They could not see...

  • Farewell to such a world! Too long I press
      The crowded pavement with unwilling feet.
    Pity makes pride, and hate breeds hatefulness,
      And both are poisons. In the forest sweet
    The shade, the peace! Immensity, that seems
    To drown the human life of doubts...

  • What if some morning, when the stars were paling,
      And the dawn whitened, and the east was clear,
    Strange peace and rest fell on me from the presence
      Of a benignant spirit standing near;

    And I should tell him, as he stood beside me:—
      “This is our...

  • O god, our Father, if we had but truth!
      Lost truth—which thou perchance
    Didst let man lose, lest all his wayward youth
      He waste in song and dance;
    That he might gain, in searching, mightier powers
    For manlier use in those foreshadowed hours.

    ...

  • The stars know a secret
      They do not tell;
    And morn brings a message
      Hidden well.

    There ’s a blush on the apple,
      A tint on the wing,
    And the bright wind whistles,
      And the pulses sting.

    Perish dark memories!
      ...

  • Yes, i know what you say:
      Since it cannot be soul to soul,
    Be it flesh to flesh, as it may;
      But is Earth the whole?

    Shall a man betray the Past
      For all Earth gives?
    “But the Past is dead?” At last
      It is all that lives.

    ...

  •   if i were very sure
    That all was over betwixt you and me,—
      That, while this endless absence I endure
    With but one mood, one dream, one misery
    Of waiting, you were happier to be free,—

      Then I might find again
    In cloud and stream and all the...

  • Lend me thy fillet, Love!
      I would no longer see:
    Cover mine eyelids close awhile,
      And make me blind like thee.

    Then might I pass her sunny face,
      And know not it was fair;
    Then might I hear her voice, nor guess
      Her starry eyes were...

  • A purple cloud hangs half-way down;
      Sky, yellow gold below;
    The naked trees, beyond the town,
      Like masts against it show,—

    Bare masts and spars of our earth-ship,
      With shining snow-sails furled;
    And through the sea of space we slip,...

  • The royal feast was done; the King
      Sought some new sport to banish care,
    And to his jester cried: “Sir Fool,
      Kneel now, and make for us a prayer!”

    The jester doffed his cap and bells,
      And stood the mocking court before;
    They could not see...