• To learn the Transport by the Pain

    As Blind Men learn the sun!

    To die of thirst — suspecting

    That Brooks in Meadows run!


    To stay the homesick — homesick feet

    Upon a foreign shore —

    Haunted by native lands, the while —

    And blue — beloved air!


    This is the Sovereign...

  • To lose one's faith — surpass

    The loss of an Estate —

    Because Estates can be

    Replenished — faith cannot —


    Inherited with Life —

    Belief — but once — can be —

    Annihilate a single clause —

    And Being's — Beggary —

  • To lose thee — sweeter than to gain

    All other hearts I knew.

    'Tis true the drought is destitute,

    But then, I had the dew!


    The Caspian has its realms of sand,

    Its other realm of sea.

    Without the sterile perquisite,

    No Caspian could be.

  • To love thee Year by Year —

    May less appear

    Than sacrifice, and cease —

    However, dear,

    Forever might be short, I thought to show —

    And so I pieced it, with a flower, now.

  • To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee,

    One clover, and a bee,

    And revery.

    The revery alone will do,

    If bees are few.

  • To make One's Toilette — after Death

    Has made the Toilette cool

    Of only Taste we cared to please

    Is difficult, and still —


    That's easier — than Braid the Hair —

    And make the Bodice gay —

    When eyes that fondled it are wrenched

    By Decalogues — away —

  • To make Routine a Stimulus

    Remember it can cease —

    Capacity to Terminate

    Is a Specific Grace —

    Of Retrospect the Arrow

    That power to repair

    Departed with the Torment

    Become, alas, more fair —

  • THE twentieth year is well-nigh past,

    Since first our sky was overcast;

    Ah would that this might be the last!
    My Mary!


    Thy spirits have a fainter flow,

    I see thee daily weaker grow —

    'Twas my distress that brought thee...

  • To mend each tattered Faith

    There is a needle fair

    Though no appearance indicate —

    'Tis threaded in the Air —


    And though it do not wear

    As if it never Tore

    'Tis very comfortable indeed

    And spacious as before —



  • Eliza, when the southern gale

    Expands the broad majestic sail,

    While Friendship breathes the parting sigh,

    And sorrow glitters in each eye,

    The vessel leaves the flying shores,

    Receding spires and less'ning tow'rs;

    And as it cleaves the lucid sea,

    The distant tumult dies away:...