•   for a cap and bells our lives we pay,
    Bubbles we buy with a whole soul’s tasking;
      ’T is heaven alone that is given away,
    ’T is only God may be had for the asking;
    No price is set on the lavish summer;
    June may be had by the poorest comer.

    And what is so rare as a day in June?
      Then, if ever, come perfect days;
    Then Heaven...

  • “she has gone to be with the angels;”
      So they had always said
    To the little questioner asking
      Of his fair, young mother, dead.

    They had never told of the darkness
      Of the sorrowful, silent tomb,
    Nor scared the sensitive spirit
      By linking a thought of gloom

    With the girl-like, beautiful being,
      Who patiently...

  • Within a poor man’s squalid home I stood:
    The one bare chamber, where his work-worn wife
    Above the stove and wash-tub passed her life,
    Next the sty where they slept with all their brood.
    But I saw not that sunless, breathless lair,
    The chamber’s sagging roof and reeking floor;
    The smeared walls, broken sash, and battered door;
    The...

  • It was a beauty that I saw,—
      So pure, so perfect, as the frame
      Of all the universe were lame
    To that one figure, could I draw,
    Or give least line of it a law:
      A skein of silk without a knot!
    A fair march made without a halt!
    A curious form without a fault!
      A printed book without a blot!
      All beauty!—and without a...

  • From Elizabeth A. Sharp’s “Lyra Celtica”
    TELL us some of the charms of the stars:
      Close and well set were her ivory teeth;
    White as the canna upon the moor
      Was her bosom the tartan bright beneath.

    Her well-rounded forehead shone
      Soft and fair as the mountain snow;
    Her two breasts were heaving full;
      To them did the hearts...

  • Ah! I shall kill myself with dreams!
      These dreams that softly lap me round
    Through trance-like hours in which meseems
      That I am swallowed up and drowned;
    Drowned in your love, which flows o’er me
      As o’er the seaweed flows the sea.

    In watches of the middle night,
      ’Twixt vesper and ’twixt matin bell,
    With rigid arms and...

  • Prelude to Part FirstOVER his keys the musing organist,
      Beginning doubtfully and far away,
    First lets his fingers wander as they list,
      And builds a bridge from Dreamland for his lay;
    Then, as the touch of his loved instrument
      Gives hope and fervor, nearer draws his theme,
    First guessed by faint auroral flushes sent
      Along the...

  • Most sweet it is with unuplifted eyes
    To pace the ground, if path there be or none,
    While a fair region round the traveller lies
    Which he forbears again to look upon;
    Pleased rather with some soft ideal scene,
    The work of fancy, or some happy tone
    Of meditation, slipping in between
    The beauty coming and the beauty gone.
    If Thought...

  • As I stood by yon roofless tower,

    Where the wa'flower scents the dewy air,

    Where the howlet mourns in her ivy bower,

    And tells the midnight moon her care.


    The winds were laid, the air was still,

    The stars they shot alang the sky;

    The fox was howling on the hill,

    And the distant echoing...