For, o America, our country!—land
  Hid in the west through centuries, till men
Through countless tyrannies could understand
  The priceless worth of freedom,—once again
The world was new-created when thy shore
  First knew the Pilgrim keels, that one last...

Poet: Arlo Bates

“o pitying angel, pause, and say
  To me, new come to Paradise,
How I may drive one pain away
  By penitence or sacrifice.
From deeps below of nether Hell
  I hear a lost soul’s bitter cry:
Alas! It was through me she fell,—
  What price...

Poet: Arlo Bates

Over the plains where Persian hosts
  Laid down their lives for glory
Flutter the cyclamens, like ghosts
  That witness to their story.
Oh, fair! Oh, white! Oh, pure as snow!
On countless graves how sweet they grow!

Or crimson, like the cruel...

Poet: Arlo Bates

I
kitty’s laugh
thy laugh’s a song an oriole trilled,
  Romping in glee the sky,—
Sunshine in lucent drops distilled,
  And showered from on high.

So perfect in his song thou art,
  That when thy laughter rings
I long to clasp thee...

Poet: Arlo Bates

Like to a coin, passing from hand to hand,
Are common memories, and day by day
The sharpness of their impress wears away.
But love’s remembrances unspoiled with-stand
The touch of time, as in an antique land
Where some proud town old centuries did slay,...

Poet: Arlo Bates

We must be nobler for our dead, be sure,
Than for the quick. We might their living eyes
Deceive with gloss of seeming; but all lies
Were vain to cheat a prescience spirit-pure.
Our soul’s true worth and aim, however poor,
They see who watch us from some...

Poet: Arlo Bates

Three horsemen galloped the dusty way
  While sun and moon were both in the sky;
An old crone crouched in the cactus’ shade,
  And craved an alms as they rode by.
    A friendless hag she seemed to be,
    But the queen of a bandit crew was she.

...

Poet: Arlo Bates

Pale beryl sky, with clouds
        Hued like dove’s wing,
        O’ershadowing
        The dying day,
And whose edge half enshrouds
  The first fair evening star,
  Most crystalline by far
Of all the stars that night enring,
  ...

Poet: Arlo Bates

Three horsemen galloped the dusty way
  While sun and moon were both in the sky;
An old crone crouched in the cactus’ shade,
  And craved an alms as they rode by.
    A friendless hag she seemed to be,
    But the queen of a bandit crew was she.

...

Poet: Arlo Bates

From “Sonnets in Shadow”
THERE is such power even in smallest things
  To bring the dear past back; a flower’s tint,
  A snatch of some old song, the fleeting glint
Of sunbeams on the wave—each vivid brings

The lost days up, as from the idle strings...

Poet: Arlo Bates