• He knelt beside her pillow, in the dead watch of the night,
    And he heard her gentle breathing, but her face was still and white,
    And on her poor, wan cheek a tear told how the heart can weep,
    And he said, “My love was weary—God bless her! she ’s asleep.”

    He knelt beside her gravestone in the shuddering autumn night,
    And he heard the dry grass rustle,...

  • Beneath the midnight moon of May,
      Through dusk on either hand,
    One sheet of silver spreads the bay,
      One crescent jet the land;
    The black ships mirrored in the stream
      Their ghostly tresses shake—
    When will the dead world cease to dream?
      When will the morning break?

    Beneath a night no longer May,
      Where only cold...

  • Out in the dark it throbs and glows—
    The wide, wild sea, that no man knows!
    The wind is chill, the surge is white,
    And I must sail that sea to-night.

    You shall not sail! The breakers roar
    On many a mile of iron shore,
    The waves are livid in their wrath,
    And no man knows the ocean path.

    I must not bide for wind or wave;...

  • And oh, to think the sun can shine,
      The birds can sing, the flowers can bloom,
    And she, whose soul was all divine,
      Be darkly mouldering in the tomb:

    That o’er her head the night-wind sighs,
      And the sad cypress droops and moans;
    That night has veiled her glorious eyes,
      And silence hushed her heavenly tones:

    That those...

  • I
    white sail upon the ocean verge,
      Just crimsoned by the setting sun,
    Thou hast thy port beyond the surge,
      Thy happy homeward course to run,
    And wingëd hope, with heart of fire,
    To gain the bliss of thy desire.

    I watch thee till the sombre sky
      Has darkly veiled the lucent plain;
    My thoughts, like homeless spirits,...

  • Sweet bell of Stratford, tolling slow,
    In summer gloaming’s golden glow,
    I hear and feel thy voice divine,
    And all my soul responds to thine.

    As now I hear thee, even so,
    My Shakespeare heard thee long ago,
    When lone by Avon’s pensive stream
    He wandered, in his haunted dream:

    Heard thee—and far his fancy sped
    Through...

  • The dirge is sung, the ritual said,
      No more the brooding organ weeps,
    And, cool and green, the turf is spread
      On that lone grave where BROMLEY sleeps.

    Gone—in his ripe, meridian hour!
      Gone—when the wave was at its crest!
    And wayward Humor’s perfect flower
      Is turned to darkness and to rest.

    No more those honest eyes...

  • Fairy spirits of the breeze—
    Frailer nothing is than these.
    Fancies born we know not where—
    In the heart or in the air;
    Wandering echoes blown unsought
    From far crystal peaks of thought;
    Shadows, fading at the dawn,
    Ghosts of feeling dead and gone:
    Alas! Are all fair things that live
    Still lovely and still fugitive?

  • This was your butterfly, you see,—
      His fine wings made him vain:
    The caterpillars crawl, but he
      Passed them in rich disdain.—
    My pretty boy says, “Let him be
      Only a worm again!”

    O child, when things have learned to wear
      Wings once, they must be fain
    To keep them always high and fair:
      Think of the creeping pain...

  • I know a story, fairer, dimmer, sadder,
      Than any story painted in your books.
    You are so glad? It will not make you gladder;
      Yet listen, with your pretty restless looks.

    “Is it a Fairy Story?” Well, half fairy—
      At least it dates far back as fairies do,
    And seems to me as beautiful and airy;
      Yet half, perhaps the fairy half, is...