Beauty poems

 / page 210 of 313 /
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Bell Birds

© Henry Kendall


By channels of coolness the echoes are calling,

And down the dim gorges I hear the creek falling;

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Within and Without: Part III: A Dramatic Poem

© George MacDonald

SCENE I.-Night. London. A large meanly furnished room; a single
candle on the table; a child asleep in a little crib. JULIAN
sits by the table, reading in a low voice out of a book. He looks
older, and his hair is lined with grey; his eyes look clearer.

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Mazeppa

© George Gordon Byron

'Twas after dread Pultowa's day,
  When fortune left the royal Swede--
Around a slaughtered army lay,
  No more to combat and to bleed.

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Lover’s Song

© Victor Marie Hugo

[ANGELO, Act II., May, 1835.]


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The Rock Of The Betrayed

© Caroline Norton

IT was a Highland chieftain's son
Gazed sadly from the hill:
And they saw him shrink from the autumn wind,
As its blast came keen and chill.
II.

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Studies For Two Heads

© James Russell Lowell

I

Some sort of heart I know is hers,--

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Joe Golightly - Or, The First Lord's Daughter

© William Schwenck Gilbert

A tar, but poorly prized,
Long, shambling, and unsightly,
Thrashed, bullied, and despised,
Was wretched JOE GOLIGHTLY.

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Andromeda

© Charles Kingsley

Over the sea, past Crete, on the Syrian shore to the southward,

Dwells in the well-tilled lowland a dark-haired AEthiop people,

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The Way Of The World

© George Frederick Cameron

WE sneer and we laugh with the lip–the most of us do it,
  Whenever a brother goes down like a weed with the tide;
We point with the finger and say–Oh, we knew it! we knew it!
  But, see! we are better than he was, and we will abide.

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To A Lady

© Matthew Prior

  Spare, gen'rous victor, spare the slave,
  Who did unequal war pursue;
  That more than triumph he might have,
  In being overcome by you.

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The Parting Of The Ways

© James Russell Lowell

Who hath not been a poet? Who hath not,
With life's new quiver full of winged years,
Shot at a venture, and then, following on,
Stood doubtful at the Parting of the Ways?

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An Ode : While Blooming Youth And Gay Delight

© Matthew Prior

While blooming youth and gay delight
Sit on thy rosy cheeks confess'd,
Thou hast, my dear, undoubted right
To triumph o'er this destined breast.
My reason bends to what thy eyes ordain;
For I was born to love, and thou to reign.

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Aspasia

© Giacomo Leopardi

At times thy image to my mind returns,

  Aspasia. In the crowded streets it gleams

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Blondine

© John Hay

I wandered through a careless world

  Deceived when not deceiving,

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Victory

© Alfred Noyes

I.
Before those golden altar-lights we stood,
  Each one of us remembering his own dead.
A more than earthly beauty seemed to brood
  On that hushed throng, and bless each bending head.

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To -----

© John Greenleaf Whittier

Fair Nature's priestesses! to whom,
In hieroglyph of bud and bloom,
Her mysteries are told;
Who, wise in lore of wood and mead,
The seasons' pictured scrolls can read,
In lessons manifold!

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To Mrs. Ward. By The Same.

© Mary Barber

O thou, my beauteous, ever tender Friend,
Thou, on whom all my worldly Joys depend,
Accept these Numbers; and with Pleasure hear
Unstudy'd Truth, which few, alas! can bear;
While conscious Virtue takes the Muse's Part,
Glows on thy Cheek, and warms thy gen'rous Heart.

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Amours De Voyage, Canto I

© Arthur Hugh Clough

I am to tell you, you say, what I think of our last new acquaintance.
Well, then, I think that George has a very fair right to be jealous.
I do not like him much, though I do not dislike being with him.
He is what people call, I suppose, a superior man, and
Certainly seems so to me; but I think he is terribly selfish.

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Her Letter

© Francis Bret Harte

I'm sitting alone by the fire,

  Dressed just as I came from the dance,

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Phyllis

© Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz

(Español)
Lo atrevido de un pincel,
Filis, dio a mi pluma alientos:
que tan gloriosa desgracia
más causa corrió que miedo.