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Fand, A Feerie Act I

© Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

Eithne's Spinning Song
Things of the Earth and things of the Air,
Strengths that we feel though we cannot share,
Shapes that are round us and everywhere.

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The Morning Visit

© Oliver Wendell Holmes

The morning visit,--not till sickness falls
In the charmed circles of your own safe walls;
Till fever's throb and pain's relentless rack
Stretch you all helpless on your aching back;
Not till you play the patient in your turn,
The morning visit's mystery shall you learn.

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The Author Upon Himself

© Jonathan Swift

By an old ——pursued,
A crazy prelate, and a royal prude;
By dull divines, who look with envious eyes
On ev'ry genius that attempts to rise;

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The Botanic Garden (Part VI)

© Erasmus Darwin

 "Born in yon blaze of orient sky,
 "Sweet MAY! thy radiant form unfold;
 "Unclose thy blue voluptuous eye,
 "And wave thy shadowy locks of gold.

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Poland

© Gilbert Keith Chesterton

Augurs that watched archaic birds

  Such plumèd prodigies might read,

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To A Lady Playing The Harp

© Paul Laurence Dunbar

Thy tones are silver melted into sound,
  And as I dream
  I see no walls around,
  But seem to hear
  A gondolier
  Sing sweetly down some slow Venetian stream.

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L'Homme Moyen Sensuel

© Ezra Pound

Yet Radway went. A circumspectious prig!
And then that woman like a guinea-pig
Accosted, that's the word, accosted him,
Thereon the amorous calor slightly frosted him.
(I burn, I freeze, I sweat, said the fair Greek,
I speak in contradictions, so to speak.)

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I Apprehend You...

© Alexander Blok

I apprehend You. The years pass by -

Yet in constant form, I apprehend You.

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Lily

© Henry Lawson

I SCORN the man—a fool at most,

  And ignorant and blind—

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An Inventor

© Augusta Davies Webster

I thought this time 'twas done at last,
the workings perfected, the life in it;
and there's the flaw again, the petty flaw,
the fretting small impossibility
that has to be made possible.

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Texas

© Henry Van Dyke

A DEMOCRATIC ODE

I

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The Girdle Of Friendship

© Oliver Wendell Holmes

SHE gathered at her slender waist
The beauteous robe she wore;
Its folds a golden belt embraced,
One rose-hued gem it bore.

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Two Voices

© Edith Nesbit

COUNTRY

'SWEET are the lanes and the hedges, the fields made red with the clover,

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Table Talk

© William Cowper

A.  You told me, I remember, glory, built

On selfish principles, is shame and guilt;

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Vine And Sycamore

© Madison Julius Cawein

I

  Here where a tree and its wild liana,

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Against Fruition

© Abraham Cowley

No; thou'rt a fool, I'll swear, if e'er thou grant; 

Much of my veneration thou must want, 

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The Two Masks

© George Meredith

Melpomene among her livid people,

Ere stroke of lyre, upon Thaleia looks,

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A Story Of Doom: Book III.

© Jean Ingelow

Above the head of great Methuselah
There lay two demons in the opened roof
Invisible, and gathered up his words;
For when the Elder prophesied, it came
About, that hidden things were shown to them,
And burdens that he spake against his time.

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You Gote-herd Gods

© Sir Philip Sidney

  You Gote-herd Gods, that loue the grassie mountaines,
  You Nimphes that haunt the springs in pleasant vallies,
  You Satyrs ioyde with free and quiet forests,
  Vouchsafe your silent eares to playning musique,
  Which to my woes giues still an early morning;
  And drawes the dolor on till wery euening.

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At Washington

© John Greenleaf Whittier

WITH a cold and wintry noon-light.
On its roofs and steeples shed,
Shadows weaving with t e sunlight
From the gray sky overhead,