Faith poems

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Snow Falling Through Fog

© William Matthews

This is how we used to imagine
the ocean floor: a steady snow of dead
diatoms and forams drifting
higher in the sunken plains, a soggy
dust on the climbing underwater
peaks. But such a weather

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The Greek Wife

© John Kenyon

I love thee best, Old Ocean! when

  Thy waters flow all-ripplingly;

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If I Had Youth

© Edgar Albert Guest

If I had youth I'd bid the world to try me;

  I'd answer every challenge to my will.

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Charles The First

© Percy Bysshe Shelley


A Pursuivant.
Place, for the Marshal of the Masque!

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The Song Of Hiawatha III: Hiawatha's Childhood

© Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Downward through the evening twilight,

In the days that are forgotten,

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Malcolm's Katie: A Love Story - Part IV.

© Isabella Valancy Crawford

  High grew the snow beneath the low-hung sky,
  And all was silent in the Wilderness;
  In trance of stillness Nature heard her God
  Rebuilding her spent fires, and veil'd her face
  While the Great Worker brooded o'er His work.

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Greek Funeral Chant Or Myriologue

© Felicia Dorothea Hemans

A WAIL was heard around the bed, the death-bed of the young,
Amidst her tears the Funeral Chant a mournful mother sung.
-"Ianthis! dost thou sleep?-Thou sleep'st!-but this is not the rest,
The breathing and the rosy calm, I have pillow'd on my breast!

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The Wonder-Working Magician - Act III

© Denis Florence MacCarthy

DEMON.  Why, how is this, that using your free-will
More than my precept meant,
Say for what end, what object, what intent,
Through ignorance or boldness can it be,
You thus come forth the sun's bright face to see?

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The Bard

© William Gilmore Simms

Where dwells the spirit of the Bard-what sky

Persuades his daring wing,-

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Epilogue

© Herman Melville

  Yea, ape and angel, strife and old debate--
The harps of heaven and dreary gongs of hell;
Science the feud can only aggravate--
No umpire she betwixt the chimes and knell:
The running battle of the star and clod
Shall run forever--if there be no God.

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The Ring And The Book - Chapter III - The Other Half-Rome

© Robert Browning

ANOTHER DAY that finds her living yet,

Little Pompilia, with the patient brow

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The Penalty

© Rudyard Kipling

Once in life I watched a Star;
 But I whistled, "Let her go!
There are others, fairer far,
 Which my favouring skies shall show
Here I lied, and herein I
Stood to pay the penalty.

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Richard and Kate: A suffolk Ballad

© Robert Bloomfield

'Come, Goody, stop your humdrum wheel,
Sweep up your orts, and get your Hat;
Old joys reviv'd once more I feel,
'Tis Fair-day;--ay, _and more than that._

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The Poor Of The Borough. Letter XXI: Abel Keene

© George Crabbe

merchant's son,
Choice spirits all, who wish'd him to be one;
It must, no question, give them lively joy,
Hopes long indulged to combat and destroy;
At these they levelled all their skill and

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Larry Mick McGarry

© William Percy French

Oh Larry Mick McGarry,

Was a torment in the town,

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The Helmsman

© Henry Kendall

LIKE one who meets a staggering blow,
  The stout old ship doth reel,
And waters vast go seething past—
But will it last, this fearful blast,
On straining shroud and groaning mast,
  O sailor at the wheel?

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To E.G., Dedicating a Book

© George MacDonald

A broken tale of endless things,
Take, lady: thou art not of those
Who in what vale a fountain springs
Would have its journey close.

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A Story Of Doom: Book I.

© Jean Ingelow

Niloiya said to Noah, "What aileth thee,
My master, unto whom is my desire,
The father of my sons?" He answered her,
"Mother of many children, I have heard
The Voice again." "Ah, me!" she saith, "ah, me!
What spake it?" and with that Niloiya sighed.

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"The City of Brass"

© Rudyard Kipling

In a land that the sand overlays – the ways to her gates are untrod –
A multitude ended their days whose gates were made splendid by God,
Till they grew drunk and were smitten with madness and went to their fall,
And of these is a story written: but Allah Alone knoweth all!

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The Three Guides

© Anne Brontë

Spirit of Earth! thy hand is chill:

I've felt its icy clasp;