Great poems

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Queen Mab: Part I.

© Percy Bysshe Shelley

FAIRY
  'Spirit! who hast dived so deep;
  Spirit! who hast soared so high;
  Thou the fearless, thou the mild,
  Accept the boon thy worth hath earned,
  Ascend the car with me!'

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Why Art Thou Thus Cast Down, My Heart?

© Hans Sachs

Why art thou thus cast down, my heart?
Why troubled, why dost mourn apart,
O'er nought but earthly wealth?
Trust in thy God, be not afraid,
He is thy Friend who all things made.

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Cyder: Book II

© John Arthur Phillips

  Sometimes thou shalt with fervent Vows implore
  A moderate Wind; the Orchat loves to wave
  With Winter-Winds, before the Gems exert
  Their feeble Heads; the loosen'd Roots then drink
  Large Increment, Earnest of happy Years.

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The Prayer on the Pier

© Henry Clay Work

Proudly foats the ocean steamer,-

Throngs aboard and on the pier;

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Australia

© John Farrell

O Radiant Land! o'er whom the Sun's first dawning

Fell brightest when God said " Let there be Light;"'

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The Lord of the Isles: Canto V.

© Sir Walter Scott

I.

On fair Loch-Ranza stream'd the early day,

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In Memoriam A. H. H.: 121.

© Alfred Tennyson

The market boat is on the stream,
  And voices hail it from the brink;
  Thou hear'st the village hammer clink,
And see'st the moving of the team.

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The Dolefull Lay of Clorinda

© Mary Sidney Herbert

Ay me, to whom shall I my case complaine,
That may compassion my impatient griefe!
Or where shall I unfold my inward paine,
That my enriven heart may find reliefe!
Shall I unto the heavenly powres it show?
Or unto earthly men that dwell below?

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At the Fords Of Jordan

© Mary Hannay Foott

Ere my hand to the husbandman’s toil had been trained,—
Or my foot to the slow-moving flocks had been chained,—
I, too, would have marched in the long line of spears,—
With the youthful, the courtly, the brave for my peers.

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Ask Me No More

© Alfred Tennyson

Ask me no more: the moon may draw the sea;
The cloud may stoop from heaven and take the shape,
With fold to fold, of mountain or of cape;
But O too fond, when have I answer'd thee?
Ask me no more.

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Deep Sea Cables

© Rudyard Kipling

They have wakened the timeless Things; they have killed their father Time
Joining hands in the gloom, a league from the last of the sun.
Hush! Men talk to-day o'er the waste of the ultimate slime,
And a new Word runs between: whispering, 'Let us be one!'

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Do Your All

© Edgar Albert Guest

"Do your bit!" How cheap and trite

  Seems that phrase in such a fight!

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Sonnet X. To Erskine

© Samuel Taylor Coleridge

When British Freedom for an happier land
Spread her broad wings, that fluttered with affright,
Erskine! thy voice she heard, and paused her flight
Sublime of hope! For dreadless thou didst stand

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Ode To Napoleon Buonaparte

© George Gordon Byron

'Expends Annibalem:--quot libras in duce summo

Invenies?~JUVENAL., Sat. X.

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With Madness Like to Mine

© Shams al-Din Hafiz

NOT one is filled with madness like to mine
In all the taverns! my soiled robe lies here,
There my neglected book, both pledged for wine.
With dust my heart is thick, that should be clear,

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by William Wordsworth">"Call Not The Royal Swede Unfortunate"

© William Wordsworth

CALL not the royal Swede unfortunate,

Who never did to Fortune bend the knee;

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The Fountain Of Youth

© James Russell Lowell

I

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

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A Parable - II

© James Russell Lowell

Said Christ our Lord, 'I will go and see
How the men, my brethren, believe in me.'
He passed not again through the gate of birth,
But made himself known to the children of earth.

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Anhelli - Chapter 8

© Juliusz Slowacki

And they came to a subterranean lake,
and proceeded along the shores of the dark water,
which stirred not, but was golden in places from the light of torches.

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When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd

© Walt Whitman


When lilacs last in the door-yard bloom’d,
And the great star early droop’d in the western sky in the night,
I mourn’d—and yet shall mourn with ever-returning spring.