Health poems

 / page 52 of 85 /
star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

Barbara Allen

© Pierre Reverdy

In Scarlet town, where I was born,
 There was a fair maid dwellin’,
Made every youth cry Well-a-way!
 Her name was Barbara Allen.

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

By the Waters of Babylon

© Emma Lazarus

Little Poems in Prose


I. The Exodus. (August 3, 1492.)

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

An Essay on Man: Epistle I

© Alexander Pope

To Henry St. John, Lord Bolingbroke


Awake, my St. John! leave all meaner things

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

The Lake of the Thousand Isles

© Evan MacColl

(For Music.)
   Though Missouri'stide may majestic glide,
    There's a curse on the soil it laves;
   The Ohio, too, may be fair, but who

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

The Feast of Stephen

© Anthony Evan Hecht

I

The coltish horseplay of the locker room,

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

Simon Lee: The Old Huntsman

© André Breton

In the sweet shire of Cardigan,


Not far from pleasant Ivor-hall,

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

Fie, Pleasure, Fie!

© George Gascoigne

Fie pleasure, fie! thou cloyest me with delight,
Thou fill’st my mouth with sweetmeats overmuch;
I wallow still in joy both day and night:
I deem, I dream, I do, I taste, I touch,
No thing but all that smells of perfect bliss;
Fie pleasure, fie! I cannot like of this.

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

Ormuzd And Ahriman. Part II

© Christopher Pearse Cranch

Fear not, for ye shall live if ye receive
The life divine, obedient to the law
Of truth and good. So shall there be no frown
Upon his face who wills the good of all.

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

To Mr. [S.T.] C[oleridge]

© Bliss William Carman

Midway the hill of science, after steep


And rugged paths that tire the unpractised feet,

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

The Cottager

© John Clare

True as the church clock hand the hour pursues

He plods about his toils and reads the news,

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

Pauline, A Fragment of a Question

© Robert Browning


And I can love nothing-and this dull truth
Has come the last: but sense supplies a love
Encircling me and mingling with my life.

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

Interrupted Meditation

© Robert Hass

Little green involute fronds of fern at creekside.

And the sinewy clear water rushing over creekstone

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

The Affliction (I)

© George Herbert

When first thou didst entice to thee my heart,
 I thought the service brave;
So many joys I writ down for my part,
 Besides what I might have
Out of my stock of natural delights,
Augmented with thy gracious benefits.

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

An Ode on the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland, Considered as the Subject of Poetry

© William Taylor Collins

Home, thou return'st from Thames, whose Naiads long

  Have seen thee ling'ring, with a fond delay,

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

The Child Of The Islands - Autumn

© Caroline Norton

I.
BROWN Autumn cometh, with her liberal hand
Binding the Harvest in a thousand sheaves:
A yellow glory brightens o'er the land,

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

Genie

© Arthur Rimbaud

He is affection and the present since he opened the house to foaming winter and the hum of summer, he who purified drink and food, he who is the charm of fleeting places and the superhuman deliciousness of staying still. He is affection and the future, strength and love that we, standing amid rage and troubles, see passing in the storm-rent sky and on banners of ecstasy.
  He is love, perfect and reinvented measurement, wonderful and unforeseen reason, and eternity: machine beloved for its fatal qualities. We have all experienced the terror of his yielding and of our own: O enjoyment of our health, surge of our faculties, egoistic affection and passion for him, he who loves us for his infinite life
  And we remember him and he travels. . . And if the Adoration goes away, resounds, its promise resounds: “Away with those superstitions, those old bodies, those couples and those ages. It’s this age that has sunk!”
  He won’t go away, nor descend from a heaven again, he won’t accomplish the redemption of women’s anger and the gaiety of men and of all that sin: for it is now accomplished, with him being, and being loved.

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

The Circus

© Kenneth Koch

Noel Lee was in Paris then but usually out of it
In Germany or Denmark giving a concert
As part of an endless activity
Which was either his career or his happiness or a combination of both
Or neither I remember his dark eyes looking he was nervous
With me perhaps because of our days at Harvard.

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

Jenny

© Dante Gabriel Rossetti

 It was a careless life I led
When rooms like this were scarce so strange
Not long ago. What breeds the change,—
The many aims or the few years?
Because to-night it all appears
Something I do not know again.

star nullstar nullstar nullstar nullstar null

Mabel Martin

© John Greenleaf Whittier

PROEM.
I CALL the old time back: I bring my lay
in tender memory of the summer day
When, where our native river lapsed away,