Hope poems

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The World In The House

© Jane Taylor

  Regions of intellect ! serenely fair,
Hence let us rise, and breathe your purer air.
--There shine the stars ! one intellectual glance
At that bright host,--on yon sublime expanse,
Might prove a cure ;--well, say they, let them shine
With all our hearts,--but let us dress and dine.

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To James Whitcomb Riley With Admiration And Regard

© Madison Julius Cawein

_O lyrist of the lowly and the true,

  The song I sought for you

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The Old Apple-Woman

© Christopher Pearse Cranch

A Broadway Lyric
SHE sits by the side of a turbulent stream
That rushes and rolls forever
Up and down like a weary dream

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Politics

© Alfred Tennyson

We move, the wheel must always move,

Nor always on the plain,

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Foreward

© Madison Julius Cawein

_And one, perchance, will read and sigh:
  "What aimless songs! Why will he sing
  Of nature that drags out her woe
  Through wind and rain, and sun, and snow,
  From miserable spring to spring?"
  Then put me by._

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Hamlet As Told On The Street

© Sheldon Allan Silverstein

Well, that was the end of our sweet prince,
He died in confusion and nobody’s seen him since.
And the moral of the story is bells do get out of tune…
And you can find shit in a silver spoon…
And an old man’s revenge can be a young man’s ruin…
Oh – and never look too close… at what your mamma is doin’.

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On the Paroo

© Henry Kendall

AS WHEN the strong stream of a wintering sea

Rolls round our coast, with bodeful breaks of storm,

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Battle Of Hastings - I

© Thomas Chatterton

From Chatelet hys launce Erle Egward drew,
And hit Wallerie on the dexter cheek;
Peerc'd to his braine, and cut his tongue in two.
There, knyght, quod he, let that thy actions speak --

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Sydney Exhibition Cantata

© Henry Kendall

A gracious morning on the hills of wet
And wind and mist her glittering feet has set;
The life and heat of light have chased away
Australia's dark, mysterious yesterday.
A great, glad glory now flows down and shines
On gold-green lands where waved funereal pines.

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The Princess (part 7)

© Alfred Tennyson

'If you be, what I think you, some sweet dream,
I would but ask you to fulfil yourself:
But if you be that Ida whom I knew,
I ask you nothing:  only, if a dream,
Sweet dream, be perfect.  I shall die tonight.
Stoop down and seem to kiss me ere I die.'

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Stanzas To Augusta

© George Gordon Byron

I.
When all around grew drear and dark,
  And reason half withheld her ray
And hope but shed a dying spark
  Which more misled my lonely way;

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Dover To Munich

© Charles Stuart Calverley

Farewell, farewell!  Before our prow
  Leaps in white foam the noisy channel,
A tourist's cap is on my brow,
  My legs are cased in tourists' flannel:

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Sorry Her Lot

© William Schwenck Gilbert

Sorry her lot who loves too well,
Heavy the heart that hopes but vainly,
Sad are the sighs that own the spell
Uttered by eyes that speak too plainly;
Heavy the sorrow that bows the head
When Love is alive and Hope is dead!

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"Sed Nos Qui Vivimus"

© Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

How beautiful is life--the physical joy of sense and breathing;
The glory of the world which has found speech and speaks to us;
The robe which summer throws in June round the white bones of winter;
The new birth of each day, itself a life, a world, a sun!

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A Wreath Of Sonnets (3/14)

© France Preseren

Since from my heart's deep roots have sprung these lays,
A heart not to be silenced any more;
Now I am like to Tasso who of yore
Would sing his Leonora's fame and praise.

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Maha-Bharata, The Epic Of Ancient India - Book II - Swayamvara (The Bride's Choice)

© Romesh Chunder Dutt

The mutual jealousies of the princes increased from day to day, and
when Yudhishthir, the eldest of all the princes and the eldest son of
the late Pandu, was recognised heir-apparent, the anger of Duryodhan
and his brothers knew no bounds. And they formed a dark scheme to
kill the sons of Pandu.

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The Waggoner - Canto First

© William Wordsworth

'TIS spent--this burning day of June!
Soft darkness o'er its latest gleams is stealing;
The buzzing dor-hawk, round and round, is wheeling,--
That solitary bird

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Marjory

© Augusta Davies Webster

Spring Stornelli.

THE RIVULET.

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Ruth

© William Wordsworth

WHEN Ruth was left half desolate,
Her Father took another Mate;
And Ruth, not seven years old,
A slighted child, at her own will
Went wandering over dale and hill,
In thoughtless freedom, bold.

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My Play Is Done

© Swami Vivekananda

Ever rising, ever falling with the waves of time, still rolling on I go

From fleeting scene to scene ephemeral, with life's currents' ebb and flow.