Love poems

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Sonnet III: Turn to Yon Vale Beneath

© Mary Darby Robinson

Turn to yon vale beneath, whose tangled shade
Excludes the blazing torch of noon-day light,
Where sportive Fawns, and dimpled Loves invite,
The bow'r of Pleasure opens to the glade:

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A Passing Hail

© James Whitcomb Riley

Let us rest ourselves a bit!
Worry?- wave your hand to it -
Kiss your finger-tips and smile
It farewell a little while.

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Sonnet II: High on a Rock

© Mary Darby Robinson

High on a rock, coaeval with the skies,
A Temple stands, rear'd by immortal pow'rs
To Chastity divine! ambrosial flow'rs
Twining round icicles, in columns rise,

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Sonnet I: Favour'd by Heav'n

© Mary Darby Robinson

Favour'd by Heav'n are those, ordain'd to taste
The bliss supreme that kindles fancy's fire;
Whose magic fingers sweep the muses' lyre,
In varying cadence, eloquently chaste!

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Second Ode to the Nightingale

© Mary Darby Robinson

BLEST be thy song, sweet NIGHTINGALE,
Lorn minstrel of the lonely vale !
Where oft I've heard thy dulcet strain
In mournful melody complain;

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Rinaldo to Laura Maria

© Mary Darby Robinson

There tell me I am most despis'd,
E'en by thyself, whom most I priz'd,
So shall I gladly welcome fate,
And perish in thy perfect hate:
So shall I better bear th' eternal pain,
Never to see thy Form, or hear thy Voice again.

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Brother Benedict

© Alfred Austin

Brother Benedict rose and left his cell

With the last slow swing of the evening bell.

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Poor Marguerite

© Mary Darby Robinson

She felt the wintry blast of night,
And smil'd to see the morning light,
For then she cried, "I soon shall meet
"The plighted love of MARGUERITE."

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Pastoral Stanzas

© Mary Darby Robinson

WHEN AURORA'S soft blushes o'erspread the blue hill,
And the mist dies away at the glances of morn;
When the birds join the music that floats on the rill,
And the beauties of spring the young woodlands adorn.

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Ode to the Nightingale

© Mary Darby Robinson

Restless and sad­I sought once more
A calm retreat on BRITAIN's shore;
Deceitful HOPE, e'en there I found
That soothing FRIENDSHIP's specious name
Was but a short-liv'd empty sound,
And LOVE a false delusive flame.

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Ode to the Muse

© Mary Darby Robinson

But, if thy magic pow'rs impart
One soft sensation to the heart,
If thy warm precepts can dispense
One thrilling transport o'er my sense;
Oh! keep thy gifts, and let me fly,
In APATHY's cold arms to die.

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Anactoria

© Algernon Charles Swinburne

MY LIFE is bitter with thy love; thine eyes

Blind me, thy tresses burn me, thy sharp sighs

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Hymn XXXIX : Night forbear; alas, our Praise,

© John Austin

Night forbear; alas, our Praise,

And our young begining hope,

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Ode to Envy

© Mary Darby Robinson

Deep in th' abyss where frantic horror bides,
In thickest mists of vapours fell,
Where wily Serpents hissing glare
And the dark Demon of Revenge resides,

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Ode to Eloquence

© Mary Darby Robinson

Oft, by thy thrilling voice subdued,
The meagre fiend INGRATITUDE
Her treach'rous fang conceals;
Pale ENVY hides her forked sting;
And CALUMNY, beneath the wing
Of dark oblivion steals.

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Haunted

© Wilcox Ella Wheeler

What are these nameless mysteries,
These subtleties of life and death,
That bring before our spirit eyes
The loved and lost; or, like a breath
Of lightest air, will touch the cheek,
And yet a wordless language speak?

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Ode to Della Crusca

© Mary Darby Robinson

ENLIGHTEN'D Patron of the sacred Lyre?
Whose ever-varying, ever-witching song
Revibrates on the heart
With magic thrilling touch,

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A Seventeenth-Century Song

© Louise Imogen Guiney

She alone of Shepherdesses

With her blue disdayning eyes,

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Ode to Beauty

© Mary Darby Robinson

EXULTING BEAUTY,­phantom of an hour,
Whose magic spells enchain the heart,
Ah ! what avails thy fascinating pow'r,
Thy thrilling smile, thy witching art ?

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The Two Sides Of The River

© William Morris

O Winter, O white winter, wert thou gone
No more within the wilds were I alone
Leaping with bent bow over stock and stone!