Music poems

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Paradise Regain'd : Book IV.

© John Milton

Perplexed and troubled at his bad success
The Tempter stood, nor had what to reply,
Discovered in his fraud, thrown from his hope
So oft, and the persuasive rhetoric

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Hellvellyn

© Sir Walter Scott

I climbed the dark brow of the mighty Hellvellyn,

Lakes and mountains beneath me gleamed misty and wide;

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The Illuminated City

© Felicia Dorothea Hemans

THE hills all glow'd with a festive light,

For the royal city rejoic'd by night:

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Taps At West Point

© John Jay Chapman

THE dim and wintry river lies

Torpid and ice-bound, like a giant snake;

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Sir Henry Irving

© Virna Sheard

No more for thee the music and the lights,
  Thy magic may no more win smile nor frown;
For thee, 0 dear interpreter of dreams,
  The curtain hath rung down.

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The Progress Of Refinement. Part II.

© Henry James Pye

CONTENTS OF PART II. Introduction.—Sketch of the Northern barbarians.—Feudal system.—Origin of Chivalry.—Superstition.—Crusades.— Hence the enfranchisement of Vassals, and Commerce encouraged. —The Northern and Western Europeans, struck with the splendor of Constantinople, and the superior elegance of the Saracens.—Origin of Romance.— The remains of Science confined to the monasteries, and in an unknown language.—Hence the distinction of learning.—Discovery of the Roman Jurisprudence, and it's effects.—Classic writers begin to be admired—Arts revive in Italy.—Greek learning introduced there, on the taking of Constantinople by the Turks.—That event lamented.—Learning encouraged by Leo X.—Invention of Printing.—The Reformation.—It's effects, even on those countries that retained their old Religion.— It's establishment in Britain.—Age of Elizabeth.— Arts and Literature flourish.—Spenser.—Shakespear. —Milton.—Dryden.—The Progress of the Arts checked by the Civil War.—Patronized in France. Age of Lewis XIV.—Taste hurt in England during the profligate reign of Charles II.—Short and turbulent reign of his Successor.—King William no encourager of the Arts.—Age of Queen Anne.—Manners.—Science and Literature flourish.—Neglected by the first Princes of the House of Brunswick.—Patronage of Arts by his present Majesty.—Poetry not encouraged.—Address to the King.—General view of the present state of Refinement. —Among the European Nations.—France.— Britain.—Italy.—Spain.—Holland and Germany. —Increasing Influence of French manners.— Russia.—Greece.—Asia.—China.—Africa. —America.—Newly discovered islands.—European Colonies.


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Ode To The Setting Sun

© Francis Thompson

Alpha and Omega, sadness and mirth,

  The springing music, and its wasting breath--

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Heartsease And Rue: Friendship

© James Russell Lowell

Natures benignly mixed of air and earth,
Now with the stars and now with equal zest
Tracing the eccentric orbit of a jest.

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I Am Raferty

© Douglas Hyde

I AM Raferty the Poet 

  Full of hope and love, 

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Rejoicing After The Battle Of Inkerman

© Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon

Rejoice! the fearful day is o’er

  For the victors and the slain;

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The Wood Carver's Wife

© Marjorie Lowry Christie Pickthall

JEAN MARCHANT, the wood-carver.
DORETTE, his wife.
LOUIS DE LOTBINIERE.
SHAGONAS, an Indian lad.

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By The Sea

© Sara Teasdale

Beside an ebbing northern sea
While stars awaken one by one,
We walk together, I and he.

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Practising The Anthem

© Ada Cambridge

A summer wind blows through the open porch,
 And, 'neath the rustling eaves,
A summer light of moonrise, calm and pale,
 Shines through a vale of leaves.

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How Is It That I Am Now So Softly Awakened

© Conrad Aiken

How is it that I am now so softly awakened,

My leaves shaken down with music?—

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Those Shadon Bells

© Denis Florence MacCarthy

Those Shandon bells, those Shandon bells!
Whose deep, sad tone now sobs, now swells-
Who comes to seek this hallowed ground,
And sleep within their sacred sound?

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Choosing A Profession

© Charles Lamb

A Creole boy from the West Indies brought,

To be in European learning taught,

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Grant At Rest-- August 8, 1885

© James Whitcomb Riley

Sir Launcelot rode overthwart and endlong in a wide forest,  and held no
path but as wild adventure led him... And he  returned and came again to his
horse, and took off his saddle and his bridle, and let him pasture; and
unlaced his helm, and ungirdled his sword, and laid him down to sleep upon
his shield before the cross.  --Age of Chivalary

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The Cathedral Porch

© Robert Laurence Binyon

Towering, towering up to the noon--blaze,
Up to the hot blue, up to blinding gold,
Pillar and pinnacle, arch and corbel, scrolled,
Flowered and tendrilled, soar, aspire and raise

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Soldier, rest! thy warfare o'er,

© Sir Walter Scott

  Soldier, rest! thy warfare o'er,

  Sleep the sleep that knows not breaking:

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Elegiac II.

© Arthur Hugh Clough

Trunks the forest yielded with gums ambrosial oozing,
  Boughs with apples laden beautiful, Hesperian,
Golden, odoriferous, perfume exhaling about them,
  Orbs in a dark umbrage luminous and radiant;