Peace poems

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The Angel In The House. Book I. Canto II.

© Coventry Kersey Dighton Patmore

IV A Distinction
  The lack of lovely pride, in her
  Who strives to please, my pleasure numbs,
  And still the maid I most prefer
  Whose care to please with pleasing comes.

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Epitaphs Translated From Chiabrera

© William Wordsworth

I
WEEP not, beloved Friends! nor let the air
For me with sighs be troubled. Not from life
Have I been taken; this is genuine life

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Sabbath Sonnet

© Felicia Dorothea Hemans

How many blessed groups this hour are bending,
Through England's primrose meadow-paths, their way
Towards spire and tower, 'midst shadowy elms ascending,
Whence the sweet chimes proclaim the hallowed day!

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My Father

© Paul Hamilton Hayne

MY father! in the vague, mysterious past,
My boyish thoughts have wandered o'er and o'er,
To thy lone grave upon a distant shore,
The wanderer of the waters, still at last.

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Italy : 26. The Campagna Of Florence

© Samuel Rogers

'Tis morning.  Let us wander through the fields,
Where Cimabue found a shepherd-boy
Tracing his idle fancies on the ground;
And let us from the top of Fiesole,

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Metamorphoses: Book The Tenth

© Ovid

 The End of the Tenth Book.


 Translated into English verse under the direction of
 Sir Samuel Garth by John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison,
 William Congreve and other eminent hands

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M'Gillviray's Dream

© Thomas Bracken

A Forest-Ranger's Story.

JUST nineteen long years, Jack, have passed o'er my shoulders

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Woodnotes

© Ralph Waldo Emerson

II 
As sunbeams stream through liberal space
And nothing jostle or displace,
So waved the pine-tree through my thought
And fanned the dreams it never brought.

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Winter-Thought

© Archibald Lampman

These are the emblems of pure pleasures flown,
I scarce can think of pleasure without these.
Even to dream of them is to disown
The cold forlorn midwinter reveries,
Lulled with the perfume of old hopes new-blown,
No longer dreams, but dear realities.

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On the Death of Stephen Grey, F.R.S.

© Samuel Johnson

The Electrician

Long hast thou borne the burden of the day,

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Beyond The Years

© Paul Laurence Dunbar

I.

BEYOND the years the answer lies,

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Song Of The Naiads

© Paul Hamilton Hayne

GAY is our crystal floor,
Beneath the wave,
With strange gems flaming o'er
The Genii gave;

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The Ladle. A Tale

© Matthew Prior

Our gods the outward gates unbarr'd;
Our farmer met 'em in the yard;
Thought they were folks that lost their way,
And ask'd them civilly to stay;
Told 'em for supper or for bed
They might go on and be worse sped. -

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The Vision Of Augustine And Monica

© Robert Laurence Binyon

Mother, because thine eyes are sealed in sleep,
And thy cheeks pale, and thy lips cold, and deep
In silence plunged, so fathomlessly still
Thou liest, and relaxest all thy will,

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Il Y A Cent Ans

© George Meredith

That march of the funereal Past behold;
How Glory sat on Bondage for its throne;
How men, like dazzled insects, through the mould
Still worked their way, and bled to keep their own.

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Love And Liberty

© Horace Smith

The linnet had flown from its cage away,
And flitted and sang in the light of day--
Had flown from the lady who loved it well,
In Liberty's freer air to dwell.
Alas! poor bird, it was soon to prove,
Sweeter than Liberty is Love.

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Visit Of Hope To Sydney Cove, Near Botany Bay

© Erasmus Darwin


Where Sydney Cove her lucid bosom swells,

And with wide arms the indignant storm repels;

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Nineteen-Fourteen

© Rupert Brooke

I PEACE

Now, God be thanked who has matched us with his hour,

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The Doe: A Fragment (From Wandering Willie)

© George Meredith

And-'Yonder look! yoho! yoho!

Nancy is off!' the farmer cried,

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A Mountain Gateway

© Bliss William Carman

I know a vale where I would go one day,
When June comes back and all the world once more
Is glad with summer. Deep in shade it lies
A mighty cleft between the bosoming hills,
A cool dim gateway to the mountains' heart.