War poems

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At Midnight

© Madison Julius Cawein

At midnight in the trysting wood
  I wandered by the waterside,
  When, soft as mist, before me stood
  My sweetheart who had died.

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A Receipt To Restore Stella’s Youth. 1724-5

© Jonathan Swift

The Scottish hinds, too poor to house
In frosty nights their starving cows,
While not a blade of grass or hay
Appears from Michaelmas to May,

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The Burial Of Moses

© Cecil Frances Alexander

  By Nebo's lonely mountain,

  On this side Jordan's wave,

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The Kindly Neighbor

© Edgar Albert Guest

I have a kindly neighbor, one who stands

Beside my gate and chats with me awhile,

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Maha-Bharata, The Epic Of Ancient India - Book I - Astra Darsana (The Tournament)

© Romesh Chunder Dutt

The scene of the Epic is the ancient kingdom of the Kurus which
flourished along the upper course of the Ganges; and the historical
fact on which the Epic is based is a great war which took place
between the Kurus and a neighbouring tribe, the Panchalas, in the
thirteenth or fourteenth century before Christ.

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A Paradox, That The Sick Are In A Better Case Than The Whole

© George Herbert

You who admire yourselves because
  You neither groan nor weep,
And think it contrary to Nature's laws
  To want one ounce of sleep,
  Your strong belief
Acquits yourselves, and gives the sick all grief.

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The Progres Of The Soule

© John Donne

Wherein,

BY OCCASION OF

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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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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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Eccentricity

© Washington Allston

 Who next appears thus stalking by his side?
Why that is one who'd sooner die than-ride!
No inch of ground can maps unheard of show
Untrac'd by him, unknown to every toe:
As if intent this punning age to suit,
The globe's circumf'rence meas'ring by the foot.

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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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Cupid Turned Stroller. - From Anacreon

© Matthew Prior

At dead of night, when stars appear,

And strong Bootes turns the Bear,

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Farmer's Boy

© John Clare

He waits all day beside his little flock

And asks the passing stranger what's o'clock,

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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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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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Oh Man!

© Franklin Pierce Adams

Man hath harnessed the lightning;

Man hath soared to the skies;

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Canto 1: Narad

© Valmiki

To sainted Nárad, prince of those
Whose lore in words of wisdom flows.
Whose constant care and chief delight
Were Scripture and ascetic rite,

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The Brus Book IV

© John Barbour


[English harshness to prisoners]

In Rawchryne leve we now the king

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Pennsylvania Hall

© John Greenleaf Whittier

NOT with the splendors of the days of old,
The spoil of nations, and barbaric gold;
No weapons wrested from the fields of blood,
Where dark and stern the unyielding Roman stood,