Weather poems

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The Three Graves. A Fragment Of A Sexton's Tale

© Samuel Taylor Coleridge

The grapes upon the Vicar's wall
Were ripe as ripe could be;
And yellow leaves in sun and wind
Were falling from the tree.

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Evening

© Victoria Mary Sackville-West

When little lights in little ports come out,
Quivering down through water with the stars,
And all the fishing fleet of slender spars
Range at their moorings, veer with tide about;

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Adam’s Curse

© William Butler Yeats

We sat grown quiet at the name of love; 
We saw the last embers of daylight die, 
And in the trembling blue-green of the sky 
A moon, worn as if it had been a shell 
Washed by time’s waters as they rose and fell 
About the stars and broke in days and years.

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The Georgics

© Virgil

GEORGIC I

 What makes the cornfield smile; beneath what star

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Amor Mundi

© Christina Georgina Rossetti

“Oh where are you going with your love-locks flowing
 On the west wind blowing along this valley track?” 
“The downhill path is easy, come with me an it please ye,
 We shall escape the uphill by never turning back.”

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In the Carpenter's Shop

© Sara Teasdale

Mary sat in the corner dreaming,
Dim was the room and low,
While in the dusk, the saw went screaming
 To and fro.

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

© Coventry Kersey Dighton Patmore

III Compensation
  That nothing here may want its praise,
  Know, she who in her dress reveals
  A fine and modest taste, displays
  More loveliness than she conceals.

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A Monumental Column : A Funeral Elegy

© John Webster

To The Right Honourable Sir Robert Carr, Viscount Rochester, Knight of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, and One Of His Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council.

The greatest of the kingly race is gone,

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The Foot-Path

© James Russell Lowell

It mounts athwart the windy hill
  Through sallow slopes of upland bare,
And Fancy climbs with foot-fall still
  Its narrowing curves that end in air.

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Nights on Planet Earth

© Louis Zukofsky

Heaven was originally precisely that: the starry sky, dating back to the earliest Egyptian texts, which include magic spells that enable the soul to be sewn in the body of the great mother, Nut, literally "night," like the seed of a plant, which is also a jewel and a star. The Greek Elysian fields derive from the same celestial topography: the Egyptian "Field of Rushes," the eastern stars at dawn where the soul goes to be purified. That there is another, mirror world, a world of light, and that this world is simply the sky—and a step further, the breath of the sky, the weather, the very air—is a formative belief of great antiquity that has continued to the present day with the godhead becoming brightness itself: dios/theos (Greek); deus/divine/diana (Latin); devas (Sanskrit); daha (Arabic); day (English).
—Susan Brind Morrow, Wolves and Honey
1

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Almswomen

© Edmund Blunden

  Many a time they kiss and cry, and pray
  That both be summoned in the self-same day,
  And wiseman linnet tinkling in his cage
  End too with them the friendship of old age,
  And all together leave their treasured room
  Some bell-like evening when the may's in bloom.

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The Long Evenings of Their Leavetakings

© Eavan Boland

My mother was married by the water.

She wore a gray coat and a winter rose.

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Milton by Firelight

© Gary Snyder

Piute Creek, August 1955


“O hell, what do mine eyes

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Boy Breaking Glass

© Gwendolyn Brooks

“Don’t go down the plank
if you see there’s no extension. 
Each to his grief, each to
his loneliness and fidgety revenge.
Nobody knew where I was and now I am no longer there.”

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The Only Child

© Katharine Tynan

Lest he miss other children, lo!
His angel is his playfellow.
A riotous angel two years old,
With wings of rose and curls of gold.

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A Prayer for Rain

© Paul Eluard

Let it come down: these thicknesses of air

have long enough walled love away from love;

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The Tour

© Sylvia Plath

O maiden aunt, you have come to call.
Do step into the hall!
With your bold
Gecko, the little flick!
All cogs, weird sparkle and every cog solid gold.
And I in slippers and housedress with no lipstick!

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Beowulf

© Charles Baudelaire

LO, praise of the prowess of people-kings
of spear-armed Danes, in days long sped,
we have heard, and what honor the athelings won!
Oft Scyld the Scefing from squadroned foes,

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The Loehrs And The Hammonds

© James Whitcomb Riley

"Hey, Bud! O Bud!" rang out a gleeful call,--

"_The Loehrs is come to your house!_" And a small

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Winter Remembered

© Pindar

Two evils, monstrous either one apart,
Possessed me, and were long and loath at going: 
A cry of Absence, Absence, in the heart, 
And in the wood the furious winter blowing.