FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   >>  
And he drank down deep, with his eyes broad beaming, Here in this room where I am, The golden vintage of Shakespeare, gleaming In the silver vessels of Lamb. Here by my hearth where he was I listen For the shade of the sound of a word, Athirst for the birdlike eyes to glisten, For the tongue to chirp like a bird. At the blast of battle, how broad they brightened, Like fire in the spheres of stars, And clung to the pictured page, and lightened As keen as the heart of Mars! At the touch of laughter, how swift it twittered The shrillest music on earth; How the lithe limbs laughed and the whole child glittered With radiant riot of mirth! Our Shakespeare now, as a man dumb-stricken, Stands silent there on the shelf: And my thoughts, that had song in the heart of them, sicken, And relish not Shakespeare's self. And my mood grows moodier than Hamlet's even, And man delights not me, But only the face that morn and even My heart leapt only to see. That my heart made merry within me seeing, And sang as his laugh kept time: But song finds now no pleasure in being, And love no reason in rhyme. IV Mild May-blossom and proud sweet bay-flower, What, for shame, would you have with us here? It is not the month of the May-flower This, but the fall of the year. Flowers open only their lips in derision, Leaves are as fingers that point in scorn The shows we see are a vision; Spring is not verily born. Yet boughs turn supple and buds grow sappy, As though the sun were indeed the sun: And all our woods are happy With all their birds save one. But spring is over, but summer is over, But autumn is over, and winter stands With his feet sunk deep in the clover And cowslips cold in his hands. His hoar grim head has a hawthorn bonnet, His gnarled gaunt hand has a gay green staff With new-blown rose-blossom on it: But his laugh is a dead man's laugh. The laugh of spring that the heart seeks after, The hand that the whole world yearns to kiss, It rings not here in his laughter, The sign of it is not this. There is not strength in it left to splinter Tall oaks, nor frost in his breath to sting: Yet it is but a breath as of winter,
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   >>  



Top keywords:

Shakespeare

 

laughter

 
flower
 

blossom

 

spring

 

winter

 

breath

 
splinter
 

fingers

 

Spring


strength

 

verily

 

vision

 
Flowers
 
derision
 

Leaves

 

stands

 
summer
 

autumn

 

clover


hawthorn
 

gnarled

 
cowslips
 

yearns

 

boughs

 

bonnet

 

supple

 

spheres

 

brightened

 
battle

pictured

 

shrillest

 

twittered

 
lightened
 

tongue

 
vintage
 
gleaming
 

silver

 

golden

 
beaming

vessels

 
Athirst
 
birdlike
 

glisten

 

hearth

 

listen

 

delights

 
reason
 
pleasure
 

Hamlet