Beauty poems

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The Flower.

© Robert Crawford

I.
The flower in its own scent breathes till it dies
As if the scent its very birth-breath were
(As love is life's) which, while it occupies

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The Loves of the Angels

© Thomas Moore

Alas! that Passion should profane
Even then the morning of the earth!
That, sadder still, the fatal stain
Should fall on hearts of heavenly birth-
And that from Woman's love should fall
So dark a stain, most sad of all!

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The Death Of The Rose

© Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

Ah! life, dear life, thy summer days have flown
Swiftly yet all too late, for they did wither.
Joy should be joy for one short hour alone,
Or it will lose its loveliness for ever.

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Patience

© Edith Wharton

PATIENCE and I have traveled hand in hand
So many days that I have grown to trace
The lines of sad, sweet beauty in her face,
And all its veiled depths to understand.

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Independence Day

© Edgar Albert Guest

WHAT does it all mean anyway,

Noise of cannon and boom of gun,

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Dear Savior Of A Dying World

© Anna Laetitia Waring

“The Lord is risen.”

Dear Savior of a dying world,

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To A Lady Who Spoke Slightingly Of Poets

© Washington Allston

Oh, censure not the Poet's art,
Nor think it chills the feeling heart
 To love the gentle Muses.
Can that which in a stone or flower,
As if by transmigrating power,
 His gen'rous soul infuses;

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Upon the Epiphany, and the Three Wise Men of the East coming to Worship Jesus

© Jeremy Taylor

A comet dangling in the aire,

Presag'd the ruine both of Death and Sin;

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Architecture

© Zbigniew Herbert

you are there
architecture
art of fantasy and stone

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The Clematis

© Alexander Bathgate

Fair crown of stars of purest ray,
  Hung aloft on Mapau tree,
What floral beauties ye display,
  Stars of snowy purity;
Around the dark-leaved mapau's head
Unsullied garlands ye have spread.

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The Eighth Olympic Ode Of Pindar

© Henry James Pye

To Alcimedon, on his Olympic Victory; Timosthenes, on his Nemean Victory; and Melesias, their Preceptor. ARGUMENT. Though this is called an Olympic Ode, the Poet does not confine himself to Alcimedon, who won the Prize in those Games, but celebrates his Brother Timosthenes, for his success at Nemea, and Melesias, their Instructor. The Ode opens with an invocation to the place where the Games were held. Pindar then, after praising Timosthenes for his early victory in the Nemean Games, mentions Alcimedon, and extols him for his dexterity and strength, his beauty, and his country Ægina; which he celebrates for it's hospitality, and for it's being under the government of the Dorians after the death of Æacus; on whom he has a long digression, giving an account of his assisting the Gods in the building of Troy. Then returning to his subject, he mentions Melesias as skilled himself in the Athletic Exercises, and therefore proper to instruct others; and, enumerating his Triumphs, congratulates him on the success of his Pupil Alcimedon; which, he says, will not only give satisfaction to his living Relations, but will delight the Ghosts of those deceased. The Poet then concludes with a wish for the prosperity of him and his family.

STROPHE I.

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The Day Is Coming

© William Morris

Come hither lads and hearken,
for a tale there is to tell,
Of the wonderful days a-coming, when all
shall be better than well.

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Tale V

© George Crabbe

these,
All that on idle, ardent spirits seize;
Robbers at land and pirates on the main,
Enchanters foil'd, spells broken, giants slain;
Legends of love, with tales of halls and bowers,
Choice of rare songs, and garlands of choice

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In A 'Bus.

© James Brunton Stephens

A QUARTER of a century agone,

Just such a face as this upon me shone,

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Ennui

© Lord Alfred Douglas

Alas! and oh that Spring should come again
Upon the soft wings of desired days,
And bring with her no anodyne to pain,
And no discernment of untroubled ways.

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The Hand In The Dark

© Ada Cambridge

How calm the spangled city spread below!
How cool the night! How fair the starry skies!
How sweet the dewy breezes! But I know
What, under all their seeming beauty, lies.

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Ode to Rae Wilson Esq.

© Thomas Hood

Mere verbiage,—it is not worth a carrot!
Why, Socrates—or Plato—where's the odds?—
Once taught a jay to supplicate the Gods,
And made a Polly-theist of a Parrot!

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Poetic Eggs

© Ezra Pound

I am a grave poetic hen
That lays poetic eggs
And to enhance my temperament
A little quiet begs.

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Childish Recollections

© George Gordon Byron

'I cannot but remember such things were,
And were most dear to me.'
WHEN slow Disease, with all her host of pains,
Chills the warm, tide which flows along the veins