Search -
Moneys Received And Paid For Secret Services Of Charles II And James II
Moneys Received And Paid For Secret Services Of Charles II And James II Author:Various A flower, or the ghost of a flower, 83 Angered Reason walked with me, 26 A present from tropical Annam, 84 Away, sad thoughts, and teasing, 68 Day begins cold and misty on soiled snow, 69 Drinking wide, sunny wind, 41 Emerging from deep sleep my eyes unscal, 59 Faces of blank decorum, and bald heads, 20 Find me out a fortress, find, 19 For Mercy... more », Courage, Kindness, Mirth, 15 From the howl of the wind, 22 Gross, with protruding cars, 38 I am weary of doing and dating, 29 I dream of western waters, and of the Seven Isles, 55 I foulld my Love among thc fern. She slept, 75 I know that there are slumbrous woods beyond, g I lay upon my bed in the great night, 9 I think of a flower that no eye ever has seen, IS I wandered bctwecn woods, 22 If I could sing the song of her, 56 In a patch of baked earth, 48 In the high leaves of a walnut, 37 In the shadow of a t rokenh ouse, 31 It was nothing but a little neglected garden, 28 Lose me, full, full moment, 47 My boat swings out and back, 49 Naked night black elms, pallid with streaming sky, I 6 Nothing is enough, 18 Of the old house, only a few, crumbled, 42 Often we talk of the house that we will build, 72 Out of first sleep as they awoke, 43 Pale was the early day, 16 Peace is perfect over, 84 Pride is the untrue mask, 47 Pure-throated flower, 89 Round apples, burning upon the apple boughs, 50 Shabby house-wall, 40 Silences in the mind, the haunting Silences, 48 So old is the wood, so old, 62 The bare branches rose against the grey sky, 43 The bread thats broken when we eat together, 45 The long road lures across the hill, 49 The night is holy and haunted, 62 The night wind over the great downs, 29 The rain was ending, and light, 24 The wind has fa17n asleep the bough that tost, 65 Thinking of shores that I shall never see, 24 Through Ebblesborne and Broad-Chalke, 5 2 Time buys no wisdo like the eyes of youth, 51 Towering, towering up to the noon-blaze, 5 7 Trees are for lovers, r g Trefoil and Quatrefoil, 33 Victory Was that proud word once so dear, 88 6 Water, frolic water, 30 We have planted a tree, 46 What is lovelier than rain that lingers, 41 What is the spirits desire, 35 Where do you float from, visions that shine ere sleep, 31 Who are these that meet, 5 2 Wisdom and Valour, Faith, Ss LAY upon my bed in thc great night 1 The sense of my body ilru vsed But a cleanless yet lingered in the spirit, By soft obscurity housed. As an inn to a traveller on a long road, Happy sleep appeared. I should come there, to the roorn of waiting dreams, In the time that slowly neared But still amid memorys wane fancy delighted, Like wings in the afterglow Dipping to the freshness of the waves of living, To recover froin long-ago A touch or a voice, then soaring alvft and afar The free world to range. At last, on the brink of the dark, by subtle tiegrees Came a chilling and a change. Solitude sank to my marrow and pierced my veins. Though I roam and though I learn All the wonder of earth and of men, it is here In the end I must return, 9 To the something alone that in each of us breathes and sleeps, Profound, isolate, still, And must brave the giant world, and from hour to hour Must prove its own will To this self, uncxcused and unglorified, drawn From its fond shadows, and bare, Wherein no inan that has bcen, none that is or shall be, Shares, or can ever share. And it tinglccl through inc how all use aid disguise Hide nothing ilonc Avails to sllield, 11eitlic. r plcader 1101-protector, But thc truth of mysclf C c L 1 one...« less