Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Unconfigured Ad Widget

Collapse

Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

    West London by Matthew Arnold
    Crouch'd on the pavement close by Belgrave Square
    A tramp I saw, ill, moody, and tongue-tied;
    A babe was in her arms, and at her side
    A girl; their clothes were rags, their feet were bare.
    Some labouring men, whose work lay somewhere there,
    Pass'd opposite; she touch'd her girl, who hied
    Across, and begg'd and came back satisfied.
    The rich she had let pass with frozen stare.
    Thought I: Above her state this spirit towers;
    She will not ask of aliens, but of friends,
    Of sharers in a common human fate.
    She turns from that cold succour, which attneds
    The unknown little from the unknowing great,
    And points us to a better time than ours.
    اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
    اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

    Comment


    • #32
      Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

      Quiet Work by Matthew Arnold
      One lesson, Nature, let me learn of thee,
      One lesson which in every wind is blown,
      One lesson of two duties kept at one
      Though the loud world proclaim their enmity--

      Of toil unsever'd from tranquility!
      Of labor, that in lasting fruit outgrows
      Far noisier schemes, accomplish'd in repose,
      Too great for haste, too high for rivalry.

      Yes, while on earth a thousand discords ring,
      Man's fitful uproar mingling with his toil,
      Still do thy sleepless ministers move on,

      Their glorious tasks in silence perfecting;
      Still working, blaming still our vain turmoil,
      Laborers that shall not fail, when man is gone.
      اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
      اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

        Lines Written in Kensington Gardens by Matthew Arnold
        In this lone, open glade I lie,
        Screen'd by deep boughs on either hand;
        And at its end, to stay the eye,
        Those black-crown'd, red-boled pine-trees stand!

        Birds here make song, each bird has his,
        Across the girdling city's hum.
        How green under the boughs it is!
        How thick the tremulous sheep-cries come!

        Sometimes a child will cross the glade
        To take his nurse his broken toy;
        Sometimes a thrush flit overhead
        Deep in her unknown day's employ.

        Here at my feet what wonders pass,
        What endless, active life is here!
        What blowing daisies, fragrant grass!
        An air-stirr'd forest, fresh and clear.

        Scarce fresher is the mountain-sod
        Where the tired angler lies, stretch'd out,
        And, eased of basket and of rod,
        Counts his day's spoil, the spotted trout.

        In the huge world, which roars hard by,
        Be others happy if they can!
        But in my helpless cradle I
        Was breathed on by the rural Pan.

        I, on men's impious uproar hurl'd,
        Think often, as I hear them rave,
        That peace has left the upper world
        And now keeps only in the grave.

        Yet here is peace for ever new!
        When I who watch them am away,
        Still all things in this glade go through
        The changes of their quiet day.

        Then to their happy rest they pass!
        The flowers upclose, the birds are fed,
        The night comes down upon the grass,
        The child sleeps warmly in his bed.

        Calm soul of all things! make it mine
        To feel, amid the city's jar,
        That there abides a peace of thine,
        Man did not make, and cannot mar.

        The will to neither strive nor cry,
        The power to feel with others give!
        Calm, calm me more! nor let me die
        Before I have begun to live.
        اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
        اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

        Comment


        • #34
          Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

          Strayed Reveller, The by Matthew Arnold
          The Youth

          Faster, faster,
          O Circe, Goddess,
          Let the wild, thronging train
          The bright procession
          Of eddying forms,
          Sweep through my soul!
          Thou standest, smiling
          Down on me! thy right arm,
          Lean'd up against the column there,
          Props thy soft cheek;
          Thy left holds, hanging loosely,
          The deep cup, ivy-cinctured,
          I held but now.
          Is it, then, evening
          So soon? I see, the night-dews,
          Cluster'd in thick beads, dim
          The agate brooch-stones
          On thy white shoulder;
          The cool night-wind, too,
          Blows through the portico,
          Stirs thy hair, Goddess,
          Waves thy white robe!


          Circe.

          Whence art thou, sleeper?


          The Youth.

          When the white dawn first
          Through the rough fir-planks
          Of my hut, by the chestnuts,
          Up at the valley-head,
          Came breaking, Goddess!
          I sprang up, I threw round me
          My dappled fawn-skin;
          Passing out, from the wet turf,
          Where they lay, by the hut door,
          I snatch'd up my vine-crown, my fir-staff,
          All drench'd in dew-
          Came swift down to join
          The rout early gather'd
          In the town, round the temple,
          Iacchus' white fane
          On yonder hill.
          Quick I pass'd, following
          The wood-cutters' cart-track
          Down the dark valley;-I saw
          On my left, through the beeches,
          Thy palace, Goddess,
          Smokeless, empty!
          Trembling, I enter'd; beheld
          The court all silent,
          The lions sleeping,
          On the altar this bowl.
          I drank, Goddess!
          And sank down here, sleeping,
          On the steps of thy portico.


          Circe.

          Foolish boy! Why tremblest thou?
          Thou lovest it, then, my wine?
          Wouldst more of it? See, how glows,
          Through the delicate, flush'd marble,
          The red, creaming liquor,
          Strown with dark seeds!
          Drink, thee! I chide thee not,
          Deny thee not my bowl.
          Come, stretch forth thy hand, thee-so!
          Drink-drink again!


          The Youth.

          Thanks, gracious one!
          Ah, the sweet fumes again!
          More soft, ah me,
          More subtle-winding
          Than Pan's flute-music!
          Faint-faint! Ah me,
          Again the sweet sleep!


          Circe.

          Hist! Thou-within there!
          Come forth, Ulysses!
          Art tired with hunting?
          While we range the woodland,
          See what the day brings.


          Ulysses.

          Ever new magic!
          Hast thou then lured hither,
          Wonderful Goddess, by thy art,
          The young, languid-eyed Ampelus,
          Iacchus' darling-
          Or some youth beloved of Pan,
          Of Pan and the Nymphs?
          That he sits, bending downward
          His white, delicate neck
          To the ivy-wreathed marge
          Of thy cup; the bright, glancing vine-leaves
          That crown his hair,
          Falling forward, mingling
          With the dark ivy-plants--
          His fawn-skin, half untied,
          Smear'd with red wine-stains? Who is he,
          That he sits, overweigh'd
          By fumes of wine and sleep,
          So late, in thy portico?
          What youth, Goddess,-what guest
          Of Gods or mortals?


          Circe.

          Hist! he wakes!
          I lured him not hither, Ulysses.
          Nay, ask him!


          The Youth.

          Who speaks' Ah, who comes forth
          To thy side, Goddess, from within?
          How shall I name him?
          This spare, dark-featured,
          Quick-eyed stranger?
          Ah, and I see too
          His sailor's bonnet,
          His short coat, travel-tarnish'd,
          With one arm bare!--
          Art thou not he, whom fame
          This long time rumours
          The favour'd guest of Circe, brought by the waves?
          Art thou he, stranger?
          The wise Ulysses,
          Laertes' son?


          Ulysses.

          I am Ulysses.
          And thou, too, sleeper?
          Thy voice is sweet.
          It may be thou hast follow'd
          Through the islands some divine bard,
          By age taught many things,
          Age and the Muses;
          And heard him delighting
          The chiefs and people
          In the banquet, and learn'd his songs.
          Of Gods and Heroes,
          Of war and arts,
          And peopled cities,
          Inland, or built
          By the gray sea.-If so, then hail!
          I honour and welcome thee.


          The Youth.

          The Gods are happy.
          They turn on all sides
          Their shining eyes,
          And see below them
          The earth and men.
          They see Tiresias
          Sitting, staff in hand,
          On the warm, grassy
          Asopus bank,
          His robe drawn over
          His old sightless head,
          Revolving inly
          The doom of Thebes.
          They see the Centaurs
          In the upper glens
          Of Pelion, in the streams,
          Where red-berried ashes fringe
          The clear-brown shallow pools,
          With streaming flanks, and heads
          Rear'd proudly, snuffing
          The mountain wind.
          They see the Indian
          Drifting, knife in hand,
          His frail boat moor'd to
          A floating isle thick-matted
          With large-leaved, low-creeping melon-plants
          And the dark cucumber.
          He reaps, and stows them,
          Drifting--drifting;--round him,
          Round his green harvest-plot,
          Flow the cool lake-waves,
          The mountains ring them.
          They see the Scythian
          On the wide stepp, unharnessing
          His wheel'd house at noon.
          He tethers his beast down, and makes his meal--
          Mares' milk, and bread
          Baked on the embers;--all around
          The boundless, waving grass-plains stretch, thick-starr'd
          With saffron and the yellow hollyhock
          And flag-leaved iris-flowers.
          Sitting in his cart
          He makes his meal; before him, for long miles,
          Alive with bright green lizards,
          And the springing bustard-fowl,
          The track, a straight black line,
          Furrows the rich soil; here and there
          Cluster of lonely mounds
          Topp'd with rough-hewn,
          Gray, rain-blear'd statues, overpeer
          The sunny waste.
          They see the ferry
          On the broad, clay-laden
          Lone Chorasmian stream;--thereon,
          With snort and strain,
          Two horses, strongly swimming, tow
          The ferry-boat, with woven ropes
          To either bow
          Firm harness'd by the mane; a chief
          With shout and shaken spear,
          Stands at the prow, and guides them; but astern
          The cowering merchants, in long robes,
          Sit pale beside their wealth
          Of silk-bales and of balsam-drops,
          Of gold and ivory,
          Of turquoise-earth and amethyst,
          Jasper and chalcedony,
          And milk-barred onyx-stones.
          The loaded boat swings groaning
          In the yellow eddies;
          The Gods behold him.
          They see the Heroes
          Sitting in the dark ship
          On the foamless, long-heaving
          Violet sea.
          At sunset nearing
          The Happy Islands.
          These things, Ulysses,
          The wise bards, also
          Behold and sing.
          But oh, what labour!
          O prince, what pain!
          They too can see
          Tiresias;--but the Gods,
          Who give them vision,
          Added this law:
          That they should bear too
          His groping blindness,
          His dark foreboding,
          His scorn'd white hairs;
          Bear Hera's anger
          Through a life lengthen'd
          To seven ages.
          They see the Centaurs
          On Pelion:--then they feel,
          They too, the maddening wine
          Swell their large veins to bursting; in wild pain
          They feel the biting spears
          Of the grim Lapithж, and Theseus, drive,
          Drive crashing through their bones; they feel
          High on a jutting rock in the red stream
          Alcmena's dreadful son
          Ply his bow;--such a price
          The Gods exact for song:
          To become what we sing.
          They see the Indian
          On his mountain lake; but squalls
          Make their skiff reel, and worms
          In the unkind spring have gnawn
          Their melon-harvest to the heart.--They see
          The Scythian: but long frosts
          Parch them in winter-time on the bare stepp,
          Till they too fade like grass; they crawl
          Like shadows forth in spring.
          They see the merchants
          On the Oxus stream;--but care
          Must visit first them too, and make them pale.
          Whether, through whirling sand,
          A cloud of desert robber-horse have burst
          Upon their caravan; or greedy kings,
          In the wall'd cities the way passes through,
          Crush'd them with tolls; or fever-airs,
          On some great river's marge,
          Mown them down, far from home.
          They see the Heroes
          Near harbour;--but they share
          Their lives, and former violent toil in Thebes,
          Seven-gated Thebes, or Troy;
          Or where the echoing oars
          Of Argo first
          Startled the unknown sea.
          The old Silenus
          Came, lolling in the sunshine,
          From the dewy forest-coverts,
          This way at noon.
          Sitting by me, while his Fauns
          Down at the water-side
          Sprinkled and smoothed
          His drooping garland,
          He told me these things.
          But I, Ulysses,
          Sitting on the warm steps,
          Looking over the valley,
          All day long, have seen,
          Without pain, without labour,
          Sometimes a wild-hair'd Mжnad--
          Sometimes a Faun with torches--
          And sometimes, for a moment,
          Passing through the dark stems
          Flowing-robed, the beloved,
          The desired, the divine,
          Beloved Iacchus.
          Ah, cool night-wind, tremulous stars!
          Ah, glimmering water,
          Fitful earth-murmur,
          Dreaming woods!
          Ah, golden-haired, strangely smiling Goddess,
          And thou, proved, much enduring,
          Wave-toss'd Wanderer!
          Who can stand still?
          Ye fade, ye swim, ye waver before me--
          The cup again!
          Faster, faster,
          O Circe, Goddess.
          Let the wild, thronging train,
          The bright procession
          Of eddying forms,
          Sweep through my soul!
          اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
          اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

          Comment


          • #35
            Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

            To a Republican Friend by Matthew Arnold
            God knows it, I am with you. If to prize
            Those virtues, priz'd and practis'd by too few,
            But priz'd, but lov'd, but eminent in you,
            Man's fundamental life: if to despise
            The barren optimistic sophistries
            Of comfortable moles, whom what they do
            Teaches the limit of the just and true--
            And for such doing have no need of eyes:
            If sadness at teh long heart-wasting show
            Wherein earth's great ones are disquieted:
            If thoughts, not idle, while before me flow
            The armies of the homeless and unfed:--
            If these are yours, if this is what you are,
            Then am I yours, and what you feel, I share.
            اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
            اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

            Comment


            • #36
              Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

              Progress by Matthew Arnold
              The Master stood upon the mount, and taught.
              He saw a fire in his disciples’ eyes;
              ‘The old law’, they said, ‘is wholly come to naught!
              Behold the new world rise!’

              ‘Was it’, the Lord then said, ‘with scorn ye saw
              The old law observed by Scribes and Pharisees?
              I say unto you, see ye keep that law
              More faithfully than these!

              ‘Too hasty heads for ordering worlds, alas!
              Think not that I to annul the law have will’d;
              No jot, no tittle from the law shall pass,
              Till all hath been fulfill’d.’

              So Christ said eighteen hundred years ago.
              And what then shall be said to those to-day,
              Who cry aloud to lay the old world low
              To clear the new world’s way?

              ‘Religious fervours! ardour misapplied!
              Hence, hence,’ they cry, ’ye do but keep man blind!
              But keep him self-immersed, preoccupied,
              And lame the active mind!’

              Ah! from the old world let some one answer give:
              ‘Scorn ye this world, their tears, their inward cares?
              I say unto you, see that your souls live
              A deeper life than theirs!

              ‘Say ye: The spirit of man has found new roads,
              And we must leave the old faiths, and walk therein?—
              Leave then the Cross as ye have left carved gods,
              But guard the fire within!

              ‘Bright, else, and fast the stream of life may roll,
              And no man may the other’s hurt behold;
              Yet each will have one anguish—his own soul
              Which perishes of cold.’

              Here let that voice make end; then let a strain,
              From a far lonelier distance, like the wind
              Be heard, floating through heaven, and fill again
              These men’s profoundest mind:

              ‘Children of men! the unseen Power, whose eye
              For ever doth accompany mankind,
              Hath looked on no religion scornfully
              That men did ever find.

              ‘Which has not taught weak wills how much they can?
              Which has not fall’n on the dry heart like rain?
              Which has not cried to sunk, self-weary man:
              Thou must be born again!

              ‘Children of men! not that your age excel
              In pride of life the ages of your sires,
              But that you think clear, feel deep, bear fruit well,
              The Friend of man desires.’
              اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
              اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                The Strayed Reveller by Matthew Arnold
                1 Faster, faster,
                2 O Circe, Goddess,
                3 Let the wild, thronging train
                4 The bright procession
                5 Of eddying forms,
                6 Sweep through my soul!

                7 Thou standest, smiling
                8 Down on me! thy right arm,
                9 Lean'd up against the column there,
                10 Props thy soft cheek;
                11 Thy left holds, hanging loosely,
                12 The deep cup, ivy-cinctured,
                13 I held but now.

                14 Is it, then, evening
                15 So soon? I see, the night-dews,
                16 Cluster'd in thick beads, dim
                17 The agate brooch-stones
                18 On thy white shoulder;
                19 The cool night-wind, too,
                20 Blows through the portico,
                21 Stirs thy hair, Goddess,
                22 Waves thy white robe!

                Circe.

                23 Whence art thou, sleeper?

                The Youth.

                24 When the white dawn first
                25 Through the rough fir-planks
                26 Of my hut, by the chestnuts,
                27 Up at the valley-head,
                28 Came breaking, Goddess!
                29 I sprang up, I threw round me
                30 My dappled fawn-skin;
                31 Passing out, from the wet turf,
                32 Where they lay, by the hut door,
                33 I snatch'd up my vine-crown, my fir-staff,
                34 All drench'd in dew-
                35 Came swift down to join
                36 The rout early gather'd
                37 In the town, round the temple,
                38 Iacchus' white fane
                39 On yonder hill.

                40 Quick I pass'd, following
                41 The wood-cutters' cart-track
                42 Down the dark valley;-I saw
                43 On my left, through the beeches,
                44 Thy palace, Goddess,
                45 Smokeless, empty!
                46 Trembling, I enter'd; beheld
                47 The court all silent,
                48 The lions sleeping,
                49 On the altar this bowl.
                50 I drank, Goddess!
                51 And sank down here, sleeping,
                52 On the steps of thy portico.

                Circe.

                53 Foolish boy! Why tremblest thou?
                54 Thou lovest it, then, my wine?
                55 Wouldst more of it? See, how glows,
                56 Through the delicate, flush'd marble,
                57 The red, creaming liquor,
                58 Strown with dark seeds!
                59 Drink, thee! I chide thee not,
                60 Deny thee not my bowl.
                61 Come, stretch forth thy hand, thee-so!
                62 Drink-drink again!

                The Youth.

                63 Thanks, gracious one!
                64 Ah, the sweet fumes again!
                65 More soft, ah me,
                66 More subtle-winding
                67 Than Pan's flute-music!
                68 Faint-faint! Ah me,
                69 Again the sweet sleep!

                Circe.

                70 Hist! Thou-within there!
                71 Come forth, Ulysses!
                72 Art tired with hunting?
                73 While we range the woodland,
                74 See what the day brings.

                Ulysses.

                75 Ever new magic!
                76 Hast thou then lured hither,
                77 Wonderful Goddess, by thy art,
                78 The young, languid-eyed Ampelus,
                79 Iacchus' darling-
                80 Or some youth beloved of Pan,
                81 Of Pan and the Nymphs?
                82 That he sits, bending downward
                83 His white, delicate neck
                84 To the ivy-wreathed marge
                85 Of thy cup; the bright, glancing vine-leaves
                86 That crown his hair,
                87 Falling forward, mingling
                88 With the dark ivy-plants--
                89 His fawn-skin, half untied,
                90 Smear'd with red wine-stains? Who is he,
                91 That he sits, overweigh'd
                92 By fumes of wine and sleep,
                93 So late, in thy portico?
                94 What youth, Goddess,-what guest
                95 Of Gods or mortals?

                Circe.

                96 Hist! he wakes!
                97 I lured him not hither, Ulysses.
                98 Nay, ask him!

                The Youth.

                99 Who speaks' Ah, who comes forth
                100 To thy side, Goddess, from within?
                101 How shall I name him?
                102 This spare, dark-featured,
                103 Quick-eyed stranger?
                104 Ah, and I see too
                105 His sailor's bonnet,
                106 His short coat, travel-tarnish'd,
                107 With one arm bare!--
                108 Art thou not he, whom fame
                109 This long time rumours
                110 The favour'd guest of Circe, brought by the waves?
                111 Art thou he, stranger?
                112 The wise Ulysses,
                113 Laertes' son?

                Ulysses.

                114 I am Ulysses.
                115 And thou, too, sleeper?
                116 Thy voice is sweet.
                117 It may be thou hast follow'd
                118 Through the islands some divine bard,
                119 By age taught many things,
                120 Age and the Muses;
                121 And heard him delighting
                122 The chiefs and people
                123 In the banquet, and learn'd his songs.
                124 Of Gods and Heroes,
                125 Of war and arts,
                126 And peopled cities,
                127 Inland, or built
                128 By the gray sea.-If so, then hail!
                129 I honour and welcome thee.

                The Youth.

                130 The Gods are happy.
                131 They turn on all sides
                132 Their shining eyes,
                133 And see below them
                134 The earth and men.

                135 They see Tiresias
                136 Sitting, staff in hand,
                137 On the warm, grassy
                138 Asopus bank,
                139 His robe drawn over
                140 His old sightless head,
                141 Revolving inly
                142 The doom of Thebes.

                143 They see the Centaurs
                144 In the upper glens
                145 Of Pelion, in the streams,
                146 Where red-berried ashes fringe
                147 The clear-brown shallow pools,
                148 With streaming flanks, and heads
                149 Rear'd proudly, snuffing
                150 The mountain wind.

                151 They see the Indian
                152 Drifting, knife in hand,
                153 His frail boat moor'd to
                154 A floating isle thick-matted
                155 With large-leaved, low-creeping melon-plants
                156 And the dark cucumber.

                157 He reaps, and stows them,
                158 Drifting--drifting;--round him,
                159 Round his green harvest-plot,
                160 Flow the cool lake-waves,
                161 The mountains ring them.

                162 They see the Scythian
                163 On the wide stepp, unharnessing
                164 His wheel'd house at noon.
                165 He tethers his beast down, and makes his meal--
                166 Mares' milk, and bread
                167 Baked on the embers;--all around
                168 The boundless, waving grass-plains stretch, thick-starr'd
                169 With saffron and the yellow hollyhock
                170 And flag-leaved iris-flowers.
                171 Sitting in his cart
                172 He makes his meal; before him, for long miles,
                173 Alive with bright green lizards,
                174 And the springing bustard-fowl,
                175 The track, a straight black line,
                176 Furrows the rich soil; here and there
                177 Cluster of lonely mounds
                178 Topp'd with rough-hewn,
                179 Gray, rain-blear'd statues, overpeer
                180 The sunny waste.

                181 They see the ferry
                182 On the broad, clay-laden
                183 Lone Chorasmian stream;--thereon,
                184 With snort and strain,
                185 Two horses, strongly swimming, tow
                186 The ferry-boat, with woven ropes
                187 To either bow
                188 Firm harness'd by the mane; a chief
                189 With shout and shaken spear,
                190 Stands at the prow, and guides them; but astern
                191 The cowering merchants, in long robes,
                192 Sit pale beside their wealth
                193 Of silk-bales and of balsam-drops,
                194 Of gold and ivory,
                195 Of turquoise-earth and amethyst,
                196 Jasper and chalcedony,
                197 And milk-barred onyx-stones.
                198 The loaded boat swings groaning
                199 In the yellow eddies;
                200 The Gods behold him.

                201 They see the Heroes
                202 Sitting in the dark ship
                203 On the foamless, long-heaving
                204 Violet sea.
                205 At sunset nearing
                206 The Happy Islands.

                207 These things, Ulysses,
                208 The wise bards, also
                209 Behold and sing.
                210 But oh, what labour!
                211 O prince, what pain!
                212 They too can see
                213 Tiresias;--but the Gods,
                214 Who give them vision,
                215 Added this law:
                216 That they should bear too
                217 His groping blindness,
                218 His dark foreboding,
                219 His scorn'd white hairs;
                220 Bear Hera's anger
                221 Through a life lengthen'd
                222 To seven ages.

                223 They see the Centaurs
                224 On Pelion:--then they feel,
                225 They too, the maddening wine
                226 Swell their large veins to bursting; in wild pain
                227 They feel the biting spears
                228 Of the grim Lapithж, and Theseus, drive,
                229 Drive crashing through their bones; they feel
                230 High on a jutting rock in the red stream
                231 Alcmena's dreadful son
                232 Ply his bow;--such a price
                233 The Gods exact for song:
                234 To become what we sing.

                235 They see the Indian
                236 On his mountain lake; but squalls
                237 Make their skiff reel, and worms
                238 In the unkind spring have gnawn
                239 Their melon-harvest to the heart.--They see
                240 The Scythian: but long frosts
                241 Parch them in winter-time on the bare stepp,
                242 Till they too fade like grass; they crawl
                243 Like shadows forth in spring.

                244 They see the merchants
                245 On the Oxus stream;--but care
                246 Must visit first them too, and make them pale.
                247 Whether, through whirling sand,
                248 A cloud of desert robber-horse have burst
                249 Upon their caravan; or greedy kings,
                250 In the wall'd cities the way passes through,
                251 Crush'd them with tolls; or fever-airs,
                252 On some great river's marge,
                253 Mown them down, far from home.

                254 They see the Heroes
                255 Near harbour;--but they share
                256 Their lives, and former violent toil in Thebes,
                257 Seven-gated Thebes, or Troy;
                258 Or where the echoing oars
                259 Of Argo first
                260 Startled the unknown sea.

                261 The old Silenus
                262 Came, lolling in the sunshine,
                263 From the dewy forest-coverts,
                264 This way at noon.
                265 Sitting by me, while his Fauns
                266 Down at the water-side
                267 Sprinkled and smoothed
                268 His drooping garland,
                269 He told me these things.

                270 But I, Ulysses,
                271 Sitting on the warm steps,
                272 Looking over the valley,
                273 All day long, have seen,
                274 Without pain, without labour,
                275 Sometimes a wild-hair'd Mжnad--
                276 Sometimes a Faun with torches--
                277 And sometimes, for a moment,
                278 Passing through the dark stems
                279 Flowing-robed, the beloved,
                280 The desired, the divine,
                281 Beloved Iacchus.

                282 Ah, cool night-wind, tremulous stars!
                283 Ah, glimmering water,
                284 Fitful earth-murmur,
                285 Dreaming woods!
                286 Ah, golden-haired, strangely smiling Goddess,
                287 And thou, proved, much enduring,
                288 Wave-toss'd Wanderer!
                289 Who can stand still?
                290 Ye fade, ye swim, ye waver before me--
                291 The cup again!

                292 Faster, faster,
                293 O Circe, Goddess.
                294 Let the wild, thronging train,
                295 The bright procession
                296 Of eddying forms,
                297 Sweep through my soul!
                اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                Comment


                • #38
                  Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                  Obermann Once More by Matthew Arnold
                  Glion?--Ah, twenty years, it cuts
                  All meaning from a name!
                  White houses prank where once were huts.
                  Glion, but not the same!

                  And yet I know not! All unchanged
                  The turf, the pines, the sky!
                  The hills in their old order ranged;
                  The lake, with Chillon by!

                  And, 'neath those chestnut-trees, where stiff
                  And stony mounts the way,
                  The crackling husk-heaps burn, as if
                  I left them yesterday!

                  Across the valley, on that slope,
                  The huts of Avant shine!
                  lts pines, under their branches, ope
                  Ways for the pasturing kine.

                  Full-foaming milk-pails, Alpine fare,
                  Sweet heaps of fresh-cut grass,
                  Invite to rest the traveller there
                  Before he climb the pass--

                  The gentian-flower'd pass, its crown
                  With yellow spires aflame;
                  Whence drops the path to Alliиre down,
                  And walls where Byron came,

                  By their green river, who doth change
                  His birth-name just below;
                  Orchard, and croft, and full-stored grange
                  Nursed by his pastoral flow.

                  But stop!--to fetch back thoughts that stray
                  Beyond this gracious bound,
                  The cone of Jaman, pale and gray,
                  See, in the blue profound!

                  Ah, Jaman! delicately tall
                  Above his sun-warm'd firs--
                  What thoughts to me his rocks recall,
                  What memories he stirs!

                  And who but thou must be, in truth,
                  Obermann! with me here?
                  Thou master of my wandering youth,
                  But left this many a year!

                  Yes, I forget the world's work wrought,
                  Its warfare waged with pain;
                  An eremite with thee, in thought
                  Once more I slip my chain,

                  And to thy mountain-chalet come,
                  And lie beside its door,
                  And hear the wild bee's Alpine hum,
                  And thy sad, tranquil lore!

                  Again I feel the words inspire
                  Their mournful calm; serene,
                  Yet tinged with infinite desire
                  For all that might have been--

                  The harmony from which man swerved
                  Made his life's rule once more!
                  The universal order served,
                  Earth happier than before!

                  --While thus I mused, night gently ran
                  Down over hill and wood.
                  Then, still and sudden, Obermann
                  On the grass near me stood.

                  Those pensive features well I knew,
                  On my mind, years before,
                  Imaged so oft! imaged so true!
                  --A shepherd's garb he wore,

                  A mountain-flower was in his hand,
                  A book was in his breast.
                  Bent on my face, with gaze which scann'd
                  My soul, his eyes did rest.

                  'And is it thou,' he cried, 'so long
                  Held by the world which we
                  Loved not, who turnest from the throng
                  Back to thy youth and me?

                  'And from thy world, with heart opprest,
                  Choosest thou now to turn?--
                  Ah me! we anchorites read things best,
                  Clearest their course discern!

                  'Thou fledst me when the ungenial earth,
                  Man's work-place, lay in gloom.
                  Return'st thou in her hour of birth,
                  Of hopes and hearts in bloom?

                  'Perceiv'st thou not the change of day?
                  Ah! Carry back thy ken,
                  What, some two thousand years! Survey
                  The world as it was then!

                  'Like ours it look'd in outward air.
                  Its head was clear and true,
                  Sumptuous its clothing, rich its fare,
                  No pause its action knew;

                  'Stout was its arm, each thew and bone
                  Seem'd puissant and alive--
                  But, ah! its heart, its heart was stone,
                  And so it could not thrive!

                  'On that hard Pagan world disgust
                  And secret loathing fell.
                  Deep weariness and sated lust
                  Made human life a hell.

                  'In his cool hall, with haggard eyes,
                  The Roman noble lay;
                  He drove abroad, in furious guise,
                  Along the Appian way.

                  'He made a feast, drank fierce and fast,
                  And crown'd his hair with flowers--
                  No easier nor no quicker pass'd
                  The impracticable hours.

                  'The brooding East with awe beheld
                  Her impious younger world.
                  The Roman tempest swell'd and swell'd,
                  And on her head was hurl'd.

                  'The East bow'd low before the blast
                  In patient, deep disdain;
                  She let the legions thunder past,
                  And plunged in thought again.

                  'So well she mused, a morning broke
                  Across her spirit grey;
                  A conquering, new-born joy awoke,
                  And fill'd her life with day.

                  ''Poor world,' she cried, 'so deep accurst,
                  That runn'st from pole to pole
                  To seek a draught to slake thy thirst--
                  Go, seek it in thy soul!'

                  'She heard it, the victorious West,
                  In crown and sword array'd!
                  She felt the void which mined her breast,
                  She shiver'd and obey'd.

                  'She veil'd her eagles, snapp'd her sword,
                  And laid her sceptre down;
                  Her stately purple she abhorr'd,
                  And her imperial crown.

                  'She broke her flutes, she stopp'd her sports,
                  Her artists could not please;
                  She tore her books, she shut her courts,
                  She fled her palaces;

                  'Lust of the eye and pride of life
                  She left it all behind,
                  And hurried, torn with inward strife,
                  The wilderness to find.

                  'Tears wash'd the trouble from her face!
                  She changed into a child!
                  'Mid weeds and wrecks she stood--a place
                  Of ruin--but she smiled!

                  'Oh, had I lived in that great day,
                  How had its glory new
                  Fill'd earth and heaven, and caught away
                  My ravish'd spirit too!

                  'No thoughts that to the world belong
                  Had stood against the wave
                  Of love which set so deep and strong
                  From Christ's then open grave.

                  'No cloister-floor of humid stone
                  Had been too cold for me.
                  For me no Eastern desert lone
                  Had been too far to flee.

                  'No lonely life had pass'd too slow,
                  When I could hourly scan
                  Upon his Cross, with head sunk low,
                  That nail'd, thorn-crowned Man!

                  'Could see the Mother with her Child
                  Whose tender winning arts
                  Have to his little arms beguiled
                  So many wounded hearts!

                  'And centuries came and ran their course,
                  And unspent all that time
                  Still, still went forth that Child's dear force,
                  And still was at its prime.

                  'Ay, ages long endured his span
                  Of life--'tis true received--
                  That gracious Child, that thorn-crown'd Man!
                  --He lived while we believed.

                  'While we believed, on earth he went,
                  And open stood his grave.
                  Men call'd from chamber, church, and tent;
                  And Christ was by to save.

                  'Now he is dead! Far hence he lies
                  In the lorn Syrian town;
                  And on his grave, with shining eyes,
                  The Syrian stars look down.

                  'In vain men still, with hoping new,
                  Regard his death-place dumb,
                  And say the stone is not yet to,
                  And wait for words to come.

                  'Ah, o'er that silent sacred land,
                  Of sun, and arid stone,
                  And crumbling wall, and sultry sand,
                  Sounds now one word alone!

                  'Unduped of fancy, henceforth man
                  Must labour!--must resign
                  His all too human creeds, and scan
                  Simply the way divine!

                  'But slow that tide of common thought,
                  Which bathed our life, retired;
                  Slow, slow the old world wore to nought,
                  And pulse by pulse expired.

                  'Its frame yet stood without a breach
                  When blood and warmth were fled;
                  And still it spake its wonted speech--
                  But every word was dead.

                  'And oh, we cried, that on this corse
                  Might fall a freshening storm!
                  Rive its dry bones, and with new force
                  A new-sprung world inform!

                  '--Down came the storm! O'er France it pass'd
                  In sheets of scathing fire;
                  All Europe felt that fiery blast,
                  And shook as it rush'd by her.

                  'Down came the storm! In ruins fell
                  The worn-out world we knew.
                  It pass'd, that elemental swell!
                  Again appear'd the blue;

                  'The sun shone in the new-wash'd sky,
                  And what from heaven saw he?
                  Blocks of the past, like icebergs high,
                  Float on a rolling sea!

                  'Upon them plies the race of man
                  All it before endeavour'd;
                  'Ye live,' I cried, 'ye work and plan,
                  And know not ye are sever'd!

                  ''Poor fragments of a broken world
                  Whereon men pitch their tent!
                  Why were ye too to death not hurl'd
                  When your world's day was spent?

                  ''That glow of central fire is done
                  Which with its fusing flame
                  Knit all your parts, and kept you one--
                  But ye, ye are the same!

                  ''The past, its mask of union on,
                  Had ceased to live and thrive.
                  The past, its mask of union gone,
                  Say, is it more alive?

                  ''Your creeds are dead, your rites are dead,
                  Your social order too!
                  Where tarries he, the Power who said:
                  See, I make all things new?

                  ''The millions suffer still, and grieve,
                  And what can helpers heal
                  With old-world cures men half believe
                  For woes they wholly feel?

                  ''And yet men have such need of joy!
                  But joy whose grounds are true;
                  And joy that should all hearts employ
                  As when the past was new.

                  ''Ah, not the emotion of that past,
                  Its common hope, were vain!
                  Some new such hope must dawn at last,
                  Or man must toss in pain.

                  ''But now the old is out of date,
                  The new is not yet born,
                  And who can be alone elate,
                  While the world lies forlorn?'

                  'Then to the wilderness I fled.--
                  There among Alpine snows
                  And pastoral huts I hid my head,
                  And sought and found repose.

                  'It was not yet the appointed hour.
                  Sad, patient, and resign'd,
                  I watch'd the crocus fade and flower,
                  I felt the sun and wind.

                  'The day I lived in was not mine,
                  Man gets no second day.
                  In dreams I saw the future shine--
                  But ah! I could not stay!

                  'Action I had not, followers, fame;
                  I pass'd obscure, alone.
                  The after-world forgets my name,
                  Nor do I wish it known.

                  'Composed to bear, I lived and died,
                  And knew my life was vain.
                  With fate I murmur not, nor chide;
                  At Sиvres by the Seine

                  '(If Paris that brief flight allow)
                  My humble tomb explore!
                  It bears: Eternity, be thou
                  My refuge! and no more.

                  'But thou, whom fellowship of mood
                  Did make from haunts of strife
                  Come to my mountain-solitude,
                  And learn my frustrate life;

                  'O thou, who, ere thy flying span
                  Was past of cheerful youth,
                  Didst find the solitary man
                  And love his cheerless truth--

                  'Despair not thou as I despair'd,
                  Nor be cold gloom thy prison!
                  Forward the gracious hours have fared,
                  And see! the sun is risen!

                  'He breaks the winter of the past;
                  A green, new earth appears.
                  Millions, whose life in ice lay fast,
                  Have thoughts, and smiles, and tears.

                  'What though there still need effort, strife?
                  Though much be still unwon?
                  Yet warm it mounts, the hour of life!
                  Death's frozen hour is done!

                  'The world's great order dawns in sheen,
                  After long darkness rude,
                  Divinelier imaged, clearer seen,
                  With happier zeal pursued.

                  'With hope extinct and brow composed
                  I mark'd the present die;
                  Its term of life was nearly closed,
                  Yet it had more than I.

                  'But thou, though to the world's new hour
                  Thou come with aspect marr'd,
                  Shorn of the joy, the bloom, the power,
                  Which best befits its bard--

                  'Though more than half thy years be past,
                  And spent thy youthful prime;
                  Though, round thy firmer manhood cast,
                  Hang weeds of our sad time

                  'Whereof thy youth felt all the spell,
                  And traversed all the shade--
                  Though late, though dimm'd, though weak, yet tell
                  Hope to a world new-made!

                  'Help it to fill that deep desire,
                  The want which rack'd our brain,
                  Consumed our heart with thirst like fire,
                  Immedicable pain;

                  'Which to the wilderness drove out
                  Our life, to Alpine snow,
                  And palsied all our word with doubt,
                  And all our work with woe--

                  'What still of strength is left, employ
                  That end to help attain:
                  One common wave of thought and joy
                  Lifting mankind again!'

                  --The vision ended. I awoke
                  As out of sleep, and no
                  Voice moved;--only the torrent broke
                  The silence, far below.

                  Soft darkness on the turf did lie.
                  Solemn, o'er hut and wood,
                  In the yet star-sown nightly sky,
                  The peak of Jaman stood.

                  Still in my soul the voice I heard
                  Of Obermann!--away
                  I turn'd; by some vague impulse stirr'd,
                  Along the rocks of Naye

                  Past Sonchaud's piny flanks I gaze
                  And the blanch'd summit bare
                  Of Malatrait, to where in haze
                  The Valais opens fair,

                  And the domed Velan, with his snows,
                  Behind the upcrowding hills,
                  Doth all the heavenly opening close
                  Which the Rhone's murmur fills--

                  And glorious there, without a sound,
                  Across the glimmering lake,
                  High in the Valais-depth profound,
                  I saw the morning break.
                  اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                  اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                    Apollo Musagetes by Matthew Arnold
                    Through the black, rushing smoke-bursts,
                    Thick breaks the red flame;
                    All Etna heaves fiercely
                    Her forest-clothed frame.

                    Not here, O Apollo!
                    Are haunts meet for thee.
                    But, where Helicon breaks down
                    In cliff to the sea,

                    Where the moon-silver'd inlets
                    Send far their light voice
                    Up the still vale of Thisbe,
                    O speed, and rejoice!

                    On the sward at the cliff-top
                    Lie strewn the white flocks,
                    On the cliff-side the pigeons
                    Roost deep in the rocks.

                    In the moonlight the shepherds,
                    Soft lull'd by the rills,
                    Lie wrapped in their blankets
                    Asleep on the hills.

                    --What forms are these coming
                    So white through the gloom?
                    What garments out-glistening
                    The gold-flower'd broom?

                    What sweet-breathing presence
                    Out-perfumes the thyme?
                    What voices enrapture
                    The night's balmy prime?

                    'Tis Apollo comes leading
                    His choir, the Nine.
                    --The leader is fairest,
                    But all are divine.

                    They are lost in the hollows!
                    They stream up again!
                    What seeks on this mountain
                    The glorified train?--

                    They bathe on this mountain,
                    In the spring by their road;
                    Then on to Olympus,
                    Their endless abode.

                    --Whose proase do they mention?
                    Of what is it told?--
                    What will be for ever;
                    What was from of old.

                    First hymn they the Father
                    Of all things; and then,
                    The rest of immortals,
                    The action of men.

                    The day in his hotness,
                    The strife with the palm;
                    The night in her silence,
                    The stars in their calm.
                    اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                    اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                      Bacchanalia by Matthew Arnold
                      The evening comes, the fields are still.
                      The tinkle of the thirsty rill,
                      Unheard all day, ascends again;
                      Deserted is the half-mown plain,
                      Silent the swaths! the ringing wain,
                      The mower's cry, the dog's alarms,
                      All housed within the sleeping farms!
                      The business of the day is done,
                      The last-left haymaker is gone.
                      And from the thyme upon the height,
                      And from the elder-blossom white
                      And pale dog-roses in the hedge,
                      And from the mint-plant in the sedge,
                      In puffs of balm the night-air blows
                      The perfume which the day forgoes.
                      And on the pure horizon far,
                      See, pulsing with the first-born star,
                      The liquid sky above the hill!
                      The evening comes, the fields are still.
                      اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                      اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                        From the Hymn of Empedocles by Matthew Arnold
                        IS it so small a thing
                        To have enjoy'd the sun,
                        To have lived light in the spring,
                        To have loved, to have thought, to have done;
                        To have advanced true friends, and beat down baffling foes;

                        That we must feign a bliss
                        Of doubtful future date,
                        And while we dream on this
                        Lose all our present state,
                        And relegate to worlds yet distant our repose?

                        Not much, I know, you prize
                        What pleasures may be had,
                        Who look on life with eyes
                        Estranged, like mine, and sad:
                        And yet the village churl feels the truth more than you;

                        Who 's loth to leave this life
                        Which to him little yields:
                        His hard-task'd sunburnt wife,
                        His often-labour'd fields;
                        The boors with whom he talk'd, the country spots he knew.

                        But thou, because thou hear'st
                        Men scoff at Heaven and Fate;
                        Because the gods thou fear'st
                        Fail to make blest thy state,
                        Tremblest, and wilt not dare to trust the joys there are.

                        I say, Fear not! life still
                        Leaves human effort scope.
                        But, since life teems with ill,
                        Nurse no extravagant hope.
                        Because thou must not dream, thou need'st not then despair.
                        اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                        اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                          Mycerinus by Matthew Arnold
                          'Not by the justice that my father spurn'd,
                          Not for the thousands whom my father slew,
                          Altars unfed and temples overturn'd,
                          Cold hearts and thankless tongues, where thanks are due;
                          Fell this dread voice from lips that cannot lie,
                          Stern sentence of the Powers of Destiny.

                          'I will unfold my sentence and my crime.
                          My crime--that, rapt in reverential awe,
                          I sate obedient, in the fiery prime
                          Of youth, self-govern'd, at the feet of Law;
                          Ennobling this dull pomp, the life of kings,
                          By contemplation of diviner things.

                          'My father loved injustice, and lived long;
                          Crown'd with grey hairs he died, and full of sway.
                          I loved the good he scorn'd, and hated wrong--
                          The Gods declare my recompense to-day.
                          I look'd for life more lasting, rule more high;
                          And when six years are measured, lo, I die!

                          'Yet surely, O my people, did I deem
                          Man's justice from the all-just Gods was given;
                          A light that from some upper fount did beam,
                          Some better archetype, whose seat was heaven;
                          A light that, shining from the blest abodes,
                          Did shadow somewhat of the life of Gods.

                          'Mere phantoms of man's self-tormenting heart,
                          Which on the sweets that woo it dares not feed!
                          Vain dreams, which quench our pleasures, then depart
                          When the duped soul, self-master'd, claims its meed;
                          When, on the strenuous just man, Heaven bestows,
                          Crown of his struggling life, an unjust close!

                          'Seems it so light a thing, then, austere Powers,
                          To spurn man's common lure, life's pleasant things?
                          Seems there no joy in dances crown'd with flowers,
                          Love, free to range, and regal banquetings?
                          Bend ye on these, indeed, an unmoved eye,
                          Not Gods but ghosts, in frozen apathy?

                          'Or is it that some Force, too wise, too strong,
                          Even for yourselves to conquer or beguile,
                          Sweeps earth, and heaven, and men, and Gods along,
                          Like the broad volume of the insurgent Nile?
                          And the great powers we serve, themselves may be
                          Slaves of a tyrannous necessity?

                          'Or in mid-heaven, perhaps, your golden cars,
                          Where earthly voice climbs never, wing their flight,
                          And in wild hunt, through mazy tracts of stars,
                          Sweep in the sounding stillness of the night?
                          Or in deaf ease, on thrones of dazzling sheen,
                          Drinking deep draughts of joy, ye dwell serene?

                          'Oh, wherefore cheat our youth, if thus it be,
                          Of one short joy, one lust, one pleasant dream?
                          Stringing vain words of powers we cannot see,
                          Blind divinations of a will supreme;
                          Lost labour! when the circumambient gloom
                          But hides, if Gods, Gods careless of our doom?

                          'The rest I give to joy. Even while I speak,
                          My sand runs short; and--as yon star-shot ray,
                          Hemm'd by two banks of cloud, peers pale and weak,
                          Now, as the barrier closes, dies away--
                          Even so do past and future intertwine,
                          Blotting this six years' space, which yet is mine.

                          'Six years--six little years--six drops of time!
                          Yet suns shall rise, and many moons shall wane,
                          And old men die, and young men pass their prime,
                          And languid pleasure fade and flower again,
                          And the dull Gods behold, ere these are flown,
                          Revels more deep, joy keener than their own.

                          'Into the silence of the groves and woods
                          I will go forth; though something would I say--
                          Something--yet what, I know not; for the Gods
                          The doom they pass revoke not, nor delay;
                          And prayers, and gifts, and tears, are fruitless all,
                          And the night waxes, and the shadows fall.

                          'Ye men of Egypt, ye have heard your king!
                          I go, and I return not. But the will
                          Of the great Gods is plain; and ye must bring
                          Ill deeds, ill passions, zealous to fulfil
                          Their pleasure, to their feet; and reap their praise,
                          The praise of Gods, rich boon! and length of days.'

                          --So spake he, half in anger, half in scorn;
                          And one loud cry of grief and of amaze
                          Broke from his sorrowing people; so he spake,
                          And turning, left them there; and with brief pause,
                          Girt with a throng of revellers, bent his way
                          To the cool region of the groves he loved.
                          There by the river-banks he wander'd on,
                          From palm-grove on to palm-grove, happy trees,
                          Their smooth tops shining sunward, and beneath
                          Burying their unsunn'd stems in grass and flowers;
                          Where in one dream the feverish time of youth
                          Might fade in slumber, and the feet of joy
                          Might wander all day long and never tire.
                          Here came the king, holding high feast, at morn,
                          Rose-crown'd; and ever, when the sun went down,
                          A hundred lamps beam'd in the tranquil gloom,
                          From tree to tree all through the twinkling grove,
                          Revealing all the tumult of the feast--
                          Flush'd guests, and golden goblets foam'd with wine;
                          While the deep-burnish'd foliage overhead
                          Splinter'd the silver arrows of the moon.

                          It may be that sometimes his wondering soul
                          From the loud joyful laughter of his lips
                          Might shrink half startled, like a guilty man
                          Who wrestles with his dream; as some pale shape
                          Gliding half hidden through the dusky stems,
                          Would thrust a hand before the lifted bowl,
                          Whispering: A little space, and thou art mine!
                          It may be on that joyless feast his eye
                          Dwelt with mere outward seeming; he, within,
                          Took measure of his soul, and knew its strength,
                          And by that silent knowledge, day by day,
                          Was calm'd, ennobled, comforted, sustain'd.
                          It may be; but not less his brow was smooth,
                          And his clear laugh fled ringing through the gloom,
                          And his mirth quail'd not at the mild reproof
                          Sigh'd out by winter's sad tranquillity;
                          Nor, pall'd with its own fulness, ebb'd and died
                          In the rich languor of long summer-days;
                          Nor wither'd when the palm-tree plumes, that roof'd
                          With their mild dark his grassy banquet-hall,
                          Bent to the cold winds of the showerless spring;
                          No, nor grew dark when autumn brought the clouds.

                          So six long years he revell'd, night and day.
                          And when the mirth wax'd loudest, with dull sound
                          Sometimes from the grove's centre echoes came,
                          To tell his wondering people of their king;
                          In the still night, across the steaming flats,
                          Mix'd with the murmur of the moving Nile.
                          اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                          اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                            Cadmus and Harmonia by Matthew Arnold
                            Far, far from here,
                            The Adriatic breaks in a warm bay
                            Among the green Illyrian hills; and there
                            The sunshine in the happy glens is fair,
                            And by the sea, and in the brakes.
                            The grass is cool, the sea-side air
                            Buoyant and fresh, the mountain flowers
                            More virginal and sweet than ours.

                            And there, they say, two bright and aged snakes,
                            Who once were Cadmus and Harmonia,
                            Bask in the glens or on the warm sea-shore,
                            In breathless quiet, after all their ills;
                            Nor do they see their country, nor the place
                            Where the Sphinx lived among the frowning hills,
                            Nor the unhappy palace of their race,
                            Nor Thebes, nor the Ismenus, any more.

                            There those two live, far in the Illyrian brakes!
                            They had stay'd long enough to see,
                            In Thebes, the billow of calamity
                            Over their own dear children roll'd,
                            Curse upon curse, pang upon pang,
                            For years, they sitting helpless in their home,
                            A grey old man and woman; yet of old
                            The Gods had to their marriage come,
                            And at the banquet all the Muses sang.

                            Therefore they did not end their days
                            In sight of blood, but were rapt, far away,
                            To where the west-wind plays,
                            And murmurs of the Adriatic come
                            To those untrodden mountain-lawns; and there
                            Placed safely in changed forms, the pair
                            Wholly forgot their first sad life, and home,
                            And all that Theban woe, and stray
                            For ever through the glens, placid and dumb.
                            اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                            اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                              Song of Callicles, The by Matthew Arnold
                              Through the black, rushing smoke-bursts,
                              Thick breaks the red flame.
                              All Etna heaves fiercely
                              Her forest-clothed frame.

                              Not here, O Apollo!
                              Are haunts meet for thee.
                              But, where Helicon breaks down
                              In cliff to the sea.

                              Where the moon-silver'd inlets
                              Send far their light voice
                              Up the still vale of Thisbe,
                              O speed, and rejoice!

                              On the sward at the cliff-top,
                              Lie strewn the white flocks;
                              On the cliff-side, the pigeons
                              Roost deep in the rocks.

                              In the moonlight the shepherds,
                              Soft lull'd by the rills,
                              Lie wrapt in their blankets,
                              Asleep on the hills.

                              —What forms are these coming
                              So white through the gloom?
                              What garments out-glistening
                              The gold-flower'd broom?

                              What sweet-breathing Presence
                              Out-perfumes the thyme?
                              What voices enrapture
                              The night's balmy prime?—

                              'Tis Apollo comes leading
                              His choir, The Nine.
                              —The Leader is fairest,
                              But all are divine.

                              They are lost in the hollows.
                              They stream up again.
                              What seeks on this mountain
                              The glorified train?—

                              They bathe on this mountain,
                              In the spring by their road.
                              Then on to Olympus,
                              Their endless abode.

                              —Whose praise do they mention:
                              Of what is it told?—
                              What will be for ever.
                              What was from of old.

                              First hymn they the Father
                              Of all things: and then,
                              The rest of Immortals,
                              The action of men.

                              The Day in his hotness,
                              The strife with the palm;
                              The Night in her silence,
                              The Stars in their calm.
                              اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                              اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                                The Song of Callicles by Matthew Arnold
                                THROUGH the black, rushing smoke-bursts,
                                Thick breaks the red flame.
                                All Etna heaves fiercely
                                Her forest-clothed frame.

                                Not here, O Apollo!
                                Are haunts meet for thee.
                                But, where Helicon breaks down
                                In cliff to the sea.

                                Where the moon-silver'd inlets
                                Send far their light voice
                                Up the still vale of Thisbe,
                                O speed, and rejoice!

                                On the sward at the cliff-top,
                                Lie strewn the white flocks;
                                On the cliff-side, the pigeons
                                Roost deep in the rocks.

                                In the moonlight the shepherds,
                                Soft lull'd by the rills,
                                Lie wrapt in their blankets,
                                Asleep on the hills.

                                —What forms are these coming
                                So white through the gloom?
                                What garments out-glistening
                                The gold-flower'd broom?

                                What sweet-breathing Presence
                                Out-perfumes the thyme?
                                What voices enrapture
                                The night's balmy prime?—

                                'Tis Apollo comes leading
                                His choir, The Nine.
                                —The Leader is fairest,
                                But all are divine.

                                They are lost in the hollows.
                                They stream up again.
                                What seeks on this mountain
                                The glorified train?—

                                They bathe on this mountain,
                                In the spring by their road.
                                Then on to Olympus,
                                Their endless abode.

                                —Whose praise do they mention:
                                Of what is it told?—
                                What will be for ever.
                                What was from of old.

                                First hymn they the Father
                                Of all things: and then,
                                The rest of Immortals,
                                The action of men.

                                The Day in his hotness,
                                The strife with the palm;
                                The Night in her silence,
                                The Stars in their calm.
                                اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                                اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X