On Leaving Rome, by Richard Chenevix Trench
ADDRESSED TO A FRIEND RESIDING IN THAT CITY O lately written in the roll of friends,
O written...
ADDRESSED TO A FRIEND RESIDING IN THAT CITY O lately written in the roll of friends,
O written...
'CALM is now that stormy water; it has learned to fear my wrath:
Lashed and fettered now it yie...
A solemn thing it is, and full of awe,
Wandering long time among the lonely hills,
To issue ...
The commonest spot we cannot without pain
Relinquish, where we tarried but a day,
And struck ...
Sole star that glitterest in the crimson west,
'Fair child of beauty, glorious lamp of love
H...
In my life's youth, while yet the deeper needs
Of the inmost spirit unawakened were,
Thou cou...
Thy gladness makes me thankful every way,
To look upon thy gladness makes me glad;
While yet ...
SINGING IN WINTER Oh light of heart and wing,
Light-hearted and light-wingë d, that dost...
Oh drinking deep of slumber's holy wine,
Whence may the smile that lights thy countenance be?
...
Dear boy, thy momentary laughter rings
Sincerely out, and that spontaneous glee,
Seeming to ...
When man was foiled in Paradise, he fell
From that fair spot, thenceforward to confess
The ba...
Spirit of Beauty, that was sought of old,
And won to incarnations manifold,
By such as knew ...
An awful statue, by a veil half-hid,
At Sais stands. One came, to whom was known
All lore co...
On Benvenuto Cellini's sculpture of Perseus and Medusa In what fierce spasms upgathered, on the...
Ah me! Of them from whom the good have hope,
Of them whom Virtue for her liegemen claims
How m...