- Above the care of Nature and of State,
- Suspended in the noon of Night we wait,
- All slumber nursing, to make sweet and pure,
- While secret Nature, weaving works the cure.
- We are the handmaids of the hollow night,
- The angels of the dark, restoring sight;
- We go -- the pains of Day to soothe, console --
- Awake, arise! Behold thou art made whole.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "An Invocation," Cloudrifts at Twilight
- Reviving Spring, a toast to thy fresh lips!
- Thy blush is music, and e'en heaven lurks
- In thy thick perfumed hair that hangs about
- Thy flowered shoulders like enchanted rain;
- Thy sigh is song and thy soft breath a balm,
- Dispelling death -- soft loosing his cold grip,
- Unravelling darkness in the heart of pain,
- As o'er dank waters rings the laugh of dawn.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Proem," Cloudrifts at Twilight
- True poetry is not of earth,
- 'T is more of Heaven by its birth.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Parnassus," Coudrifts at Twilight
- Some fearful sights there be that creep
- By night -- I mean that harass sleep;
- But tenfold more alarming seem these when
- They brave the day, to breathe the air like men.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "The Link," Cloudrifts at Twilight
- There surely is some Life beyond
- The state of man's mere waking mind:
- Whereto -- Earth-blind --
- Men's spirits creep
- From out the sepulchre of sleep.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "The Existence Dual," Cloudrifts at Twilight
- Thou Moon! Sun of the Night,
- Sister mystic of the Day;
- Look down, pause in thy flight!
- Calm me with thy aural ray,
- Enchanting souls to silver sleep.
- Look down from out thy airy keep,
- My fevered senses hypnotize;
- Shut out the World, whereto Mind flies--
- Ambitious Mind, with travail sore;
- Its fibre rest, its calm restore.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "An Invocation," Cloudrifts at Twilight
- Success,
- The apple of ambition's eye;
- The crooked prop of tyranny;
- The wind that puffs the changeful sail;
- That fills the tuneful pipe;
- That gives a color to the pale,
- A plumpness to the ripe;
- Desire's counterpart,
- That men most have at heart.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Success," Imogen and Other Poems
- O Music! language of the soul,
- Of love, of God to man;
- Bright beam from heaven thrilling,
- That lightens sorrow's weight.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Apostrophe," Imogen and Other Poems
- Yea, Paris is a festive ton -- a festive
- Ton for all! Skate o'er on joy --
- Thin crust of gilded, polished joy!
- What matters it if Hell's beneath?
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Paris the Ton," Cloudrifts at Twilight
- How Time doth lash us with sharp pains,
- Set loose our teeth, snatch wisps of hair, dim eyes --
- And finally bend our backs toward earth
- To find the fittest place for burial.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Of Time," Cloudrifts at Twilight
- Woman, thou art a river, deep and wide,
- Of waters soft and sweet:
- Alas! I've never reached the other side;
- Though oft I've wet my feet!
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Epigram," Imogen and Other Poems
- Life is a waste of woes,
- And Death a river deep,
- That ever onward flows,
- Troubled, yet asleep.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Lines To --," Imogen and Other Poems
- Thou slanting rain! Thou Hebe of the Skies,
- That pours out drink to Earth; thou faithful wife
- That with moist tears embraces her prone lord.
- Thou mist intensified; thou double dew
- That drowns the drought, that heals the parched and burnt --
- Thou resurrection rain.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "The Earth's Athirst," Cloudrifts at Twilight
- Like a goddess on her azure hill,
- The star of my ambition,
- The mistress of my dream;
- A thing apart,
- That we can worship, but not touch;
- A wild desire,
- That, in the madness of the thought,
- Soars higher in its dignity,
- And leaves me weeping in the dust.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Ambition," Imogen and Other Poems
- Passing pleasures do but cloy,
- And ape the consciousness of joy:
- The wine, the women, and the song,
- That tempt us here by night,
- Are happy things, though not for long,
- To wing oblivious flight
- Above the dull, resenting pain,
- That, waking, seizes on the brain,
- And gives the moody fibre food
- To mope, or captiously to brood,
- With swollen eyes and torpid legs,
- O'er foul and discontented dregs.
- Ah! the quiet that did pall
- Before I drank indulgence blind
- Becomes the panacea in all
- I seek, yet, seeking, cannot find.
WILLIAM BATCHELDER GREENE, "Passing Pleasures," Imogen and Other Poems
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