The Song Of Empedocles
And you, ye stars,
Who slowly begin to marshal,
As of old, in the fields of heaven,
Your distant, melancholy lines!
Have you, too, survived yourselves?
Are you, too, what I fear to become?
You, too, once lived;
You too moved
Among august companions,
In an older world, peopled by Gods,
In a mightier order,
The radiant, rejoicing, intelligent Sons of Heaven.
But now, ye
Your lonely, cold-shining lights,
Unwilling
In the heavenly wilderness,
For a younger, ignoble world;
And renew, by necessity,
Night after night your courses,
In echoing, unneared silence,
Above a race you know not—Uncaring and undelighted,
Without friend and without home;
Weary like us, though
Weary with our weariness.
Matthew Arnold
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Come to me in my dreams, and By day I shall be well again For so the night will more than The hopeless longing of the day
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HE LE Down the Savoy valleys sounding, Echoing round this castle old, 'Mid the distant mountain-chalets Hark what bell for church is toll'd In the bright October morning Savoy's Duke had left his bride
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Saint Brandan sails the northern main; The brotherhood of saints are glad He greets them once, he sails again; So late
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Goethe in Weimar sleeps, and Greece, Long since, saw Byron's struggle cease But one such death remain'd to come; The last poetic voice is dumb—We stand to-day by Wordsworth's tomb