Lord, I Come

All my weakness, all my failings,
Lord, in sorrow I deplore;
Make me purer, stronger, better,
That my heart may love thee more
I have failed to follow closely
All the steps marked out for me,
Yet I dare to hope formercy,
For my heart still trusts in thee.
Henceforth, Saviour, walk beside me,
Lead me by thy loving hand
Till my feet shall reach the portals
Of the dear Immanuel's land

Full of failings, yet I come,
Saviour, make my heart thy home!
Let it be, let it be,

He That Loves a Rosy Cheek

Ask not overmuch for fair
Form and face: let women be
Good: beauty is but a snare:
Gladly woo, if good is she.

After the strewn leaves of roses
Richer the rich mind uncloses.
Boorish is he, and unwise,
Who judges women by the eyes.

The Tryst

I Waited full two hours, or more,
Beneath the old pine tree,
Where oft I've lingered twilight hours,
Watching, my Love, for thee.

I waited till the shadows grew
Like giants, grim and grey;
I waited till night's coming chased
The shadows far away.

I waited for, I knew not what;
But, oh, I waited there,
Hoping, perchance, some ray to find,
To lighten my despair.

A year ago last May, I sat
Beneath the old pine-tree;
My tryst was not a broken one,
For, Love, you came to me.

Yesternight thy languorous glances Of my life and soul beraught me

Yesternight thy languorous glances Of my life and soul beraught me;
But thy ruby lip with kisses, Of its favour, new life brought me.

No to-day's growth my love-liking For that musky down of thine is;
Long time with the wine of passion Hath its crescent-cup distraught me.

Well my constancy this showeth That, in spite of thine oppression,
From thy quest I rested never, Albe weariness besought me.

Righteousness nor yet amendment Hope from me, the tavern-haunter;
For unto the topers' service, Ere I was, The Fates forethought me.

Love's Properties

'Twixt heat and cold, 'twixt death and life,
I freeze and burn, I live and die;
Which jointly work in me such strife,
I live in death, in cold I fry:
Nor hot, nor cold, nor 'live, nor dead,
Neither, and both, this life I lead.

First, burning heat sets all on fire,
Whereby I seem in flames to fry;
Then cold Despair kills hot Desire,
That drenched deep in death I lie:
Heat drives out cold, and keeps my life;
Cold quencheth heat, no end of strife.

The less I hope to have my will,

Sonnet

They say that shadows of deceased ghosts
Do haunt the houses and the graves about,
Of such whose life's lamp went untimely out,
Delighting still in their forsaken hosts:
So, in the place where cruel Love doth shoot
The fatal shaft that slew my love's delight,
I stalk, and walk, and wander day and night,
Even like a ghost with unperceived foot.
But those light ghosts are happier far than I,
For, at their pleasure, they can come and go
Unto the place that hides their treasure so,
And see the name with their fantastic eye:

Carisima

“D O YOU NOT KNOW I LOVE YOU ?”—So you cried,
And blessed my lips with kisses multiplied,
Sweeter than those for which Adonis died—
Kisses that promised true love's long endurance;
While your dear eyes in mine my soul were reading,
With wistful, anxious, eager question pleading,
To know if I believed the sweet assurance.

“Y ES , I DO KNOW YOU LOVE ME ,”—I replied,
“And in that love I am beatified;
“It is my wealth, my glory, and my pride,
“The evening-glory of a clouded west:”—
Without it earth were but a desert dreary,

Homeless

Without a home at holy Christmas-tide,
Sad-hearted at the feast of all the year,
These were strange words you told me, Phoebe dear;
I have no social joys when all beside
Meet with such blessed mirth round happy fires.
When the long-parted greet and draw fresh love
From ceaseless flow of talk that never tires;
Through all the homes there is no place for me.
No place, no room; dear friend, if it can be
One thought of joy to you, then know
My heart grew larger at your words, as though

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