“Give me October’s meditative haze” poem – Alfred Austin

Give me October’s meditative haze, Its gossamer mornings, dewy-wimpled eves, Dewy and fragrant, fragrant and secure, The long slow sound of farmward-wending wains, When homely Love sups quiet ‘mid his sheaves, Sups ‘mid his sheaves, his sickle at his side, And all is peace, peace and plump fruitfulness. Alfred AustinAlfred Austin (1835 – […]

“Give me a roof where Wisdom dwells” poem – Alfred Austin

Give me a roof where Wisdom dwells, Where honeysuckle smiles and smells, A bleating flock, some lowing kine, An honest welcome always mine, A homely draught, a humble meal, Leisure to live, to think, to feel, A narrow plot, a prospect wide, A patch upon the mountain side! From these my heart you will […]

“For where, beneath one’s parent sky” poem – Alfred Austin

For where, beneath one’s parent sky, Our dear ones live, our dead ones lie. Alfred AustinAlfred Austin (1835 – 1913) was an English journalist and a poet who was appointed Poet Laureate in 1896, after an interval following the death of Tennyson, when the other candidates had either caused controversy or simply refused […]

“`Father, farewell! Be not distressed” poem – Alfred Austin

`Father, farewell! Be not distressed, And take my vow, ere I depart, To found a Convent in my breast, And keep a cloister in my heart.’ Alfred AustinAlfred Austin (1835 – 1913) was an English journalist and a poet who was appointed Poet Laureate in 1896, after an interval following the death of […]

Farewell To Spring poem – Alfred Austin

I saw this morning, with a sudden smart, Spring preparing to depart. I know her well and so I told her all my heart. “Why did you, Spring, your coming so delay, If, now here, you cannot stay? You win my love and then unloving pass away. “We waited, waited, O so long, so […]

Farewell To Italy poem – Alfred Austin

Incomparable Italy, farewell! Tears not unmanly trespass to the eyes, From thy soft touch and glance unspeakable Compelled to turn and suffer other skies. E’en as I leave thee, the maternal vine Under the weight of clustering fruitage bends; And the plump fig, beyond where tendrils twine, Shows greener, moister, as the sap ascends. […]

Dedication To The Edition Of 1876 To H.J.A. poem – Alfred Austin

Three graces still attend me, since the day Your step across my graceless threshold came: Reverence, and Gratitude, and Love, their name. Reverence, whose gaze fears from the ground to stray, And bows its head, and sues to you to lay Your foot thereon, and keep my base self down: Next, Gratitude, that, bolder, […]

Dedication To Lady Windsor poem – Alfred Austin

Where violets blue to olives gray From furrows brown lift laughing eyes, And silvery Mensola sings its way Through terraced slopes, nor seeks to stay, But onward and downward leaps and flies; Where vines, just newly burgeoned, link Their hands to join the dance of Spring, Green lizards glisten from clest and chink, And […]

“`Covet who will the patronage of Kings ” poem – Alfred Austin

`Covet who will the patronage of Kings, And pompous titles Emperors bestow, Splendour, and revelry, and all that brings A thousand bitter thoughts, a world of woe: A meadow glistening in an April shower, A green-banked rivulet, and, near his nest, A blackbird carolling in guelder bower, ‘Tis these that soothe and satisfy the […]

“Could I but leave men wiser by my song ” poem – Alfred Austin

Could I but leave men wiser by my song, And somewhat happier in their little day, Wean them from things that lure but to betray, Make the harsh gentle, and the feeble strong, Shunning the paths where pride and folly throng, Then would I carol all the livelong day, And, as the golden sunset […]

Content Written Off Ithica poem – Alfred Austin

I could not find the little maid Content, So out I rushed, and sought her far and wide; But not where Pleasure each new fancy tried, Heading the maze of reeling merriment, Nor where, with restless eyes and bow half bent, Love in a brake of sweetbrier smiled and sighed, Nor yet where Fame […]

Chi È? poem – Alfred Austin

When for a buonamano Cometh, at break of day, Knock at the terzo piano, A little voice answers, Chi è? “I, the facchino, awaiting The bounty of cara lei.” She droppeth a paul through the grating, And silently steals away. When, with a long low mumble Of lips that appear to pray, There cometh […]

By The Fates poem – Alfred Austin

By the fates that have fastened our life, By the distance that holds us apart, By our passion, its sweetness, its strife, By the longing and ache of the heart; By our meeting, our parting, our pain When meeting and parting are o’er,- Take me hence to where once I have lain, Ere I […]

Burns’s Statue At Irvine poem – Alfred Austin

Yes! let His place be there! Where the lone moorland gazes on the sea, Not in the squalid street nor pompous square: So that he again may be From contamination free, His pedestal the plain, his canopy the air! There leave him all alone! Too much, too long, he herded with his kind, Lured […]

“Beyond the pasture’s withered bents ” poem – Alfred Austin

Beyond the pasture’s withered bents, Upstanding hop, recumbent fleece, And sheaves of wheat, like weathered tents, A twilight bivouac of peace. Alfred AustinAlfred Austin (1835 – 1913) was an English journalist and a poet who was appointed Poet Laureate in 1896, after an interval following the death of Tennyson, when the other candidates […]

Before, Behind, And Beyond poem – Alfred Austin

O the sunny days before us, before us, before us, When all was bright From holt to height, And the heavens were shining o’er us; When sound and scent, with vision blent, Wingèd Hope, and perched Content, Joys that came, and ills that went, Seemed singing all in chorus. O the dreary days behind […]

“Because I failed, shall I asperse the End” poem – Alfred Austin

Because I failed, shall I asperse the End With scorn or doubt, my failure to excuse; ‘Gainst arduous Truth my feeble falseness use, Like that worst foe, a vain splenetic friend? Deem’st thou, self-amorous fool, the High will bend If that thy utmost stature prove too small? Though thou be dwarf, some other is […]

At Vaucluse poem – Alfred Austin

By Avignon’s dismantled walls, Where cloudless mid-March sunshine falls, Rhone, through broad belts of green, Flecked with the light of almond groves, Upon itself reverting, roves Reluctant from the scene. Yet from stern moat and storied tower, From sprouting vine, from spreading flower, My footsteps cannot choose But turn aside, as though some friend […]

At The Lattice poem – Alfred Austin

Behind the curtain, With glance uncertain, Peeps pet Florence as I gaily ride; Half demurely, But, though purely, Most, most surely Wishing she were riding, riding by my side. In leafy alleys, Where sunlight dallies, Pleasant were it, bonnie, to be riding rein by rein; And where summer tosses, All about in bosses, Velvet […]

At The Gate Of The Convent poem – Alfred Austin

Beside the Convent Gate I stood, Lingering to take farewell of those To whom I owed the simple good Of three days’ peace, three nights’ repose. My sumpter-mule did blink and blink; Was nothing more to munch or quaff; Antonio, far too wise to think, Leaned vacantly upon his staff. It was the childhood […]

At Shelley’s House At Lerici poem – Alfred Austin

Maiden, with English hair, and eyes The colour of Italian skies, What seek you by this shore? “I seek, sir, for the latest home Where Shelley dwelt, and, o’er the foam Speeding, returned no more.” Come, then, with me: I seek it, too. Are you his kith? For strangely you Resemble him in mien. […]

At Shelley’s Grave poem – Alfred Austin

Beneath this marble, mute of praise, Is hushed the heart of One Who, whilst it beat, had eagle’s gaze To stare upon the sun. Equal in flight To any height, He lies where they that crawl but come, Sleeping most sound,-Cor Cordium. No rippling notes announcing spring, No bloom-evoking breeze, No fleecy clouds that […]

At San Giovanni Del Lago poem – Alfred Austin

I leaned upon the rustic bridge, And watched the streamlet make Its chattering way past zigzag ridge Down to the silent lake. The sunlight flickered on the wave, Lay quiet on the hill; Italian sunshine, bright and brave, Though ’twas but April still. I heard the distant shepherd’s shout, I heard the fisher’s call; […]

A Woman’s Apology poem – Alfred Austin

In the green darkness of a summer wood, Wherethro’ ran winding ways, a lady stood, Carved from the air in curving womanhood. A maiden’s form crowned by a matron’s mien, As, about Lammas, wheat-stems may be seen, The ear all golden, but the stalk still green. There as she stood, waiting for sight or […]

A Wintry Picture poem – Alfred Austin

Now where the bare sky spans the landscape bare, Up long brown fallows creeps the slow brown team, Scattering the seed-corn that must sleep and dream, Till by Spring’s carillon awakened there. Ruffling the tangles of his thicket hair, The stripling yokel steadies now the beam, Now strides erect with cheeks that glow and […]

A Wintry Picture (II) poem – Alfred Austin

Now in the woodlands from the creaking boughs The last sere leaves are loosened and unstrung, Where once the tender honeysuckle clung, And the fond mavis fluted to his spouse. Already dreaming of her winter drowse, And brooding dimly on her unborn young, The dormouse rakes the beechmast, and among The matted roots the […]

A Wild Rose poem – Alfred Austin

The first wild rose in wayside hedge, This year I wandering see, I pluck, and send it as a pledge, My own Wild Rose, to Thee. For when my gaze first met thy gaze, We were knee-deep in June: The nights were only dreamier days, And all the hours in tune. I found thee, […]

A Voice From The West poem – Alfred Austin

What is the voice I hear On the wind of the Western Sea? Sentinel, listen from out Cape Clear And say what the voice may be. “’Tis a proud, free people calling loud to a people proud and free. “And it says to them, `Kinsmen, hail! We severed have been too long. Now let […]

A Twilight Song poem – Alfred Austin

Why, rapturous bird, though shades of night Muffle the leaves and swathe the lawn, Singest thou still with all thy might, As though ’twere noon, as though ’twere dawn? Silence darkens on vale and hill, But thou, unseen, art singing still. ‘Tis because, though in dusky bower, With love delighted still thou art; Nor […]

A Tusculan Question poem – Alfred Austin

One day as on an ass I rode, By many a twisting gully, To where once stood the famed abode Of philosophic Tully, A shepherd lad with hat aslouch Was singing to his flock O; I pulled my money from my pouch, And chucked him a baiocco. A moment gone, and with his psalm […]

The Haymakers’ Song poem – Alfred Austin

HERE’S to him that grows it, Drink, lads, drink! That lays it in and mows it, Clink, jugs, clink! To him that mows and makes it, That scatters it and shakes it, That turns, and teds, and rakes it, Clink, jugs, clink! Now here ’s to him that stacks it, Drink, lads, drink! That […]

Love’s Blindness poem – Alfred Austin

Now do I know that Love is blind, for I Can see no beauty on this beauteous earth, No life, no light, no hopefulness, no mirth, Pleasure nor purpose, when thou art not nigh. Thy absence exiles sunshine from the sky, Seres Spring’s maturity, checks Summer’s birth, Leaves linnet’s pipe as sad as plover’s cry, […]

At Her Grave poem – Alfred Austin

Lo, here among the rest you sleep, As though no difference were ‘Twixt them and you, more wide, more deep, Than such as fondness loves to keep Round each lone sepulchre. Yet they but human, you divine, Warmed by that heavenly breath, Which, when ephemeral lights decline, Like lamp before nocturnal shrine, Still burneth […]

At Delphi poem – Alfred Austin

I Apollo! Apollo! Apollo! II Where hast thou, Apollo, gone? I have wandered on and on, Through the shaggy Dorian gorges, Down from where Parnassus forges Thunder for the Phocian valleys; Where the Pleistus springs and sallies Past ravines and caverns dread, Have, like it, meanderëd; But I cannot see thee, hear thee, Find […]

As Dies The Year poem – Alfred Austin

The Old Year knocks at the farmhouse door. October, come with your matron gaze, From the fruit you are storing for winter days, And prop him up on the granary floor, Where the straw lies threshed and the corn stands heaped: Let him eat of the bread he reaped; He is feeble and faint, […]

Any Poet At Any Time poem – Alfred Austin

Time, thou supreme inexorable Judge, Whom none can bribe, and none can overawe, Who unto party rancour, private grudge, Calmly opposeth equitable law, Before whom advocacy vainly strives To make the better cause to seem the worse, To thy Tribunal, when our jangling lives Are husht, I leave the verdict on my verse. Irrevocably […]

An Experiment In Translation poem – Alfred Austin

Blest husbandmen! if they but knew their bliss! For whom, from war remote, fair-minded Earth Teems, to light toil, with ready sustenance. What though from splendid palace streams at dawn No servile train, gaping at inlaid gates, Corinthian bronzes, garments tricked with gold; What though for them no snow-white wool be stained By Eastern […]

An Autumn Picture poem – Alfred Austin

Now round red roofs stand russet stacks arow: Homeward from gleaning in the stubbly wheat, High overhead the harsh rook saileth slow, And cupless acorns crackle ‘neath your feet. No breeze, no breath, veereth the oasthouse hoods, Whence the faint smoke floats fragrantly away; And, in the distance, the half-hazy woods Glow with the […]

An Autumn Homily poem – Alfred Austin

Here let us sit beneath this oak, and hear The acorns fitfully fall one by one, The final harvest of the fading year Now Summer eves and Autumn days are done. The orchard rows stand desolate and bare, Even the mellow quince is gathered now; The furrow yields the sickle to the share, And […]

An Autumn-Blooming Rose poem – Alfred Austin

I found, and plucked, an autumn-blooming rose, And shut my eyes, and scented all its savour: When lo! as in the month the blackthorn blows, Lambs ‘gan to bleat, and merle and lark to quaver. Flower of my life! inestimably dear, Now that its calendar wanes sere and sober, To me your freshness, turning […]