BALLADS OF BEAUTY.
EDITED BY
GEORGE M. BAKER.
WITH
Forty Full Page Illustrations.
"IF EYES WERE MADE FOR SEEING,
THEN BEAUTY IS ITS OWN EXCUSE FOR BEING."
Emerson.
BOSTON:
LEE AND SHEPARD, PUBLISHERS.
NEW YORK:
CHARLES T. DILLINGHAM.
1878.
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1874, by
Lee and Shepard,
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
PAGE | |
Beauty.—Young | 13 |
Waiting in the Twilight.—Alice M. Adams | 14 |
Life Songs.—Amy Key | 18 |
The Welcome.—Thomas Davis | 25 |
Love at First Sight.—Edward Bulwer Lytton | 26 |
O Fairest of the Rural Maids.—William Cullen Bryant | 30 |
Louise on the Doorstep.—Charles Mackay | 37 |
Our Skater Belle.—Anonymous | 38 |
Augusta.—Saxe | 42 |
Lord Ullin's Daughter.—Thomas Campbell | 45 |
Winter Song | 50 |
The Miller's Daughter.—Alfred Tennyson | 54 |
Oh, Were My Love a Country Lass.—William Allingham | 58[x] |
The Siesta.—William Cullen Bryant | 62 |
The Queen's Ride.—Thomas Bailey Aldrich | 66 |
Mary Morison.—Robert Burns | 70 |
Margaret and Dora.—Thomas Campbell | 74 |
Out in the Cold.—"Fair Women" | 77 |
The Annoyer.—N. P. Willis | 82 |
Desolate.—Gerald Massey | 86 |
Linger, O Gentle Time | 90 |
Bonnie Bessie.—George S. Burleigh | 94 |
The Confidante.—"Fair Women" | 98 |
Somebody's Waiting for Somebody.—Charles Swain | 102 |
Elise.—Henry Gillman | 106 |
Somebody.—Anonymous | 110 |
A True Woman.—William Wordsworth | 114 |
Flowers and Flowers.—"Fair Women" | 118 |
She Walks in Beauty.—Lord Byron | 122 |
My Sunshine.—S. P. Driver | 126 |
A Sleeping Beauty.—Samuel Rogers | 130 |
The Lady's "Yes."—Elizabeth Barrett Browning | 134[xi] |
A Health.—Edward Coate Pinkney | 138 |
Winifred's Hair.—Hamilton Aidé | 142 |
In the Organ Loft.—George Arnold | 146 |
A Garden in Her Face.—Richard Allison | 150 |
When Stars are in the Quiet Skies.—Edward Bulwer Lytton | 154 |
The Time I've Lost in Wooing.—Thomas Moore | 158 |
Not a Match.—Henry S. Leigh | 162 |
Oh, Saw Ye the Lass.—Richard Ryan | 166 |
Ballads of Beauty.
Beauty gives
The features perfectness, and to the form
Its delicate proportions: she may stain
The eye with a celestial blue, the cheek
With carmine of the sunset; she may breathe
Grace into every motion, like the play
Of the least visible tissue of a cloud;
She may give all that's rich—her own
Bright cestus—and one glance of Intellect,
Like stronger magic, will outshine it all.
Slowly from the western hill-sides
Fades the sunset's ruddy light,
While the birds amid the tree-tops
Softly chirp their sweet "Good-night."
Where the elm trees' spreading branches
Hide the streamlets with their shades,
Stands the fair-faced, blue-eyed Dolly,
Flower of all the village maids,—
Looking, in the growing twilight,
Towards the grassy fields ahead,
Listening still, with eye expectant,
For the ever-welcome tread.
From across the verdant meadow
Comes a whistle, loud and shrill,
Sounding through the evening stillness,
Seemeth but the whip-poor-will.
But the fair face glows still brighter,
And the eyes more eager grow,
As the notes come near and nearer,
Louder than the streamlet's flow.
Soon she hears the well-known music
Of his voice, borne on the air:
"Don't you hear me coming, Dolly?
Dolly, dear, I'll soon be there."
And the one she's long been waiting,
Hat upraised, now comes in sight,
Hastening towards the blue-eyed maiden,
Waiting in the soft twilight.
Happy hearts, so young and trusting,
May no frost e'er blight your love,
But may blessings all unnumbered
Fall upon you from above!
A brook flashed from a rugged height,
Merrily, merrily glancing;
The songs of the summer light
Kept time to the tune of its dancing.
Fond eyes looked on its dewy sheen,
Reading fate in its waters;
"Darling, the song of the brook is for you,
Fairest of earth's dear daughters."
Bright eyes looked on its dewy sheen,
And the songs of their lives rang clearly,—
"The world is fair! the world is fair!"
"And I love, I love you dearly."
Autumn leaves, like a fairy fleet,
Swept down towards the river;
The false wind moaned through the dreary sleet,
"The flowers are dead forever!"
Sad eyes looked down on the shadowed stream,
Reading fate in its measure:
"For me your song, for my withered life,
Pain in the mask of pleasure."
Sad eyes looked on the shadowed stream,
And the songs of their lives rang clearly,—
"The world is sad! the world is sad!"
"Oh! I loved, I loved him dearly."
Come in the evening or come in the morning,
Come when you're looked for or come without warning,
Kisses and welcome you'll find here before you,
And the oftener you come here the more I'll adore you!
Light is my heart since the day we were plighted,
Red is my cheek that they told me was blighted;
The green of the trees looks far greener than ever,
And the linnets are singing, "True lovers don't sever!"
Into my heart a silent look
O fairest of the rural maids!
Half-past three in the morning!
Along the frozen lake she comes
"Handsome and haughty!" a comment that came
A chieftain to the Highlands bound,
Wintry winds are calling,
It is the miller's daughter,
Oh, were my love a country lass,
(FROM THE SPANISH.)
Airs! that wander and murmur round,
'Tis that fair time of year,
O Mary, at thy window be—
Margaret's beauteous,—Grecian arts
Under a bough without berries or leaves,
Love knoweth every form of air,
The day goes down red, darkling,
Linger, O gentle Time,
I love Bessie and she loves me—
A letter, Lucy? for me to read?
Rainy and rough sets the day,—
I watched him through the lattice
Somebody's courting somebody,
She was a phantom of delight
Beautiful flowers,
She walks in beauty, like the night
Like a cluster of sunbeams her hair is,
Sleep on, and dream of Heaven awhile!
"Yes!" I answered you last night;
I fill this cup to one made up
Winifred, waking in the morning,
The dead in their ancient graves are still;
There is a garden in her face,
When stars are in the quiet skies,
The time I've lost in wooing
Kitty, sweet and seventeen,
O saw ye the lass wi' the bonny blue een?
Minor punctuation and printer errors repaired.