10 Best Famous Culling Poems

Here is a collection of the top 10 all-time best famous Culling poems. This is a select list of the best famous Culling poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Culling poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of culling poems.

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Written by Francesco Petrarch | Create an image from this poem

Canzone X

[Pg 76]

CANZONE X.

Poichè per mio destino.

IN PRAISE OF LAURA'S EYES: IN THEM HE FINDS EVERY GOOD, AND HE CAN NEVER CEASE TO PRAISE THEM.

Since then by destinyI am compell'd to sing the strong desire,Which here condemns me ceaselessly to sigh,May Love, whose quenchless fireExcites me, be my guide and point the way,And in the sweet task modulate my lay:But gently be it, lest th' o'erpowering themeInflame and sting me, lest my fond heart mayDissolve in too much softness, which I deem,From its sad state, may be:For in me—hence my terror and distress!Not now as erst I seeJudgment to keep my mind's great passion less:Nay, rather from mine own thoughts melt I so,As melts before the summer sun the snow.
At first I fondly thoughtCommuning with mine ardent flame to winSome brief repose, some time of truce within:This was the hope which broughtMe courage what I suffer'd to explain,Now, now it leaves me martyr to my pain:But still, continuing mine amorous song,Must I the lofty enterprise maintain;So powerful is the wish that in me glows,That Reason, which so longRestrain'd it, now no longer can oppose.Then teach me, Love, to singIn such frank guise, that ever if the earOf my sweet foe should chance the notes to hear,Pity, I ask no more, may in her spring.
If, as in other times,When kindled to true virtue was mankind,The genius, energy of man could findEntrance in divers climes,Mountains and seas o'erpassing, seeking thereHonour, and culling oft its garland fair,[Pg 77]Mine were such wish, not mine such need would be.From shore to shore my weary course to trace,Since God, and Love, and Nature deign for meEach virtue and each graceIn those dear eyes where I rejoice to place.In life to them must ITurn as to founts whence peace and safety swell:And e'en were death, which else I fear not, nigh,Their sight alone would teach me to be well.
As, vex'd by the fierce wind,The weary sailor lifts at night his gazeTo the twin lights which still our pole displays,So, in the storms unkindOf Love which I sustain, in those bright eyesMy guiding light and only solace lies:But e'en in this far more is due to theft,Which, taught by Love, from time to time, I makeOf secret glances than their gracious gift:Yet that, though rare and slight,Makes me from them perpetual model take;Since first they blest my sightNothing of good without them have I tried,Placing them over me to guard and guide,Because mine own worth held itself but light.
Never the full effectCan I imagine, and describe it lessWhich o'er my heart those soft eyes still possess!As worthless I rejectAnd mean all other joys that life confers,E'en as all other beauties yield to hers.A tranquil peace, alloy'd by no distress,Such as in heaven eternally abides,Moves from their lovely and bewitching smile.So could I gaze, the whileLove, at his sweet will, governs them and guides,—E'en though the sun were nigh,Resting above us on his onward wheel—On her, intensely with undazzled eye,Nor of myself nor others think or feel.
Ah! that I should desireThings that can never in this world be won,[Pg 78]Living on wishes hopeless to acquire.Yet, were the knot undone,Wherewith my weak tongue Love is wont to bind,Checking its speech, when her sweet face puts onAll its great charms, then would I courage find,Words on that point so apt and new to use,As should make weep whoe'er might hear the tale.But the old wounds I bear,Stamp'd on my tortured heart, such power refuse;Then grow I weak and pale,And my blood hides itself I know not where;Nor as I was remain I: hence I knowLove dooms my death and this the fatal blow.
Farewell, my song! already do I seeHeavily in my hand the tired pen moveFrom its long dear discourse with her I love;Not so my thoughts from communing with me.
Macgregor.

Written by James Henry Leigh Hunt | Create an image from this poem

Sudden Fine Weather

 Reader! what soul that laoves a verse can see 
The spring return, nor glow like you and me? 
Hear the quick birds, and see the landscape fill, 
Nor long to utter his melodious will? 

This more than ever leaps into the veins, 
When spring has been delay'd by winds and rains, 
And coming with a burst, comes like a show, 
Blue all above, and basking green below, 
And all the people culling the sweet prime: 
Then issues forth the bee to clutch the thyme, 
And the bee poet rushes into rhyme. 

For lo! no sooner has the cold withdrawn, 
Than the bright elm is tufted on the lawn; 
The merry sap has run up in the bowers, 
And bursts the windows of the buds in flowers; 
With song the bosoms of the birds run o'er, 
The cuckoo calls, the swallow's at the door, 
And apple-tree at noon with bees alive 
Burn with the golden chorus of the hive. 
Now all these sweets, these sounds, this vernal blaze,
Is but one joy, express'd a thousand ways: 
And honey from the flowers and song from birds 
Are from the poet's pen his oeverflowing words. 

Ah friends! methinks it were a pleasant sphere, 
If, like the trees, we blossom'd every year; 
If locks grew thick again, and rosy dyes 
Return'd in cheeks, and raciness in eyes, 
And all around us, vital to the tips, 
The human orchard laugh'd with cherry lips! 
Lord! what a burst of merriment and play, 
Fair dames, were that! and what a first of May! 
So natural is the wish, that bards gone by 
Have left it, all, in some immortal sigh! 

And yet the winter months were not so well: 
Who would like changing, as the seasons fell? 
Fade every year, and stare, midst ghastly friends, 
With falling hairs, and stuck-out fingers' ends? 
Besides, this tale of youth that comes again 
Is no more true of apple-trees than men. 
The Swedish sage, the Newton of the flow'rs, 
Who first found out those worlds of paramours, 
Tells us, that every blossom that we see 
Boasts in its walls a separate family; 
So that a tree is but a sort of stand 
That holds those afilial fairies in its hand; 
Just as Swift's giant might have held a bevy 
Of Lilliputian ladies, or a levee. 
It is not her that blooms: it is his race, 
Who honour his old arms, and hide his rugged face. 

Ye wits and bards, then, pray discern your duty, 
And learn the lastingness of human beauty. 
Your finest fruit to some two months may reach: 
I've known a cheek at forth like a peach. 

But see! the weather calls me. Here's a bee 
Comes bounding in my room imperiously, 
And talking to himself, hastily burns 
About mine ear, and so in heat returns. 
O little brethren of the fervid soul, 
Kissers of flowers, lords of the golden bowl, 
I follow to your fields and tusted brooks: 
Winter's the time to which the poet looks 
For hiving his sweet thoughts, and making honied books.
Written by Victor Hugo | Create an image from this poem

Ii

 To prayer, my child! and O, be thy first prayer 
 For her who, many nights, with anxious care, 
 Rocked thy first cradle; who took thy infant soul 
 From heaven and gave it to the world; then rife 
 With love, still drank herself the gall of life, 
 And left for thy young lips the honeyed bowl. 
 
 And then—I need it more—then pray for me! 
 For she is gentle, artless, true like thee;— 
 She has a guileless heart, brow placid still; 
 Pity she has for all, envy for none; 
 Gentle and wise, she patiently lives on; 
 And she endures, nor knows who does the ill. 
 
 In culling flowers, her novice hand has ne'er 
 Touched e'en the outer rind of vice; no snare 
 With smiling show has lured her steps aside: 
 On her the past has left no staining mark; 
 Nor knows she aught of those bad thoughts which, dark 
 Like shade on waters, o'er the spirit glide. 
 
 She knows not—nor mayest thou—the miseries 
 In which our spirits mingle: vanities, 
 Remorse, soul-gnawing cares, Pleasure's false show: 
 Passions which float upon the heart like foam, 
 Bitter remembrances which o'er us come, 
 And Shame's red spot spread sudden o'er the brow. 
 
 I know life better! when thou'rt older grown 
 I'll tell thee—it is needful to be known— 
 Of the pursuit of wealth—art, power; the cost. 
 That it is folly, nothingness: that shame 
 For glory is oft thrown us in the game 
 Of Fortune; chances where the soul is lost. 
 
 The soul will change. Although of everything 
 The cause and end be clear, yet wildering 
 We roam through life (of vice and error full). 
 We wander as we go; we feel the load 
 Of doubt; and to the briars upon the road 
 Man leaves his virtue, as the sheep its wool. 
 
 Then go, go pray for me! And as the prayer 
 Gushes in words, be this the form they bear:— 
 "Lord, Lord, our Father! God, my prayer attend; 
 Pardon! Thou art good! Pardon—Thou art great!" 
 Let them go freely forth, fear not their fate! 
 Where thy soul sends them, thitherward they tend. 
 
 There's nothing here below which does not find 
 Its tendency. O'er plains the rivers wind, 
 And reach the sea; the bee, by instinct driven, 
 Finds out the honeyed flowers; the eagle flies 
 To seek the sun; the vulture where death lies; 
 The swallow to the spring; the prayer to Heaven! 
 
 And when thy voice is raised to God for me, 
 I'm like the slave whom in the vale we see 
 Seated to rest, his heavy load laid by; 
 I feel refreshed—the load of faults and woe 
 Which, groaning, I drag with me as I go, 
 Thy wingèd prayer bears off rejoicingly! 
 
 Pray for thy father! that his dreams be bright 
 With visitings of angel forms of light, 
 And his soul burn as incense flaming wide, 
 Let thy pure breath all his dark sins efface, 
 So that his heart be like that holy place, 
 An altar pavement each eve purified! 
 
 C., Tait's Magazine 


 




Written by John Keats | Create an image from this poem

Written On The Day That Mr Leigh Hunt Left Prison

 What though, for showing truth to flattered state,
Kind Hunt was shut in prison, yet has he,
In his immortal spirit, been as free
As the sky-searching lark, and as elate.
Minion of grandeur! think you he did wait?
Think you he nought but prison-walls did see,
Till, so unwilling, thou unturnedst the key?
Ah, no! far happier, nobler was his fate!
In Spenser's halls he strayed, and bowers fair,
Culling enchanted flowers; and he flew
With daring Milton through the fields of air:
To regions of his own his genius true
Took happy flights. Who shall his fame impair
When thou art dead, and all thy wretched crew?
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