tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-66852802009-06-23T06:05:19.373-07:00Cranky Professor Poetry CornerOld poemsDudenoreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6685280.post-68103367260136058612009-06-23T06:01:00.000-07:002009-06-23T06:02:06.261-07:00ALONE POEMAlone in my chamber, forsaken, unsought,<br /> My spirit's enveloped in shadows of night,<br />Is there no one to give me a smile or a thought?<br /> Is there none to restore to me faded delight?<br /><br />The zephyrs disport with a light-bosomed song,<br /> And the joy-laden songsters flit over the lea--<br />Yet the hours of the spring as they hurry along<br /> Bring nothing but sadness and sighing to me!<br /><br />There were friends--but their love is departed and dead,<br /> And alone must the tear-drop disconsolate start,<br />All the beauty of Life, all its sweetness is fled,<br /> Oh, who shall unburden this weight at my heart!<br /><br />Lennox Amott<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6685280-6810336726013605861?l=crankyprofessor.blogspot.com'/></div>Dudenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6685280.post-18938795161935645502009-06-23T06:00:00.000-07:002009-06-23T06:01:08.795-07:00THE MUSICIAN'S GRAVE POEMThou'rt gone like the meteor that blazed in the sky,<br /> And the spot thou hast smiled upon knows thee no more,<br />Is there no one that heaves o'er thy ashes a sigh?<br /> Is there none to regret? Is there none to deplore?<br /><br />Thy note--it is silent, thy song--it is hushed,<br /> No more shall thy music entrance or enthral,<br />The music that like the blue rivulet gushed,<br /> A finger of terror has silenced it all.<br /><br />When far through the cloisters the anthem was stealing,<br /> Thy heart was ablaze with a heavenly ray--<br />When thy organ was softly and tenderly pealing,<br /> Or the bass of thy bourdon was rolling away.<br /><br />Thy vespers were sweet and thy exquisite numbers<br /> Swelled gently and hung on the tremulous air,<br />And, light as the prayer before infancy's slumbers,<br /> Ascended on high--thou hast followed them there.<br /><br />And like the dim eve was thy spirit's repose,<br /> When loftily o'er thee, while musing alone,<br />Within the cathedral thine echoes arose<br /> And melted to feeling the passionless stone.<br /><br />While sculptured recess and immortalized shrine<br /> And far-stretching arches were bathed in the flood<br />Of the lingering sunset, whose beauties were thine,<br /> And the motionless figures were blazoned in blood.<br /><br />But an undertone rose thro' the chords like a wail,<br /> 'Twas thy elegy mourning thee deep in the sound,<br />Soon, soon did that something of sadness prevail,<br /> And the minors commingled and fell to the ground.<br /><br />Rest peacefully, Minstrel, He took thee who gave,<br /> That passion is still that once swelled in thy lay,<br />Thy notes are departed, thy fame is thy grave,<br /> For the angels descended and bore thee away.<br /><br /> [Footnote 1: The late John Amott, for over thirty years<br /> Organist of Gloucester Cathedral, who fell dead immediately<br /> after the rendering of the anthem "Oh that I had the wings of<br /> a dove, for then would I flee away and be at rest."]<br /><br />Lennox Amott<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6685280-1893879516193564550?l=crankyprofessor.blogspot.com'/></div>Dudenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6685280.post-55779898764285292042009-06-23T05:59:00.000-07:002009-06-23T06:00:12.385-07:00THE SUMMER SHOWER POEMThe eve is still and silent and above the tinted plain<br />The passing clouds are driving gentle showers of summer rain,<br />And the scent of hay-strewn meadows and the fresh-besprinkled ground<br />Is mingling with the perfume of the flowers that bloom around.<br /><br />Off I wander and I stroke the gleeful spaniel at my side,<br />And, delighted with each other, do we ramble far and wide,<br />While a ditty is the tribute to the joy that gives it birth,<br />And the leaves, refreshed, are pouring their cool nectar to the earth.<br /><br />Oh let me gaze again upon the moisture-laden sky,<br />Let me see the rolling masses, let me hear the plover's cry,<br />While enveloping the distant mountain-summits like a shroud,<br />Like a head bent down and hoary, hangs a heavy wreath of cloud.<br /><br />Let me gaze upon the sunshine as it breaks upon the mist,<br />As it bathes the stony mountains that the clouds have lately kissed,<br />As it tips the dripping leaflet with a scintillating gem,<br />Like the far-resplendent treasure in a monarch's diadem.<br /><br />Let me tread the shining pasture-lands, the greenest of the green,<br />Let me quaff the luscious perfume of the smiling, glistering scene,<br />While beautified and golden stands the ripe and waving grain,<br />And all Nature sings for gladness now that sunshine follows rain.<br /><br />Lennox Amott<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6685280-5577989876428529204?l=crankyprofessor.blogspot.com'/></div>Dudenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6685280.post-14519205642866948112009-06-23T05:58:00.000-07:002009-06-23T05:59:34.804-07:00WHEN THE TWILIGHT SHADOWS DEEPEN POEMWhen the twilight shadows deepen and the far-off lands are dim,<br />And the vesper dirge is stealing like the chant of cherubim,<br />There's a prayer within my bosom that's responsive to the sound,<br />There's a thought that springs within me--but 'tis sad and silence-bound.<br /><br />There's a sorrow in those shadows as they lengthen on the lawn,<br />For the joy of life has vanished and its sweetness--all is gone,<br />And the purple mists of even as they hover o'er the glade<br />Seem to hush in voiceless gloom the deep recesses of the shade.<br /><br />Oh thou beyond those heathery hills, beyond those woodlands blue,<br />Which, as they meet the eastern sky, receive its azure hue,<br />Ah, must I lonely linger here, where nought but griefs await,<br />Where life is but one long, long sigh, and all disconsolate?<br /><br />I'm weeping, yes I'm weeping, with the sun of youth gone down,<br />With the blossoms of the summer-time all withering and brown,<br />Thou can'st not know that rending pain, those sobs thou can'st not hear,<br />Thou can'st not feel those burning throbs whence wells the sparkling tear.<br /><br />Oh say thou wilt not turn away, oh say we must not part,<br />Thou would'st not spurn this aching breast, nor crush this breaking heart,<br />Without thee, what is Life?--a name--in which no life can be,<br />Oh give me back thy smile, thy tear--'tis all the world to me.<br /><br />Lennox Amott<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6685280-1451920564286694811?l=crankyprofessor.blogspot.com'/></div>Dudenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6685280.post-42593832957641127332009-06-23T05:57:00.000-07:002009-06-23T05:58:18.641-07:00THE SHADOW OF A LIFE POEMThere's a face that beclouds like a shadow my pathway at morn and eve,<br />There's a form that glides before me which my eyes can never leave,<br />When I pore above the hearth and heavy thoughts my bosom fill,<br />I start like a sleeper from dreaming, for it's standing beside me still.<br /><br />When I stroll in the gloom of the evening is that figure before me cast<br />With its strange and measured footfall, like the shadow of something past,<br />All through my summer wandering does it darken the light of the sun,<br />And it sits like a phantom to mock me when the work of the day is done.<br /><br />It is ever present with me like an overhanging blight,<br />Thro' the heaviness of morning and the wakefulness of night,<br />When I bend within my chamber in the attitude of prayer--<br />With a look of wrapt devotion is it kneeling--kneeling there.<br /><br />There's a strangeness in its features, there's a horror in its eye,<br />There's a sadness in its visage like the tremour of a sigh,<br />And as silently as ever it precedes me thro' the day<br />While I long for the hush of midnight ere its hours have passed away.<br /><br />Oh when shall that figure leave me, are its terrors to haunt me still<br />Like the ever deepening twilight in the valley o'er the hill?<br />And its wild and ill forebodings--must they--can they never cease?<br />When its shadow rests above me, is there none to whisper peace?<br /><br />Is there no one that can soothe me? Is there no one that can save?<br />No, that figure still must haunt me and shall haunt me to my grave,<br />From my cradle to my coffin is that vision doomed to be<br />A scare of Hell and darkness--a thing of terror unto me!<br /><br />Lennox Amott<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6685280-4259383295764112733?l=crankyprofessor.blogspot.com'/></div>Dudenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6685280.post-50027238069332968212009-06-23T05:55:00.000-07:002009-06-23T05:58:35.701-07:00ON PLUCKING A HEDGEROW ROSE POEMI saw on a hedge that was flourishing by<br /> A rose that was stirred by the breath of the morn,<br />So smiling and fragrant it looked there, that I<br /> Was tempted to seize it, forgetting the thorn.<br /><br />I eagerly plucked it but found to my pain<br /> 'Twas scentless and in it an insect was curled,<br />So I flung it away to the hedgerow again<br /> And I thought of the joys of this troublesome world.<br /><br />Lennox Amott<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6685280-5002723806933296821?l=crankyprofessor.blogspot.com'/></div>Dudenoreply@blogger.com