Arthur Hugh Clough
Arthur Hugh Clough (1819–1861) was an English poet whose work explores Victorian doubt and moral uncertainty. His poems "Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth" and "The L…
"Cease, empty Faith, the Spectrum saith, I was, and lo, have been; I, God, am nought: a shade of thought, Which, but by darkness see"
"These are the words of Jacobs wives, the words Which Leah spake and Rachel to his ears, When, in the shade at eventide, he sat By"
"To spend uncounted years of pain, Again, again, and yet again, In working out in heart and brain The problem of our being here;"
"On grass, on gravel, in the sun, Or now beneath the shade, They went, in pleasant Kensington, A prentice and a maid. That Sun"
"It is not sweet content, be sure, That moves the nobler Muse to song, Yet when could truth come whole and pure From hearts that inl"
"Farewell, farewell! Her vans the vessel tries, His iron might the potent engine plies: Haste, winged words, and ere 'tis useless, tell, Farewell, fare"
"A Long-Vacation Pastoral IX Arva, beata Petamus arva! So on the morrows morrow, with Term-time dread returning, Philip returned to"
"A Long-Vacation Pastoral IV Ut vidi, ut perii, ut me malus abstulit error So in the golden weather they waited. But Philip returned not"
"A Long-Vacation Pastoral VIII Jam veniet virgo, jam dicetur hymenus. But a revulsion again came over the spirit of Elspie, When s"
"I To think that men of former days In naked truth deserved the praise Which, fain to have in flesh and blood An image of imagined"
"I dreamed a dream: I dreamt that I espied, Upon a stone that was not rolled aside, A Shadow sit upon a grave, a Shade, As thin, as unsubstantial, as o"
"If, when in cheerless wanderings, dull and cold, A sense of human kindliness hath found us, We seem to have around us An atmosphere"
"Whence comest thou? shady lane, and why and how? Thou, where with idle heart, ten years ago, I wandered, and with childhoods paces slow"
"Edward and Jane a married couple were, And fonder she of him or he of her Was hard to say; their wedlock had begun When in one year"
"SCENE I. The Piazza at Venice, 9 p.m. Dipsychus and the Spirit. Di. The scene is different, and the place, the air Tastes of the"
"Old things need not be therefore true, O brother men, nor yet the new; Ah! still awhile the old thought retain, And yet consider"
"Thou shalt have one God only; -who Would be at the expense of two? No graven images may be Worshipped, except the currency: Sw"
"Say not, the struggle nought availeth, The labour and the wounds are vain, The enemy faints not, nor faileth, And as things have be"
"Across the sea, along the shore, In numbers more and ever more, From lonely hut and busy town, The valley through, the mountain down, What was it ye w"
"Some future day when what is now is not, When all old faults and follies are forgot, And thoughts of difference passed like dreams away,"
"What we, when face to face we see The Father of our souls, shall be, John tells us, doth not yet appear; Ah! did he tell what we are here! A mind for"
""There is no God," the wicked saith, "And truly it's a blessing, For what He might have done with us It's better only guessing." "There is no God," a"
"But that from slow dissolving pomps of dawn No verity of slowly strengthening light Early or late hath issued; that the day Scarce-"
"As ships, becalmed at eve, that lay With canvas drooping, side by side, Two towers of sail at dawn of day Are scarce long leagues a"
"A Long-Vacation Pastoral III Namque canebat uti So in the golden morning they parted and went to the westward. And in the cott"
"Thou shalt have one God only; who Would be at the expense of two? No graven images may be Worshipped, except the currency: Swe"
"Where lies the land to which the ship would go? Far, far ahead, is all her seamen know. And where the land she travels from? Away,"
"Is it true, ye gods, who treat us As the gambling fool is treated; O ye, who ever cheat us, And let us feel were cheated! Is"
"Lips, lips, open! Up comes a little bird that lives inside Up comes a little bird, and peeps, and out he flies. All the day he sit"
"I dreamed a dream: I dreamt that I espied, Upon a stone that was not rolled aside, A Shadow sit upon a grave, a Shade, As thin, as"
"Over a mountain slope with lentisk, and with abounding Arbutus, and the red oak overtufted, 'mid a noontide Now glowing fervidly, the Leto-born, the d"
"If that we thus are guilty doth appear, Ah, guilty tho we are, grave judges, hear! Ah, yes; if ever you in your sweet youth Midst"
"Scene I. The interior Arcade of the Doges Palace. Sp. Thunder and rain! O dear, O dear! But see, a noble shelter here, This"
"Come back, come back, behold with straining mast And swelling sail, behold her steaming fast; With one new sun to see her voyage oer,"
"O stream descending to the sea, Thy mossy banks between, The flowrets blow, the grasses grow, The leafy trees are green. In"
"O ship, ship, ship, That travellest over the sea, What are the tidings, I pray thee, Thou bearest hither to me? Are they tidi"
"O, richly soiled and richly sunned, Exuberant, fervid, and fecund! Is this the fixed condition On which may Northern pilgrim come,"
"So in the sinful streets, abstracted and alone, I with my secret self held communing of mine own. So in the southern city spake the tong"
"O only Source of all our light and life, Whom as our truth, our strength, we see and feel, But whom the hours of mortal moral strife"
"In controversial foul impureness The peace that is thy light to thee Quench not: in faith and inner sureness Possess thy soul and l"
"As, at a railway junction, men Who came together, taking then One the train up, one down, again Meet never! Ah, much more as they"
"SCENE I. Adam and Eve. Adam. Since that last evening we have fallen indeed! Yes, we have fallen, my Eve! O yes! One, two, and three, and four; the App"
"I That children in their loveliness should die Before the dawning beauty, which we know Cannot remain, has yet begun to go; That"
"Or shall I say, Vain word, false thought, Since prudence hath her martyrs too, And Wisdom dictates not to do, Till doing shall be n"
"O tell me, friends, while yet we part, And heart can yet be heard of heart, O tell me then, for what is it Our early plan of life w"
"I hope it is in good plain verse, said my uncle, none of your hurry-scurry anapsts, as you call them, in lines which sober people read for pla"
"Hope evermore and believe, O man, for een as thy thought So are the things that thou seest; een as thy hope and belief. Cowardly art"
"Across the sea, along the shore, In numbers more and ever more, From lonely hut and busy town, The valley through, the mountain dow"
"Blessed are those who have not seen, And who have yet believed The witness, here that has not been, From heaven they have received."
"So I went wrong, Grievously wrong, but folly crushed itself, And vanity oertoppling fell, and time And healthy discipline and some"
"When panting sighs the bosom fill, And hands by chance united thrill At once with one delicious pain The pulses and the nerves of t"
"Lo, here is God, and there is God! Believe it not, O Man; In such vain sort to this and that The ancient heathen ran: Though o"
"Christian. A highland inn among the western hills, A single parlour, single bed that fills With fisher or with tourist, as may be;"
"Upon the water, in the boat, I sit and sketch as down I float: The stream is wide, the view is fair, I sketch it looking backward t"
"A Long-Vacation Pastoral V Putavi Stultus ego huic nostr similem. So in the cottage with Adam the pupils five together Duly"
"NAPOLEON. Is it this, then, O world-warrior, That, exulting, through the folds Of the dark and cloudy barrier Thine enfranchi"
"Come back again, my olden heart! Ah, fickle spirit and untrue, I bade the only guide depart Whose faithfulness I surely knew: I said, my heart is all"
"Were you with me, or I with you, Theres nought, methinks, I might not do; Could venture here, and venture there, And never fear, n"
"Light words they were, and lightly, falsely said: She heard them, and she started, and she rose, As in the act to speak; the sudden thou"
"O happy they whose hearts receive The implanted word with faith; believe Because their fathers did before, Because they learnt, and"