The Willow Tree (English Version)
        
        O take me in your arms, love
        For keen doth the wind blow
        O take me in your arms, love
        For bitter is my deep woe.
        
        She hears me not, she heeds me not
        Nor will she listen to me
        While here I lie alone
        To die beneath the willow tree.
        
        My love hath wealth and beauty
        Rich suitors attend her door
        My love hath wealth and beauty
        She slights me because I am poor.
        
        The ribbon fair that bound her hair
        Is all that is left to me
        While here I lie alone
        To die beneath the willow tree.
        
        I once had gold and silver
        I thought them without end
        I once had gold and silver
        I thought I had a true friend.
        
        My wealth is lost, my friend is false
        My love hath he stolen from me
        While here I lie alone
        To die beneath the willow tree.
       
      [ Listen to the Willow Tree ]        
      
      
       
      Ozymandius
        by Percy Bysshe Shelley
        First Published in 1817
        
          I met a traveler from an antique land, 
          Who said--"Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
          Stand in the desert . . . . Near them, on the sand,
          Half sunk a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
          And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
          Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
          Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
          The hand that mocked them, the heart that fed;
          And on the pedestal, these words appear:
          My name is Ozymandius, King of Kings,
          Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!
          Nothing beside remains. Round the decay 
          Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare
          The lone and level sands stretch far away."
       
      
       
         
        A Hymn: O God 
          of Earth and Altar
        
          O God of earth and altar,
          Bow down and hear our cry, 
          Our earthly rulers falter,
          Our people drift and die; 
          The walls of gold entomb us,
          The swords of scorn divide, 
          Take not thy thunder from us,
          But take away our pride. 
          From all that terror teaches,
          From lies of tongue and pen, 
          From all the easy speeches
          That comfort cruel men, 
          From sale and profanation
          Of honour and the sword, 
          From sleep and from damnation,
          Deliver us, good Lord. 
          Tie in a living tether
          The prince and priest and thrall, 
          Bind all our lives together,
          Smite us and save us all; 
          In ire and exultation
          Aflame with faith, and free, 
          Lift up a living nation,
          A single sword to thee. 
          
        - Gilbert 
          Keith Chesterton  
           
       
      
      
       
      
       
      Charge 
        of the Light Brigade 
        Tennyson, Alfred Tennyson, Baron, 1809-1892.
        
       Half 
        a league half a league
        Half a league onward
        All in the valley of Death
        Rode the six hundred:
        Forward the Light Brigade
        Charge for the guns' he said
        Into the valley of Death
        Rode the six hundred
      Forward 
        the Light Brigade!'
        Was there a man dismay'd?
        Not tho' the soldier knew
        Some one had blunder'd:
        Theirs not to make reply,
        Theirs not to reason why,
        Theirs but to do & die,
        Into the valley of Death
        Rode the six hundred.
      Cannon 
        to right of them,
        Cannon to left of them,
        Cannon in front of them
        Volley'd & thunder'd;
        Storm'd at with shot & shell,
        Boldly they rode & well,
        Into the jaws of Death,
        Into the mouth of Hell
        Rode the six hundred.
       Flash'd 
        all their sabres bare,
        Flash'd as they turn'd in air,
        Sabring the gunners there,
        Charging an army while
        All the world wonder'd:
        Plunged in the battery-smoke
        Right thro' the line they broke;
        Cossack & Russian
        Reel'd from the sabre-stroke,
        Shatter'd & sunder'd.
        Then they rode back, but not
        Not the six hundred.
       Cannon 
        to right of them,
        Cannon to left of them, 
        Cannon behind them
        Volley'd & thunder'd; 
        Storm'd at with shot & shell,
        While horse & hero fell,
        They that had fought so well
        Came thro' the jaws of Death
        Back from the mouth of Hell,
        All that was left of them
        Left of six hundred.
      When 
        can their glory fade?
        O the wild charge they made!
        All the world wonder'd.
        Honour the charge they made!
        Honour the Light Brigade,
        Noble six hundred!
      
        ATennyson 
        Apr.10/64.