Sunday, January 4, 2026

A Song to the New Year / Barry Cornwall


A Song to the New Year

Hark!
The Old Year is gone!
And the young New Year is coming!
Through minutes, and days, and unknown skies,
My soul on her forward journey flies;
Over the regions of rain and snow;
And beyond where the wild March-trumpets blow:
And I see the meadows, all cowslip-strewn;
And I dream of the dove in the greenwood lone;
And the wild bee humming:—
And all because the New Year is coming!

The Winter is cold, the Winter is grey,
But he hath not a sound on his tongue to-day:
The son of the stormy Autumn, he
Totters about on a palsied knee,
With a frozen heart and a feeble head:
Let us pierce a barrel and drink him dead!
The fresh New Year is almost here;
Let us warm him with mistletoe boughs, my dear!
Let us welcome hither with songs and wine,
Who holdeth such joys in his arms divine!
What is the Past,— to you, or me,
But a thing that was, and was to be?
And now it is gone to a world unknown;
Its deeds are done; its flight is flown!

Hark to The Past! In a bitter tone,
It crieth, "The good Old Year is flown," —
The sire of a thousand thoughtful hours,
Of a thousand songs, of a thousand flowers!
Ah! why, thou ungrateful child of rhyme,
Rail'st thou at the deeds of our father Time?
Hath he not fed thee, day by day,
With fancies that soothe thy soul alway?
Hath he not 'wakened, with pleasant pain,
The Muse that slept in thy teeming brain?
Hath he not, — ah dost thou forget
All the amount of the mighty debt?

Hush, hush! The little I owe to Time
I'll pay him, some day, with a moody rhyme,
Full of phantasmas, dark and drear,
As the shadows thrown down by the old Old Year,
Dim as the echoes that lately fell
From the deep Night's funereal bell,
Sounding hollow o'er hill and vale,
Like the close of a mournful tale!
In the mean time,— speak, trump and drum!
The Year is gone! the Year is come!
The fresh New Year, the bright New Year,
That telleth of hope and joy, my dear!
Let us model our spirit to chance and change,
Let us lesson our spirit to hope, and range
Through pleasures to come,— through years unknown;
But never forget the time that's flown! 

~~
Barry Cornwall (1787-1874)
from 
Through the Year with the Poets: January, 1886.

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]


George Henry Broughton (1833-1905) Party for New Year's Day in New Amsterdam, 1870.

Saturday, January 3, 2026

Mild is the Parting Year / Walter Savage Landor


Chris Downer, New Year's Eve stroll, 2005. CC BY 2.0, Wikimedia Commons.

from Ianthe

XXXI

Mild is the parting year, and sweet
    The odour of the falling spray;
Life passes on more rudely fleet,
    And balmless is its closing day.

I wait its close, I court its gloom,
    But mourn that never must there fall
Or on my breast or on my tomb
    The tear that would have soothed it all.

~~
Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864)
from
Gebir, Count Julian, and other poems, 1831

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]


"Mild is the Parting Yerr" read for Audiobook Passion.

Friday, January 2, 2026

January's featured poem


The Penny Blog's featured poem poem for January 2026:

The Winter Lakes, by William Wilfred Campbell

[...]
Under the sun and the moon, under the dusk and the day;
Under the glimmer of stars and the purple of sunsets dying,
Wan and waste and white, stretch the great lakes away.
[...]

(read by Jolene Sentes)


Thursday, January 1, 2026

Penny's Top 20 / December 2025

  

Penny's Top 20


The most-visited poems on  The Penny Blog in December 2025:

  1.  December, John Clare
  2.  Christmas, W.H. Davies
  3.  Christmas at Sea, Robert Louis Stevenson
  4.  Winterworld Descending, Will Dockery
  5.  A Winter Elegy, Charles Lotin Hildreth
  6.  The Three Kings, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  7.  Reflections in Netley Abbey, Edward Hamley
  8.  Prey, George J. Dance
  9.  December Finds Himself Again a Child, Nicholas Gordon
10.  Across a Wall, JD Shirk

11.  Skating, William Wordsworth
12.  Large Red Man Reading, Wallace Stevens
13.  The Poor Boy's Christmas, Ellis Parker Butler
14.  December, Mary E. Blake
15.  Vowels, Arthur Rimbaud
16.  The Rich Boy's Christmas, Ellis Parker Butler
17.  The Clock-Tower Bell, Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
18.  Autumn, John Clare
19.  Ode to Sport, Pierre de Coubertin
20. December, Folgore da San Geminiano


Source: Blogger, "Stats" 

Penny's Top 100 of 2025

  

Penny's Top 100
The most-visited poems on  The Penny Blog in 2025:

  1.  Penny's Blog, George J. Dance 
  2.  Large Red Man Reading, Wallace Stevens
  3.  Skating, William Wordsworth
  4.  Vowels, Arthur Rimbaud
  5.  The Dwarf, Wallace Stevens 

  6.  Ode to Sport, Pierre de Coubertin 
  7.  Christmas Sonnet, E.A. Woodward 
  8.  Esthetique du Mal, Wallace Stevens
  9.  December, John Clare 
10.  The Waste Land, T.S. Eliot

11.  The Red Wheelbarrow, William Carlos Williams 
12.  Spring Longings, Francis W. Bourdillon
13.  Winterworld Descending, Will Dockery
15.  Chaos in Motion and Not in Motion, Wallace Stevens

16.  News, AE Reiff
17.  Spring Again, George J. Dance
18.  Away, George J. Dance
20.  A Song to Mithras, Rudyard Kipling

21.  January, George J. Dance
22.  Ganesha Girl on Rankin, Will Dockery
23.  Penny's Blog 2.0, George J. Dance
24.  On Mulberry Drive, Will Dockery
25.  Once Like a Light, AE Reiff

26.  Prey, George J. Dance
27.  April on the Battlefields, Leonora Speyer
28.  An April Shower, George J. Dance
29.  Mind on a Wander, JD Shirk
30.  Wander-Thirst, Gerald Gould

32.  Fern Hill, Dylan Thomas
33.  Jonah, AE Reiff
34.  Tired of Waiting, Will Dockery
35.  Amarant, AE Reiff

36.  'Tis the World's Winter, Alfred Tennyson
38.  Morning of My Life, Will Dockery
39.  Waiting for Winter, JD Shirk
40.  The Lodger, Francis Sherman

41.  The Branch, AE Reiff
42.  Summer 1969, Michael G. Munoz
43.  Song in March, William Gilmore Simms
44.  March, Folgore da San Geminiano
45.  June, Folgore da San Geminiano

46.  Song on May Morning, John Milton
47.  An Easter Carol, Christina Rossetti
48.  Daddy, Sylvia Plath
49.  Spring: An ode, Jane West
50.  The Plant, AE Reiff

51.  Christmas, W.H. Davies
52.  A Summer Invocation, Walt Whitman
53.  Heaven's Man, AE Reiff
54.  April, Folgore da San Geminiano
55.  March is the Month of Expectation, Emily Dickinson

56.  A Brief Winter Sunset, JD Shirk
58.  A Disappointment, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt
59.  Song: To Celia, Ben Jonson
60.  Song, Trumbull Stickney

61.  October, Elinor Wylie
62.  Sunlight, AE Reiff
63.  A June Day, John Todhunter
64.  The Lonely Hunter, Fiona MacLeod
65.  Mid-August, Duncan Campbell Scott

66.  Philomel, Richard Barnfield
67.  Barley Feed, AE Reiff
68.  Coats, JD Shirk
69.  The Courage That My Mother Had, Edna St. Vincent Millay
70.  The Town Rabbit in the Country, Camilla Doyle

71.  Autumn, John Clare
72.  Suspending Winter Willingly in Disbelief, Cathleen Harvea Guthrie
73.  Memory of My Father, Patrick Kavanagh
74.  The Landscape, William Shenstone
75.  September, Michael Field 

76.  Even in the bluest noonday of July, Robert Louis Stevenson
77.  For Once, Then, Something, Robert Frost
78.  Spring Sonnet, E.A. Woodward
80.  June Days, Charles Lotin Hildreth

81.  May, Folgore da San Geminiano
82.  How happy I was if I could forget, Emily Dickinson
83.  A November Grave, James B. Kenyon
84.  As August Comes, Clinton Scollard
85.  Youth and Nature, Philip Marston

86.  Before the Birth of Spring, Charles Leonard Moore
87.  Christmas at Sea, Robert Louis Stevenson
88.  From Piccadilly in August, John Freeman
89.  Midnight Cry, R.K. Singh
90.  Laurentian Lure, Arthur S. Bourinot

91.  The Entering May, Ralph Waldo Emerson
92.  Metric Figure, William Carlos Williams
93.  Waiting for the May, Denis MacCarthy
94.  Winter Sunset, William Carlos Williams
95.  All Day It Has Rained, Alun Lewis

96.  October, Folgore da San Geminiano
97.  A Winter Elegy, Charles Lotin Hildreth
98.  Morning in August, James Herbert Morse
99.  The Three Kings, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
100 Reflections in Netley Abbey, Edward Hamley


Source: Blogger, "Stats"

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

The Clock-Tower Bell / Rose Hawthorne Lathrop



Patrick Roque, Manila City Hall,
midnight (detail). CC BY-SA 4.0,

The Clock-Tower Bell

Say not, sad bell, another hour hath come,
Bare for the record of a world of crime;
Toll, rather, friend, the end of hideous Time,
Wherein we bloom, live, die, yet have no home!

Bell, laurels would we o’er thy pulsing twine,
And sing thee songs of triumph with glad tears,
If to the warring of our haggard years
Thy clang should herald peace along the line!

~~
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop (1861-1926)
from Along the Shore, 1888
(courtesy Dead Poets Daily)

[Poem is in the publid domain in Canada, the United States, and the European Union]

Rose Hawthorne Lathrop biography

Sunday, December 28, 2025

December / Folgore da San Geminiano


from Of the Months

December

Last, for December, houses on the plain,
    Ground-floors to live in, logs heaped mountain-high,
    And carpets stretched, and newest games to try,
And torches lit, and gifts from man to man
(Your host, a drunkard and a Catalan);
    And whole dead pigs, and cunning cooks to ply
    Each throat with tit-bits that shall satisfy;
And wine-butts of Saint Galganus' brave span.
And be your coats well-lined and tightly bound,
    And wrap yourselves in cloaks of strength and weight,
        With gallant hoods to put your faces through.
And make your game of abject vagabond
    Abandoned miserable reprobate
    Misers; don't let them have a chance with you.

~~
Folgore da San Geminiano (?1270-1332?)
translated by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882)
from The Early Italian Poets, 1861

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

[January]

Folgore da San Geminiano biography
Dante Gabriel Rossetti biography

Joseph Nash, Christmas revels at Haddon Hall, from 
Mansions of England in the Olden Time, 1839. Wikimedia Commons.