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Memory
In silence and in darkness memory wakesHer million sheathèd buds, and breaksThat day-long winter when the light and noiseAnd hard bleak breath of the outward-looking willMade barren her tender soil, when every voiceOf her million airy birds was muffled or still.One bud-sheath breaks:One sudden voice awakes.What change grew in our hearts, seeing one nightThat moth-winged ship drifting across the bay, Her broad sail dimly whiteOn cloudy waters and hills as vague as they?Some new thing touched our spirits with distant delight,Half-seen, half-noticed, as we loitered down,Talking in whispers, to the little town, Down from the narrow hill Talking in whispers, for the air so stillImposed its stillness on our lips, and made
Edward Shanks
Days And Dreams.
He dreamed of hills so deep with woodsStorm-barriers on the summer skyAre not more dark, where plunged loud floodsDown rocks of sullen dye.Flat ways were his where sparsely grewGnarled, iron-colored oaks, with rifts,Between dead boughs, of Eden-blue:Ways where the speedwell liftsIts shy appeal, and spreading farThe gold, the fallen gold of dawnStaining each blossom's balanced starHollows of cowslips wan.Where 'round the feet the lady-smockAnd pearl-pale lady-slipper creep;White butterflies upon them rockOr seal-brown suck and sleep.At eve the west shoots crooked fireAthwart a half-moon leaning low;While one white, arrowy star throbs higherIn curdled honey-glow.Was it some elfin euphrasy
Madison Julius Cawein
A Dream Shape
With moon-white hearts that held a gleamI gathered wild-flowers in a dream,And shaped a woman, whose sweet bloodWas odour of the wildwood bud.From dew, the starlight arrowed through,I wrought a woman's eyes of blue;The lids that on her eyeballs lay,Were rose-pale petals of the May.Out of a rosebud's veins I drewThe flagrant crimson beating throughThe languid lips of her, whose kissWas as a poppy's drowsiness.Out of the moonlight and the airI wrought the glory of her hair,That o'er her eyes' blue heaven layLike some gold cloud o'er dawn of day.I took the music of the breezeAnd water, whispering in the trees,And shaped the soul that breathed belowA woman's blossom breasts of snow.A shadow's sh...
Dreams Of The Sea
I know not why I yearn for thee again,To sail once more upon thy fickle flood;I'll hear thy waves wash under my death-bed,Thy salt is lodged forever in my blood.Yet I have seen thee lash the vessel's sidesIn fury, with thy many tailed whip;And I have seen thee, too, like Galilee,When Jesus walked in peace to Simon's shipAnd I have seen thy gentle breeze as softAs summer's, when it makes the cornfields run;And I have seen thy rude and lusty galeMake ships show half their bellies to the sun.Thou knowest the way to tame the wildest life,Thou knowest the way to bend the great and proud:I think of that Armada whose puffed sails,Greedy and large, came swallowing every cloud.But I have seen the sea-boy, young and drowned,...
William Henry Davies
The Secret
One thing in all things have I seen: One thought has haunted earth and air;Clangour and silence both have been Its palace chambers. EverywhereI saw the mystic vision flow, And live in men, and woods, and streams,Until I could no longer know The dream of life from my own dreams.Sometimes it rose like fire in me, Within the depths of my own mind,And spreading to infinity, It took the voices of the wind.It scrawled the human mystery, Dim heraldry--on light and air;Wavering along the starry sea, I saw the flying vision there.Each fire that in God's temple lit Burns fierce before the inner shrine,Dimmed as my fire grew near to it, And darkened at the light of mine.
George William Russell
The Day-Dream.
[1]They both were husht, the voice, the chords,-- I heard but once that witching lay;And few the notes, and few the words. My spell-bound memory brought away;Traces, remembered here and there, Like echoes of some broken strain;--Links of a sweetness lost in air, That nothing now could join again.Even these, too, ere the morning, fled; And, tho' the charm still lingered on,That o'er each sense her song had shed, The song itself was faded, gone;--Gone, like the thoughts that once were ours, On summer days, ere youth had set;Thoughts bright, we know, as summer flowers, Tho' what they were we now forget.In vain with hints from other strains I wooed this tru...
Thomas Moore
My Room. To G.E.M.
'Tis a little room, my friend;A baby-walk from end to end;All the things look sadly real,This hot noontide's Unideal.Seek not refuge at the casement,There's no pasture for amazementBut a house most dim and rusty,And a street most dry and dusty;Seldom here more happy visionThan water-cart's blest apparition,We'll shut out the staring space,Draw the curtains in its face.Close the eyelids of the room,Fill it with a scarlet gloom:Lo! the walls on every sideAre transformed and glorified;Ceiled as with a rosy cloudFurthest eastward of the crowd,Blushing faintly at the blissOf the Titan's good-night kiss,Which her westward sisters share,--Crimson they from breast to hair.'Tis the faintest lends its dyeTo...
George MacDonald
Dream Of A Curious Man
for F.N.Do you, as I do, know a zesty grief,And is it said of you, 'curious man!'I dreamed of dying; in my spirit's heatDesire and horror mixed, a strange mischance;Anguish and ardent hope were tightly knit;The more the fatal glass was drained of sandThe more I suffered, and I savoured it;My heart pulled out of the familiar, andI was a child, eager to see a play,Hating the curtain standing in the way...At last the chilling verity came on:Yes, I was dead, and in the dreadful dawnWas wrapped. And what! That's all there is to tell?The screen was raised, and I was waiting still.
Charles Baudelaire
Rhymes On The Road. Extract XIV. Rome.
Fragment of a Dream.--The great Painters supposed to be Magicians.--The Beginnings of the Art.--Gildings on the Glories and Draperies.-- Improvements under Giotto, etc.--The first Dawn of the true Style in Masaccio.--Studied by all the great Artists who followed him.--Leonardo da Vinci, with whom commenced the Golden Age of Painting.--His Knowledge of Mathematics and of Music.--His female heads all like each other.-- Triangular Faces.--Portraits of Mona Lisa, etc.--Picture of Vanity and Modesty.--His chef-d'oeuvre, the Last Supper.--Faded and almost effaced.Filled with the wonders I had seen In Rome's stupendous shrines and halls,I felt the veil of sleep sereneCome o'er the memory of each scene, As twilight o'er the landscape falls.Nor was it slumber, sound and deep,
Beyond
Cloudy argosies are drifting down into the purple dark,And the long low amber reaches, lying on the horizon's mark,Shape themselves into the gateways, dim and wonderful unfurled,Gateways leading through' the sunset, out into the underworld.How my spirit vainly flutters, like a bird that beats the bars,To be launched upon that ocean, with its tides of throbbing stars,To be gone beyond the sunset, and the day's revolving zone,Out into the primal darkness, and the world of the unknown!Hints and guesses of its grandeur, broken shadows, sudden gleams,Like a falling star shoot past me, quenched within a sea of dreams,--But the unimagined glory lying in the dark beyond,Is to these as morn to midnight, or as silence is to sound.Sweeter than the trees of Eden...
Kate Seymour Maclean
A Dream
My dead love came to me, and said, 'God gives me one hour's rest,To spend with thee on earth again: How shall we spend it best?''Why, as of old,' I said; and so We quarrell'd, as of old:But, when I turn'd to make my peace, That one short hour was told.
Stephen Phillips
Paradise: In A Dream
(Lyra Messianica, second edition, 1865.)Once in a dream I saw the flowers That bud and bloom in Paradise; More fair they are than waking eyesHave seen in all this world of ours.And faint the perfume-bearing rose, And faint the lily on its stem,And faint the perfect violet Compared with them.I heard the songs of Paradise: Each bird sat singing in his place; A tender song so full of graceIt soared like incense to the skies.Each bird sat singing to his mate Soft cooing notes among the trees:The nightingale herself were cold To such as these.I saw the fourfold River flow, And deep it was, with golden sand; It flowed between a mossy landWith murmured music grave and...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The House Of Dust: Part 02: 04: Nightmare
Draw three cards, and I will tell your future . . .Draw three cards, and lay them down,Rest your palms upon them, stare at the crystal,And think of time . . . My father was a clown,My mother was a gypsy out of Egypt;And she was gotten with child in a strange way;And I was born in a cold eclipse of the moon,With the future in my eyes as clear as day.I sit before the gold-embroidered curtainAnd think her face is like a wrinkled desert.The crystal burns in lamplight beneath my eyes.A dragon slowly coils on the scaly curtain.Upon a scarlet cloth a white skull lies.Your hand is on the hand that holds three lilies.You will live long, love many times.I see a dark girl here who once betrayed you.I see a shadow of secret crimes.
Conrad Aiken
A Swimmer's Dream
Somno mollior undaIDawn is dim on the dark soft water,Soft and passionate, dark and sweet.Love's own self was the deep sea's daughter,Fair and flawless from face to feet,Hailed of all when the world was golden,Loved of lovers whose names beholdenThrill men's eyes as with light of oldenDays more glad than their flight was fleet.So they sang: but for men that love her,Souls that hear not her word in vain,Earth beside her and heaven above herSeem but shadows that wax and wane.Softer than sleep's are the sea's caresses,Kinder than love's that betrays and blesses,Blither than spring's when her flowerful tressesShake forth sunlight and shine with rain.All the strength of the waves that perishSwells beneath me and ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Gods
Last night, as one who hears a tragic jest,I woke from dreams, half-laughing, half in tears;Methought that I had journeyed in the spheresAnd stood upon the Planet of the Blest!And found thereon a folk who prayed with zestExceeding, and through all their painful years,Like strong souls struggled on, mid hopes and fears;Where dwell the gods, they said, we shall find rest.The gods? What gods, I thought, are these who soInspire their worshippers with faith that flowersImmortal, and who make them keep aglowThe flames for ever on their altar-towers?Where dwell these gods of yours? I asked, and lo!They pointed upward to this earth of ours!
Victor James Daley
Deep Sleep
Heart-hidden from the outer things I rose,The spirit woke anew in nightly birthInto the vastness where forever glows The star-soul of the earth.There all alone in primal ecstasy,Within her depths where revels never tire,The olden Beauty shines; each thought of me Is veined through with its fire.And all my thoughts are throngs of living souls;They breath in me, heart unto heart alliedWith joy undimmed, though when the morning tolls The planets may divide.--September 15, 1893
My Dream
Hear now a curious dream I dreamed last nightEach word whereof is weighed and sifted truth. I stood beside Euphrates while it swelledLike overflowing Jordan in its youth:It waxed and coloured sensibly to sight;Till out of myriad pregnant waves there welledYoung crocodiles, a gaunt blunt-featured crew,Fresh-hatched perhaps and daubed with birthday dew.The rest if I should tell, I fear my friendMy closest friend would deem the facts untrue;And therefore it were wisely left untold;Yet if you will, why, hear it to the end. Each crocodile was girt with massive goldAnd polished stones that with their wearers grew:But one there was who waxed beyond the rest,Wore kinglier girdle and a kingly crown,Whilst crowns and orbs and sceptres s...
Dreamers
Soldiers are citizens of death's grey land,Drawing no dividend from time's to-morrows.In the great hour of destiny they stand,Each with his feuds, and jealousies, and sorrows.Soldiers are sworn to action; they must winSome flaming, fatal climax with their lives.Soldiers are dreamers; when the guns beginThey think of firelit homes, clean beds, and wives.I see them in foul dug-outs, gnawed by rats,And in the ruined trenches, lashed with rain,Dreaming of things they did with balls and bats,And mocked by hopeless longing to regainBank-holidays, and picture shows, and spats,And going to the office in the train.
Siegfried Sassoon