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A Dream - Sonnet
Once in a dream (for once I dreamed of you) We stood together in an open field; Above our heads two swift-winged pigeons wheeled,Sporting at ease and courting full in view.When loftier still a broadening darkness flew, Down-swooping, and a ravenous hawk revealed; Too weak to fight, too fond to fly, they yield;So farewell life and love and pleasures new.Then as their plumes fell fluttering to the ground, Their snow-white plumage flecked with crimson drops, I wept, and thought I turned towards you to weep: But you were gone; while rustling hedgerow topsBent in a wind which bore to me a sound Of far-off piteous bleat of lambs and sheep.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Translations. - The Dream. (From Uhland.)
In a garden sweet went walkingTwo lovers hand in hand;Two pallid figures, low talking,They sat in the flowery land.They kissed on the cheek one another,And they kissed upon the mouth;They held in their arms each the other,And back came their health and youth.Two little bells rang shrilly--And the lovely dream was dead!She lay in the cloister chilly;He afar on his dungeon-bed.
George MacDonald
The Awakening
The Soul, of late a lovely sleeping child,Spreads sudden wings and stands in radiant guise,Eyed like the morn and bent upon the skies;Her the blue gulf dismays not, nor the wildHorizons with the wrecks of thunder piled;Storm has she known, and how its murmur diesStarlike through stainless heavens she would riseAnd be no more with cloudy dreams beguiled.Was sleep not sweet? sweet till on sleeping earsEarth's voices broke in discord. Now she hearsFar, far away diviner music move;Nor shall her wing be sated of its flight,Nor shall her eyes be weary of the night,While round her sweep the singing stars of Love.
Enid Derham
Night Thoughts.
Oh, unhappy stars! your fate I mourn,Ye by whom the sea-toss'd sailor's lighted,Who with radiant beams the heav'ns adorn,But by gods and men are unrequited:For ye love not, ne'er have learnt to love!Ceaselessly in endless dance ye move,In the spacious sky your charms displaying,What far travels ye have hasten'd through,Since, within my loved one's arms delaying,I've forgotten you and midnight too!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Isle Of Sleep.
In those dark mornings, deep in June, When brooding birds stir in the nest,And heavy dews slip down the leaves, And drop into the rose's breast,I woke and looked into the east, And saw no sign of coming day,The pale cold morning rolled in mist, Slept on the hill-tops far away.My window looked into the dawn, The slumbering dawn that was so nigh,The shadow of the hills was drawn In waving lines against the sky.But warmer hues began to tip The edges of the mountain cloudAnd morning's rosy cheek and lip Glowed softly through her snow-pale shroud.I turned and gazed into the west, The river murmured in my ear'Gone night, and silence, dreams and rest, Another day of toil is here.'...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Hopes And Fears.
Like clouds that flit across the sky, So follow hopes and fears.What in these clouds see you and me Dear Sweetheart, smiles or tears?This little airy fleecy wing, That flits across the blue,What message Sweetheart does it bring Of hope or fear to you?Pray God it brings you sunny hours And haply some few tearsTo bless like showers your summer flowers In the long coming years.
Lizzie Lawson
The Glory And The Dream
There in the past I see her as of old,Blue-eyed and hazel-haired, within a roomDim with a twilight of tenebrious gold;Her white face sensuous as a delicate bloomNight opens in the tropics. Fold on foldPale laces drape her; and a frail perfume,As of a moonlit primrose brimmed with rain,Breathes from her presence, drowsing heart and brain.Her head is bent; some red carnations glowDeep in her heavy hair; her large eyes gleam;--Bright sister stars of those twin worlds of snow,Her breasts, through which the veined violets stream;--I hold her hand; her smile comes sweetly slowAs thoughts of love that haunt a poet's dream;And at her feet once more I sit and hearWild words of passion--dead this many a year.
Madison Julius Cawein
And Ask Ye Why These Sad Tears Stream?
Te somnia nostra reducunt.OVID.And ask ye why these sad tears stream?Why these wan eyes are dim with weeping?I had a dreama lovely dream,Of her that in the grave is sleeping.I saw her as twas yesterday,The bloom upon her cheek still glowing;And round her playd a golden ray,And on her brows were gay flowers blowing.With angel-hand she swept a lyre,A garland red with roses bound it;Its strings were wreathd with lambent fireAnd amaranth was woven round it.I saw her mid the realms of light,In everlasting radiance gleaming;Co-equal with the seraphs bright,Mid thousand thousand angels beaming.I strove to reach her, when, behold,Those fairy forms of bliss Elysian,And all that rich scene wrapt...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
A Dream Of Spring.
The world is asleep! All hushed is Nature's warm, sweet breath.The world is asleep, and dreaming the silent dream of snow,But through the silence that seems like the silence of death,Under their shroud of ermine, the souls of the roses glow.And forever the heart of the water throbs and beats,Though bound by a million gleaming fetters and crystal rings,No sound on lonesome mornings the lonely watcher greets,But the frosty pane is impressed with the shadow of coming wings.
Marietta Holley
Ode II; To Sleep
Thou silent power, whose welcome swayCharms every anxious thought away;In whose divine oblivion drown'd,Sore pain and weary toil grow mild,Love is with kinder looks beguil'd,And grief forgets her fondly-cherish'd wound;Oh whither hast thou flown, indulgent god?God of kind shadows and of healing dews,Whom dost thou touch with thy Lethaean rod?Around whose temples now thy opiate airs diffuse?Lo, midnight from her starry reignLooks awful down on earth and main.The tuneful birds lie hush'd in sleep,With all that crop the verdant food,With all that skim the crystal flood,Or haunt the caverns of the rocky steep.No rushing winds disturb the tufted bowers;No wakeful sound the moon-light valley knows,Save where the brook its liquid murmur po...
Mark Akenside
Reverie: Zahir-u-Din
Alone, I wait, till her twilight gate The Night slips quietly through,With shadow and gloom, and purple bloom, Flung over the Zenith blue.Her stars that tremble, would fain dissemble Light over lovers thrown, -Her hush and mystery know no history Such as day may own.Day has record of pleasure and pain,But things that are done by Night remain For ever and ever unknown.For a thousand years, 'neath a thousand skies, Night has brought men love;Therefore the old, old longings rise As the light grows dim above.Therefore, now that the shadows close, And the mists weird and white,While Time is scented with musk and rose; Magic with silver light.I long for love; will you grant me some?...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
The Divine Vision
This mood hath known all beauty for it seesO'erwhelmed majestiesIn these pale forms, and kingly crowns of goldOn brows no longer bold,And through the shadowy terrors of their hellThe love for which they fell,And how desire which cast them in the deepCalled God too from his sleep.O, pity, only seer, who looking throughA heart melted like dew,Seest the long perished in the present thus,For ever dwell in us.Whatever time thy golden eyelids opeThey travel to a hope;Not only backward from these low degreesTo starry dynasties,But, looking far where now the silence ownsAnd rules from empty thrones,Thou seest the enchanted halls of heaven burnFor joy at our return.Thy tender kiss hath memory we are kingsFor all our wanderi...
George William Russell
The Bath
My dreams are bubbles of cool light,Sunbeams mingled in the light greenWaters of your bath.Through fretted spaces in the olive woodMy love adventures with the white sun.I dive into the ice-coloured shadowsWhere the water is like light blue flowersDancing on mirrors of silver.The sun rolls under the waters of your bathLike the body of a strong swimmer.And now you cool your feet,Which have the look of apple flowers,Under the water on the oval marbleColoured like yellow roses.Your scarlet nipplesWaver under the green kisses of the water,Flowers drowned in a mountain stream.From the Modern Turkish.
Edward Powys Mathers
Voices Of The Night. Prelude.
Pleasant it was, when woods were green, And winds were soft and low,To lie amid some sylvan scene,Where, the long drooping boughs between,Shadows dark and sunlight sheen Alternate come and go;Or where the denser grove receives No sunlight from above,But the dark foliage interweavesIn one unbroken roof of leaves,Underneath whose sloping eaves The shadows hardly move.Beneath some patriarchal tree I lay upon the ground;His hoary arms uplifted he,And all the broad leaves over meClapped their little hands in glee, With one continuous sound--A slumberous sound,--a sound that brings The feelings of a dream--As of innumerable wings,As, when a bell no longer swings,Paint the holl...
William Henry Giles Kingston
The Dream.
By dream I saw one of the threeSisters of fate appear to me;Close to my bedside she did stand,Showing me there a firebrand;She told me too, as that did spend,So drew my life unto an end.Three quarters were consum'd of it;Only remained a little bit,Which will be burnt up by-and-by;Then, Julia, weep, for I must die.
Robert Herrick
A Reverie.
O, tomb of the pastWhere buried hopes lie,In my visions I seeThy phantoms pass by!A form, long departed, Before me appears;A sweet voice, long silent, Again greets my ears.Fond memory dwells On the things that have been;And my eyes calmly gaze On a long vanished scene;A scene such as memory Stores deep in the breast,Which only appears In a season of rest.Once more we wander, Her fair hand in mine;Once more her promise, "I'll ever be thine";Once more the parting, The shroud, and the pall,The sods' hollow thump As they coffinward fall.The reverie ends-- All the fancies have flown;And my sad, lonely heart, Now seems doubly alone;...
Alfred Castner King
A Gift.
My gift would find thee fast asleep, And arise a dream in thee;A violet sky o'er the roll and sweep Of a purple and pallid sea;And a crescent moon from my sky should creep In the golden dream to thee.Thou shouldst lay thee down, and sadly list To the wail of our cold birth-time;And build thee a temple, glory-kissed, In the heart of the sunny clime;Its columns should rise in a music-mist, And its roofs in a spirit-rhyme.Its pillars the solemn hills should bind 'Neath arches of starry deeps;Its floor the earth all veined and lined; Its organ the ocean-sweeps;And, swung in the hands of the grey-robed wind, Its censers the blossom-heaps.And 'tis almost done; for in this my rhyme, Tha...
Town
Mostly in a dull rotation We bear our loads and eat and drink and sleep. Feeling no tears, knowing no meditation, Too tired to think, too clogged with earth to weep. Dimly convinced, poor groping wretches, Like eyeless insects in a murky pond That out and out this city stretches, Away, away, and there is no beyond. No larger earth, no loftier heaven, No cleaner, gentler airs to breathe. And yet, Even to us sometimes is given Visions of things we other times forget. Some day is done, its labour ended, And as we sit and brood at windows high, A steady wind from far descended, Blows off the filth that hid the deeper sky; There are the empty waiting spaces, We w...
John Collings Squire, Sir