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The Rice-boat
I slept upon the Rice-boatThat, reef protected, layAt anchor, where the palm-treesInfringe upon the bay.The windless air was heavyWith cinnamon and rose,The midnight calm seemed waiting,Too fateful for repose.One joined me on the Rice-boatWith wild and waving hair,Whose vivid words and laughterAwoke the silent air.Oh, beauty, bare and shining,Fresh washen in the bay,One well may love by moonlightWhat one would not love by day!Above among the cordageThe night wind hardly stirred,The lapping of the ripplesWas all the sound we heard.Love reigned upon the Rice-boat,And Peace controlled the sea,The spirit's consolation,The senses' ecstasy.Though many things and mightyAre further...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
How Clear She Shines.
How clear she shines! How quietlyI lie beneath her guardian light;While heaven and earth are whispering me,"To morrow, wake, but dream to-night."Yes, Fancy, come, my Fairy love!These throbbing temples softly kiss;And bend my lonely couch above,And bring me rest, and bring me bliss.The world is going; dark world, adieu!Grim world, conceal thee till the day;The heart thou canst not all subdueMust still resist, if thou delay!Thy love I will not, will not share;Thy hatred only wakes a smile;Thy griefs may wound, thy wrongs may tear,But, oh, thy lies shall ne'er beguile!While gazing on the stars that glowAbove me, in that stormless sea,I long to hope that all the woeCreation knows, is held in thee!And this s...
Emily Bronte
Hesitation
I've orders to waken you from your nap,And orders are orders, my little chap.But I hate to do it, because it seemsA shame to break in on your blissful dreams.I've sat and watched you a long, long while,And not since I came have you ceased to smile.So it strikes me as wrong to arouse you, boy,From sleep that's so plainly a sleep of joy.'Twill make a big diff'rence tonight, of course,But p'rhaps you are riding a real live horse;In dreams, it's a pleasant and harmless sport,So why should I cruelly cut it short?Maybe you have for your very ownA piece of pie or an ice cream cone;If that's your amusement, why end it quick?Dream-food can't possibly make you sick.Orders are orders and I'm afraidIt's trouble for me if they'...
Ringgold Wilmer Lardner
Song.
Deep in the green bracken lying, Close by the welcoming sea,Dream I, and let all my dreaming Drift as it will, Love, to thee.Sated with splendid caresses Showered by the sun in his pride,Scorched by his passionate kisses Languidly ebbs the tide.
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Sleep
Not a dream brush your sleep,Not a thought wake and creepIn upon your spirit's slumber;Not a memory encumber,Nor a thievish care unbarSleep's portcullis that no starNor sentry hath. I'll not speakWith my soul even: no, nor seekOther happiness for youWhen you this happy sleep sleep through.Let no least desire waverBetween us, nor impatience quaver;No sudden nearness of me flushYour veins with welcome.... Hush, hush!Be still, my thoughts, lest you creepUnawares into her sleep.
John Frederick Freeman
Echo
Come to me in the silence of the night; Come in the speaking silence of a dream;Come with soft rounded cheeks and eyes as bright As sunlight on a stream; Come back in tears,O memory, hope, love of finished years.Oh dream how sweet, too sweet, too bitter sweet, Whose wakening should have been in Paradise,Where souls brimfull of love abide and meet; Where thirsting longing eyes Watch the slow doorThat opening, letting in, lets out no more.Yet come to me in dreams, that I may live My very life again though cold in death:Come back to me in dreams, that I may give Pulse for pulse, breath for breath: Speak low, lean low,As long ago, my love, how long ago!
Christina Georgina Rossetti
A Fantasy
Her voice is like clear waterThat drips upon a stoneIn forests far and silentWhere Quiet plays alone.Her thoughts are like the lotusAbloom by sacred streamsBeneath the temple archesWhere Quiet sits and dreams.Her kisses are the rosesThat glow while dusk is deepIn Persian garden closesWhere Quiet falls asleep.
Sara Teasdale
The Lost House
Out of thy door I run to do the thing That calls upon me. Straight the wind of wordsWhoops from mine ears the sounds of them that singAbout their work, "My God, my father-king!"I turn in haste to see thy blessed door, But, lo, a cloud of flies and bats and birds, And stalking vapours, and vague monster-herds Have risen and lighted, rushed and swollen between!Ah me! the house of peace is there no more.Was it a dream then?--Walls, fireside, and floor, And sweet obedience, loving, calm, and free, Are vanished--gone as they had never been! I labour groaning. Comes a sudden sheen!--And I am kneeling at my father's knee,Sighing with joy, and hoping utterly.
George MacDonald
Sorrows Of The Moon
The moon tonight dreams vacantly, as ifShe were a beauty cushioned at her restWho strokes with wandering hand her liftingNipples, and the contour of her breasts;Lying as if for love, glazed by the softLuxurious avalanche, dying in swoons,She turns her eyes to visions-clouds aloftBillowing hugely, blossoming in blue.When sometimes from her stupefying calmOn to this earth she drops a furtive tearPale as an opal, iridescent, rare,The poet, sleepless watchman, is the oneTo take it up within his hollowed palmAnd in his heart to hide it from the sun.
Charles Baudelaire
Memoria In Æterna.
Sweet Memory! thou faculty divine--Triumphant o'er the cruel hand of Time!On thy tablets we may traceThe lines his fingers ne'er efface,And take with us till latest dayThe images that light our way,And picture thus in a shadowy formThe loved and lost he's from us torn--Their lids by Death so early sealed--Life's crimson tide by him congealed--The tyrant has not all concealed--They in thy mirror still revealed!Before the morning sunbeams kissedThe face of Nature--veiled in mist--And heralded with golden rayThe opening of the perfect day--Ere yet the sable shades of nightAt dawn's approach had winged their flight--We've listed to the whispering breezeThat's wafted o'er the trembling trees,And seemed to hear the voice...
George W. Doneghy
To Isadore
IBeneath the vine-clad eaves,Whose shadows fall beforeThy lowly cottage doorUnder the lilacs tremulous leaves,Within thy snowy claspeèd handThe purple flowers it bore.Last eve in dreams, I saw thee stand,Like queenly nymphs from Fairy-land,Enchantress of the flowery wand,Most beauteous Isadore!IIAnd when I bade the dreamUpon thy spirit flee,Thy violet eyes to meUpturned, did overflowing seemWith the deep, untold delightOf Loves serenity;Thy classic brow, like lilies whiteAnd pale as the Imperial NightUpon her throne, with stars bedight,Enthralled my soul to thee!IIIAh! ever I beholdThy dreamy, passionate eyes,Blue as the languid skiesHung with the sunset...
Abijah Ide
The Slave's Dream
Beside the ungathered rice he lay, His sickle in his hand;His breast was bare, his matted hair Was buried in the sand.Again, in the mist and shadow of sleep, He saw his Native Land.Wide through the landscape of his dreams The lordly Niger flowed;Beneath the palm-trees on the plain Once more a king he strode;And heard the tinkling caravans Descend the mountain-road.He saw once more his dark-eyed queen Among her children stand;They clasped his neck, they kissed his cheeks, They held him by the hand!--A tear burst from the sleeper's lids And fell into the sand.And then at furious speed he rode Along the Niger's bank;His bridle-reins were golden chains, And, with a mar...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
A Mood
My thoughts are like fire-flies, pulsing in moonlight; My heart like a silver cup, filled with red wine;My soul a pale gleaming horizon, whence soon light Will flood the gold earth with a torrent divine.
The Journey.
I.Hark, the rain is on my roof!Every murmur, through the dark,Stings me with a dull reproofLike a half-extinguished spark.Me! ah me! how came I here,Wide awake and wide alone!Caught within a net of fear,All my dreams undreamed and gone!I will rise; I will go forth.Better dare the hideous night,Better face the freezing northThan be still, where is no light!Black wind rushing round me now,Sown with arrowy points of rain!Gone are there and then and now--I am here, and so is pain!Dead in dreams the gloomy street!I will out on open roads.Eager grow my aimless feet--Onward, onward something goads!I will take the mountain path,Beard the storm within its den;Know the worst of this dim wrath
The Palaces of the Sidhe
Two small sweet lives together From dawn till the dew falls down,They danced over rock and heather Away from the dusty town.Dark eyes like stars set in pansies, Blue eyes like a hero's bold--Their thoughts were all pearl-light fancies, Their hearts in the age of gold.They crooned o'er many a fable And longed for the bright-capped elves,The faery folk who are able To make us faery ourselves.A hush on the children stealing They stood there hand in hand,For the elfin chimes were pealing Aloud in the underland.And over the grey rock sliding, A fiery colour ran,And out of its thickness gliding The twinkling mist of a man--To-day for the children had fled to ...
George William Russell
Mobile Mystic Societies
The olden golden stories of the world, That stirred the past,And now are dim as dreams,The lays and legends which the bards unfurled In lines that last,All -- rhymed with glooms and gleams.Fragments and fancies writ on many a page By deathless pen,And names, and deeds that all along each age, Thrill hearts of men.And pictures erstwhile framed in sun or shade Of many climes,And life's great poems that can never fade Nor lose their chimes;And acts and facts that must forever ring Like temple bells,That sound or seem to sound where angels sing Vesper farewells;And scenes where smiles are strangely touching tears, 'Tis ever thus,Strange Mystics! in the meeting of the years Ye bring to us
Abram Joseph Ryan
To A Friend
On her return from Europe.How smiled the land of FranceUnder thy blue eye's glance,Light-hearted roverOld walls of chateaux gray,Towers of an early day,Which the Three Colors playFlauntingly over.Now midst the brilliant trainThronging the banks of SeineNow midst the splendorOf the wild Alpine range,Waking with change on changeThoughts in thy young heart strange,Lovely, and tender.Vales, soft Elysian,Like those in the visionOf Mirza, when, dreaming,He saw the long hollow dell,Touched by the prophet's spell,Into an ocean swellWith its isles teeming.Cliffs wrapped in snows of years,Splintering with icy spearsAutumn's blue heavenLoose rock and frozen slide,
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Venetian Girl's Evening Song.
Unmoor the skiff, - unmoor the skiff, - The night wind's sigh is on the air,And o'er the highest Alpine cliff, The pale moon rises, broad and clear.The murmuring waves are tranquil now, And on their breast each twinkling starWith which Night gems her dusky brow, Flings its mild radiance from afar.Put off upon the deep blue sea, And leave the banquet and the ball;For solitude, when shared with thee, Is dearer than the carnival.And in my heart are thoughts of love, Such thoughts as lips should only breathe,When the bright stars keep watch above, And the calm waters sleep beneath!The tale I have for thee, perchance, May to thine eye anew impartThe long-lost gladness of its glance, And soo...
George W. Sands