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To F--
Beloved! amid the earnest woesThat crowd around my earthly path,(Drear path, alas! where growsNot even one lonely rose),My soul at least a solace hathIn dreams of thee, and therein knowsAn Eden of bland repose.And thus thy memory is to meLike some enchanted far-off isleIn some tumultuous sea,Some ocean throbbing far and freeWith storm,but where meanwhileSerenest skies continuallyJust oer that one bright inland smile.
Edgar Allan Poe
The Dream Of Roderick
Below, the tawny Tagus sweptPast royal gardens, breathing balm;Upon his couch the monarch slept;The world was still; the night was calm.Gray, Gothic-gated, in the rayOf moonrise, tower-and castle-crowned,The city of Toledo layBeneath the terraced palace-ground.Again, he dreamed, in kingly sportHe sought the tree-sequestered path,And watched the ladies of his CourtWithin the marble-basined bath.Its porphyry stairs and fountained baseShone, houried with voluptuous forms,Where Andalusia vied in graceWith old Castile, in female charms.And laughter, song, and water-splashRang round the place, with stone arcaded,As here a breast or limb would flashWhere beauty swam or beauty waded.And then, like V...
Madison Julius Cawein
Sleep! Sleep! Beauty Bright
Sleep! sleep! beauty bright,Dreaming o'er the joys of night;Sleep! sleep! in thy sleepLittle sorrows sit and weep.Sweet Babe, in thy faceSoft desires I can trace,Secret joys and secret smiles,Little pretty infant wiles.As thy softest limbs I feel,Smiles as of the morning stealO'er thy cheek, and o'er thy breastWhere thy little heart does rest.O! the cunning wiles that creepIn thy little heart asleep.When thy little heart does wakeThen the dreadful lightnings break,From thy cheek and from thy eye,O'er the youthful harvests nigh.Infant wiles and infant smilesHeaven and Earth of peace beguiles.
William Blake
Night
The night is young yet; an enchanted nightIn early summer: calm and darkly bright.I love the Night, and every little breezeShe brings, to soothe the sleep of dreaming trees.Hearst thou the Voices? Sough! Susurrus! Hark!Tis Mother Nature whispering in the dark!Burden of cities, mad turmoil of men,That vex the daylight, she forgets them then.Her breasts are bare; Grief gains from them surcease:She gives her restless sons the milk of Peace.To sleep she lulls them, drawn from thoughts of pelfBy telling sweet old stories of herself.. . . . .All secrets deep, yea, all I hear and seeOf things mysterious, Night reveals to me.I know what every flower, with drowsy headDown-drooping, dreams of, ...
Victor James Daley
The Dream Child
There is a place (I know it well)Where beech trees crowd into a gloom,And where a twinkling woodland wellFlings from a rock a rippling plume,And, like a Faun beneath a spell,The silence breathes of beam and bloom.And here it was I met with her,The child I never hoped to see,Who long had been heart's-comforter,And soul's-companion unto me,Telling me oft of myths that were,And of far faerylands to-be.She stood there smiling by the pool,The cascade made below the rocks;Innocent, naked, beautiful,The frail gerardia in her locks,A flower, elfin-sweet and cool,Freckled as faery four-o -clocks.Her eyes were rain-bright; and her hairAn amber gleam like that which tipsThe golden leaves when Fall comes fair;
All is well
Whateer you dream with doubt possest,Keep, keep it snug within your breast,And lay you down and take your rest;Forget in sleep the doubt and pain,And when you wake, to work again.The wind it blows, the vessel goes,And where and whither, no one knows.Twill all be well: no need of care;Though how it will, and when, and where,We cannot see, and cant declare.In spite of dreams, in spite of thought,Tis not in vain, and not for nought,The wind it blows, the ship it goes,Though where and whither, no one knows.
Arthur Hugh Clough
Fancy And The Poet.
POET.Enchanting spirit! at thy votive shrineI lowly bend one simple wreath to twine;O come from thy ideal world and flingThy airy fingers o'er my rugged string;Sweep the dark chords of thought and give to earthThe wild sweet song that tells thy heavenly birth--FANCY.Happiness, when from earth she fled, I passed on her heaven-ward flight,--"Take this wreath," the spirit said, "And bathe it in floods of light;To the sons of sorrow this token give,And bid them follow my steps and live!"I took the wreath from her radiant hand, Each flower was a silver star;I turned this dark earth to a fairy land, When I hither drove my car;But I wove the wreath round my tresses bright,And man only saw its...
Susanna Moodie
In Sleep
I dreamt (no "dream" awake-a dream indeed) A wrathful man was talking in the park: "Where are the Higher Powers, who know our need And leave us in the dark? "There are no Higher Powers; there is no heart In God, no love"-his oratory here, Taking the paupers and the cripples part, Was broken by a tear. And then it seemed that One who did create Compassion, who alone invented pity, Walked, as though called, in at that north-east gate, Out from the muttering city; Threaded the little crowd, trod the brown grass, Bent oer the speaker close, saw the tear rise, And saw Himself, as one looks in a glass, In tho...
Alice Meynell
Good Night.
O slumber on, untaught to feelThe weight of care and sorrow's blight.Here have I often loved to stealAnd o'er thee breathe a soft "good night."And gentle as thy beauty's rayBe all the visions of thy dreams,Thy years be joyous as to-day,And life be always what it seems.Ah, may it ne'er be thine to knowThe sleepless eye, the tossing head;May He above ordain it so,And guardian angels shield thy bed.Now o'er thy cheek the smile betraysSome sweetness in thy dreaming eye,Alas that thou must wake and gazeOn things that cause thy breast a sigh!So placid is thy pillow here,'Tis sweet, indeed, to know thy peace,To smoothe thy locks and drop a tear,To clasp a hand I must release.Ah, dost thou dream of ...
Lennox Amott
The Two Friends.
[1]Two friends, in Monomotapa,Had all their interests combined.Their friendship, faithful and refined,Our country can't exceed, do what it may.One night, when potent Sleep had laidAll still within our planet's shade,One of the two gets up alarm'd,Runs over to the other's palace,And hastily the servants rallies.His startled friend, quick arm'd,With purse and sword his comrade meets,And thus right kindly greets: -'Thou seldom com'st at such an hour;I take thee for a man of sounder mindThan to abuse the time for sleep design'd.Hast lost thy purse, by Fortune's power?Here's mine. Hast suffer'd insult, or a blow,I've here my sword - to avenge it let us go.''No,' said his friend, 'no need I feelOf either silve...
Jean de La Fontaine
The Tossing Mountains
They were like dreams that in a drowsy hourA sad old God had dreamed in loneliness of power.They were like dreams that in his drowsy mindRose slowly and then, darkening, made him wise and blind--So that he saw no more the level sun,Nor the small solid shadow of unclouded noon.The dark green heights rose slowly from the greenOf the dark water till the sky was narrowly seen;Only at night the lifting walls were still,And stars were bright and calm above each calm dark hill.... I could not think but that a God grown oldSaw in a dream or waking all this round of boldAnd wavelike hills, and knew them but a thought,Or but a wave uptost and poised awhile then caughtBack to the sea with waves a million moreThat rise and pause and break at last upon the shore....
John Frederick Freeman
The Path To Faery
IWhen dusk falls cool as a rained-on rose,And a tawny tower the twilight shows,With the crescent moon, the silver moon, the curvednew moon in a space that glows,A turret window that grows alight;There is a path that my Fancy knows,A glimmering, shimmering path of night,That far as the Land of Faery goes.IIAnd I follow the path, as Fancy leads,Over the mountains, into the meads,Where the firefly cities, the glowworm cities, the faerycities are strung like beads,Each city a twinkling star:And I live a life of valorous deeds,And march with the Faery King to war,And ride with his knights on milk-white steeds.IIIOr it's there in the whirl of their life I sit,Or dance in their houses with starligh...
Chorus Of Spirits.
Vanish, dark clouds on high,Offspring of night!Let a more radiant beamThrough the blue ether gleam,Charming the sight!Would the dark clouds on highMelt into air!Stars glimmer tenderly,Planets more fairShed their soft light.Spirits of heav'nly birth,Fairer than sons of earth,Quivering emotions trueHover above;Yearning affections, too,In their train move.See how the spirit-band,By the soft breezes fann'd,Covers the smiling land,Covers the leafy grove,Where happy lovers rove,Deep in a dream of love,True love that never dies!Bowers on bowers rise,Soft tendrils twine;While from the press escapes,Born of the juicy grapes,Foaming, th...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Crystal Spring.
I. Fair spirit of the plaining sea, Thou heard'st Apollo's lyre! - Now folded are thy silver wings Thee sunward bore, A dream and a desire. Ranging the upper azure deeps, The sunlight on thy wings, How blanched thy purpose as there fell The lightning's stroke, And darkness on all things! In agony of rain and hail, And phantom dance of snow, The chastening angels of the air To mountain bleak Consigned thee far below. There in the arms of heartless frost, And burdened with thy train, The keen stars watched thy ageful way, Till breast of earth Warmed th...
Theodore Harding Rand
Child And Mother
O mother-my-love, if you'll give me your hand,And go where I ask you to wander,I will lead you away to a beautiful land,--The Dreamland that's waiting out yonder.We'll walk in a sweet posie-garden out there,Where moonlight and starlight are streaming,And the flowers and the birds are filling the airWith the fragrance and music of dreaming.There'll be no little tired-out boy to undress,No questions or cares to perplex you,There'll be no little bruises or bumps to caress,Nor patching of stockings to vex you;For I'll rock you away on a silver-dew streamAnd sing you asleep when you're weary,And no one shall know of our beautiful dreamBut you and your own little dearie.And when I am tired I'll nestle my headIn the bosom that's soot...
Eugene Field
An Evening Thought.
Bird of the fanciful plumage,That foldest thy wings in the west,Imbuing the shimmering oceanWith the hues of thy delicate breast,Passing away into Dreamland,To visions of heavenly rest!Spirit! when thou art permittedTo bask in the sunset of life;Serene in thine eventide splendour,Thy countenance victory rife;Leaving the world where thou'st triumphedAlike o'er its greatness and strife:Thine be the destiny, spirit,To set like the sun in the west;Folding thy wings of rare plumage,Conscious of infinite rest,Heralded on to thy haven,The Fortunate Isles of the Blest.
Charles Sangster
Their Faces
O Beautiful white Angels! who controlThe inner workings of each poet soul,Thou who hast touched my mind with tender gracesCome near to me that I may see thy faces.Me, didst thou bless before I came to earth;Me, hast thou kissed, and dowered at my birth,With such a wealth of sweet imaginings,That, even in sleep, my dreaming fancy sings.Sometimes when seeing snow-white clouds at noon,Or watching silver shadows from the moon,Within my soul has stirred a joy like fear,As if some kindred spirit lingered near.Come closer, Angels! thou whose haloed wingsDo gild for me the meanest ways and things,With beauty borrowed from the Infinite -Stand forth, let me behold thee in the light.O thought supreme! O death! O life! unknown...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Boat Beneath A Sunny Sky
A boat beneath a sunny sky,Lingering onward dreamilyIn an evening of July,Children three that nestle near,Eager eye and willing ear,Pleased a simple tale to hear,Long has paled that sunny sky:Echoes fade and memories die:Autumn frosts have slain July.Still she haunts me, phantomwise,Alice moving under skiesNever seen by waking eyes.Children yet, the tale to hear,Eager eye and willing ear,Lovingly shall nestle near.In a Wonderland they lie,Dreaming as the days go by,Dreaming as the summers die:Ever drifting down the stream,Lingering in the golden dream,Life, what is it but a dream?
Lewis Carroll