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Calm Be Thy Sleep.
Calm be thy sleep as infant's slumbers! Pure as angel thoughts thy dreams!May every joy this bright world numbers Shed o'er thee their mingled beams!Or if, where Pleasure's wing hath glided, There ever must some pang remain,Still be thy lot with me divided,-- Thine all the bliss and mine the pain!Day and night my thoughts shall hover Round thy steps where'er they stray;As, even when clouds his idol cover, Fondly the Persian tracks its ray.If this be wrong, if Heaven offended By worship to its creature be,Then let my vows to both be blended, Half breathed to Heaven and half to thee.
Thomas Moore
Twilight.
The sun is sinking where the western hills The vision bounds with rugged summits old,And with his latest beam he brightly gilds And crowns with amethyst and gold.The distant music of a tinkling bell Is floating o'er the meadow's gentle sweep--No discords mar the magic of the spell, And stealthily the twilight shadows creep.And gently falls upon the listening ear-- Like tones from voices of the long-ago--The cadence of the murmuring waters near-- With rhythmic ripplings soft and low.Now grow apace the shadows' slanting shapes And fade the rugged hills to misty gray,As dying day its calm departure takes And yields to coming night her sable sway.The vaulted dome above now glows afar With man...
George W. Doneghy
The Ghost
Through the open door of dreamlandCame a ghost of long ago, long ago.When I wakened, all unheedingWas the phantom to my pleading;For he would not turn and go,But beside me all the day,In my work and in my play,Trod this ghost of long ago, long ago.Not a vague and pallid phantomWas this ghost that came to me, followed me:Though he rose from regions haunted,Though he came unbid, unwanted,He was very fair to see.Like the radiant sun in spaceWas the halo round the faceOf that ghost that came to me, followed me.And he wore no shroud or cere-clothAs he wandered at my side, close beside:He was clothed in royal splendourAnd his eyes were deep and tender,While he walked in stately pride;And he seemed like some g...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Nun's Aspiration
The yesterday doth never smile,The day goes drudging through the while,Yet, in the name of Godhead, IThe morrow front, and can defy;Though I am weak, yet God, when prayed,Cannot withhold his conquering aid.Ah me! it was my childhood's thought,If He should make my web a blotOn life's fair picture of delight,My heart's content would find it right.But O, these waves and leaves,--When happy stoic Nature grieves,No human speech so beautifulAs their murmurs mine to lull.On this altar God hath builtI lay my vanity and guilt;Nor me can Hope or Passion urgeHearing as now the lofty dirgeWhich blasts of Northern mountains hymn,Nature's funeral high and dim,--Sable pageantry of clouds,Mourning summer laid in shrouds.Many...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
To Fausta
Joy comes and goes: hope ebbs and flows,Like the wave.Change doth unknit the tranquil strength of men.Love lends life a little grace,A few sad smiles: and then.Both are laid in one cold place,In the grave.Dreams dawn and fly: friends smile and die,Like spring flowers.Our vaunted life is one long funeral.Men dig graves, with bitter tears,For their dead hopes; and all,Mazd with doubts, and sick with fears,Count the hours.We count the hours: these dreams of ours,False and hollow,Shall we go hence and find they are not dead?Joys we dimly apprehend,Faces that smild and fled,Hopes born here, and born to end,Shall we follow?
Matthew Arnold
The Stranger
In the woods as I did walk,Dappled with the moon's beam,I did with a Stranger talk,And his name was Dream.Spurred his heel, dark his cloak,Shady-wide his bonnet's brim;His horse beneath a silvery oakGrazed as I talked with him.Softly his breast-brooch burned and shone;Hill and deep were in his eyes;One of his hands held mine, and oneThe fruit that makes men wise.Wondrously strange was earth to see,Flowers white as milk did gleam;Spread to Heaven the Assyrian Tree,Over my head with Dream.Dews were still betwixt us twain;Stars a trembling beauty shed;Yet - not a whisper comes againOf the words he said.
Walter De La Mare
Shadows
The shadow of the lantern on the wall,The lantern hanging from the twisted beam,The eye that sees the lantern, shadow and all.The crackle of the sinking fire in the grate,The far train, the slow echo in the coombe,The ear that hears fire, train and echo and all.The loveliness that is the secret shapeOf once-seen, sweet and oft-dreamed loveliness,The brain that builds shape, memory, dream and all....A white moon stares Time's thinning fabric through,And makes substantial insubstantial seem,And shapes immortal mortal as a dream;And eye and brain flicker as shadows doRestlessly dancing on a cloudy wall.
John Frederick Freeman
The House Of Dust: Part 02: 10: Sudden Death
Number four, the girl who died on the table,The girl with golden hair,The purpling body lies on the polished marble.We open the throat, and lay the thyroid bare . . .One, who held the ether-cone, remembersHer dark blue frightened eyes.He heard the sharp breath quiver, and saw her breastMore hurriedly fall and rise.Her hands made futile gestures, she turned her headFighting for breath; her cheeks were flushed to scarlet,And, suddenly, she lay dead.And all the dreams that hurried along her veinsCame to the darkness of a sudden wall.Confusion ran among them, they whirled and clamored,They fell, they rose, they struck, they shouted,Till at last a pallor of silence hushed them all.What was her name? Where had she walked that morn...
Conrad Aiken
By The Fire
We who are lovers sit by the fire,Cradled warm 'twixt thought and will,Sit and drowse like sleeping dogsIn the equipoise of all desire,Sit and listen to the stillSmall hiss and whisper of green logsThat burn away, that burn awayWith the sound of a far-off falling streamOf threaded water blown to steam,Grey ghost in the mountain world of grey.Vapours blue as distance riseBetween the hissing logs that showA glimpse of rosy heat below;And candles watch with tireless eyesWhile we sit drowsing here. I know,Dimly, that there exists a world,That there is time perhaps, and spaceOther and wider than this place,Where at the fireside drowsily curledWe hear the whisper and watch the flameBurn blinkless and inscrutable.And then...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
A Dream of Fair Women
I read, before my eyelids dropt their shade,The Legend of Good Women, long agoSung by the morning star of song, who madeHis music heard below;Dan Chaucer, the first warbler, whose sweet breathPreluded those melodious bursts that fillThe spacious times of great ElizabethWith sounds that echo still.And, for a while, the knowledge of his artHeld me above the subject, as strong galesHold swollen clouds from raining, tho my heart,Brimful of those wild tales,Charged both mine eyes with tears. In every landI saw, wherever light illumineth,Beauty and anguish walking hand in handThe downward slope to death.Those far-renowned brides of ancient songPeopled the hollow dark, like burning stars,And I heard sounds of ins...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Sympathetic Horror
From that sky livid, bizarreas your tortured destiny,what thoughts fill your empty heart,Freethinker, answer me.Insatiable and avidfor vague and obscure skies,Ill not groan like Ovid,banned from Rome and paradise.Skies, shores split and seamed,my prides mirrored in you:your clouds in mourning, too,are the hearses of my dreams,Hells reflected in your light,where my heart takes delight.
Charles Baudelaire
The Question.
1.I dreamed that, as I wandered by the way,Bare Winter suddenly was changed to Spring,And gentle odours led my steps astray,Mixed with a sound of waters murmuringAlong a shelving bank of turf, which layUnder a copse, and hardly dared to flingIts green arms round the bosom of the stream,But kissed it and then fled, as thou mightest in dream.2.There grew pied wind-flowers and violets,Daisies, those pearled Arcturi of the earth,The constellated flower that never sets;Faint oxslips; tender bluebells, at whose birthThe sod scarce heaved; and that tall flower that wets -Like a child, half in tenderness and mirth -Its mother's face with Heaven's collected tears,When the low wind, its playmate's voice, it hears.3.And in th...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Observatory
At noon, upon the mountain's purple height,Above the pine-woods and the clouds it shoneNo larger than the small white dome of shellLeft by the fledgling wren when wings are born.By night it joined the company of heaven,And, with its constant light, became a star.A needle-point of light, minute, remote,It sent a subtler message through the abyss,Held more significance for the seeing eyeThan all the darkness that would blot it out,Yet could not dwarf it. High in heaven it shone,Alive with all the thoughts, and hopes, and dreamsOf man's adventurous mind. Up there, I knewThe explorers of the sky, the pioneersOf science, now made ready to attackThat darkness once again, and win new worlds.
Alfred Noyes
Mahomed Akram's Appeal To The Stars
Oh, Silver Stars that shine on what I love, Touch the soft hair and sparkle in the eyes, -Send, from your calm serenity above, Sleep to whom, sleepless, here, despairing lies.Broken, forlorn, upon the Desert sand That sucks these tears, and utterly abased,Looking across the lonely, level land, With thoughts more desolate than any waste.Planets that shine on what I so adore, Now thrown, the hour is late, in careless rest,Protect that sleep, which I may watch no more, I, the cast out, dismissed and dispossessed.Far in the hillside camp, in slumber lies What my worn eyes worship but never see.Happier Stars! your myriad silver eyes Feast on the quiet face denied to me.Loved with a love beyond all word...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
The Swimmer
With short, sharp, violent lights made vivid,To southward far as the sight can roam,Only the swirl of the surges livid,The seas that climb and the surfs that comb.Only the crag and the cliff to norward,And the rocks receding, and reefs flung forward,And waifs wreckd seaward and wasted shorewardOn shallows sheeted with flaming foam.A grim, grey coast and a seaboard ghastly,And shores trod seldom by feet of men,Where the batterd hull and the broken mast lie,They have lain embedded these long years ten.Love! when we wanderd here together,Hand in hand through the sparkling weather,From the heights and hollows of fern and heather,God surely loved us a little then.The skies were fairer and shores were firmer,The blue sea over th...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Eyes Inside
There's cadencea real movementto the worldsthe gaze insidea flicker ofyour eyes.
Paul Cameron Brown
The Sea Spirit
Ah me! I shall not waken soonFrom dreams of such divinity!A spirit singing 'neath the moonTo me.Wild sea-spray driven of the stormIs not so wildly white as she,Who beckoned with a foam-white armTo me.With eyes dark green, and golden-greenLong locks that rippled drippingly,Out of the green wave she did leanTo me.And sang; till Earth and Heaven seemedA far, forgotten memory,And more than Heaven in her who gleamedOn me.Sleep, sweeter than love's face or home;And death's immutability;And music of the plangent foam,For me!Sweep over her! with all thy ships,With all thy stormy tides, O sea!The memory of immortal lipsFor me!
Madison Julius Cawein
My Room
To G. E. M. 'Tis a little room, my friend--Baby walks from end to end;All the things look sadly realThis hot noontide unideal;Vaporous heat from cope to basementAll you see outside the casement,Save one house all mud-becrusted,And a street all drought-bedusted!There behold its happiest vision,Trickling water-cart's derision!Shut we 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 with warm flush dyed!Lo, the ceiling glorified,As when, lost in tenderest pinks,White rose on the red rose thinks!But beneath, a hue right rosy,Red as a geranium-posy,Stains the air with power estranging,Known with unknown clouding, changin...
George MacDonald