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Let Them Go
Let the dream go. Are there not other dreams In vastness of clouds hid from thy sightThat yet shall gild with beautiful gold gleams, And shoot the shadows through and through with light? What matters one lost vision of the night? Let the dream go!!Let the hope set. Are there not other hopes That yet shall rise like new stars in thy sky?Not long a soul in sullen darkness gropes Before some light is lent it from on high; What folly to think happiness gone by! Let the hope set!Let the joy fade. Are there not other joys, Like frost-bound bulbs, that yet shall start and bloom?Severe must be the winter that destroys The hardy roots locked in their silent tomb. What cares the earth for her ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Epimetheus Or The Poet's Afterthought
Have I dreamed? or was it real, What I saw as in a vision,When to marches hymenealIn the land of the Ideal Moved my thought o'er Fields Elysian?What! are these the guests whose glances Seemed like sunshine gleaming round me?These the wild, bewildering fancies,That with dithyrambic dances As with magic circles bound me?Ah! how cold are their caresses! Pallid cheeks, and haggard bosoms!Spectral gleam their snow-white dresses,And from loose dishevelled tresses Fall the hyacinthine blossoms!O my songs! whose winsome measures Filled my heart with secret rapture!Children of my golden leisures!Must even your delights and pleasures Fade and perish with the capture?Fair they seemed,...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Dreamers
The gypsies passed her little gate--She stopped her wheel to see,--A brown-faced pair who walked the road,Free as the wind is free;And suddenly her tidy roomA prison seemed to be.Her shining plates against the walls,Her sunlit, sanded floor,The brass-bound wedding chest that heldHer linen's snowy store,The very wheel whose humming died,--Seemed only chains she bore.She watched the foot-free gypsies pass;She never knew or guessedThe wistful dream that drew them close--The longing in each breastSome day to know a home like hers,Wherein their hearts might rest.
Theodosia Garrison
Hymn To Spiritual Desire
I.Mother of visions, with lineaments dulcet as numbersBreathed on the eyelids of Love by music that slumbers,Secretly, sweetly, O presence of fire and snow,Thou comest mysterious,In beauty imperious,Clad on with dreams and the light of no world that we know:Deep to my innermost soul am I shaken,Helplessly shaken and tossed,And of they tyrannous yearnings so utterly taken,My lips, unsatisfied, thirst;Mine eyes are accurstWith longings for visions that far in the night are forsaken;And mine ears, in listening lost,Yearn, waiting the note of a chord that will never awaken.II.Like palpable music thou comest, like moonlight; and far,Resonant bar upon bar,The vibrating lyreOf the spirit responds with melodious fire...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Higher Pantheism
The Higher PantheismThe sun, the moon, the stars, the seas, the hills and the plainsAre not these, O Soul, the Vision of Him who reigns?Is not the Vision He? tho He be not that which He seems?Dreams are true while they last, and do we not live in dreams?Earth, these solid stars, this weight of body and limb,Are they not sign and symbol of thy division from Him?Dark is the world to thee: thyself art the reason why;For is He not all but that which has power to feel I am I?Glory about thee, without thee; and thou fulfillest thy doomMaking Him broken gleams, and a stifled splendour and gloom.Speak to Him thou for He hears, and Spirit with Spirit can meetCloser is He than breathing, and nearer than hands and feet.G...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
A Flower's Song
Star! Star, why dost thou shineEach night upon my brow?Why dost thou make me dream the dreamsThat I am dreaming now?Star! Star, thy home is high --I am of humble birth;Thy feet walk shining o'er the sky,Mine, only on the earth.Star! Star, why make me dream?My dreams are all untrue;And why is sorrow dark for meAnd heaven bright for you?Star! Star, oh, hide thy ray,And take it off my face;Within my lowly home I stay,Thou, in thy lofty place.Star! Star, and still I dream,Along thy light afarI seem to soar until I seemTo be, like you, a star.
Abram Joseph Ryan
Aedh Wishes For The Cloths Of Heaven
Had I the heavens embroidered cloths,Enwrought with golden and silver light,The blue and the dim and the dark clothsOf night and light and the half light,I would spread the cloths under your feet:But I, being poor, have only my dreams;I have spread my dreams under your feet;Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.
William Butler Yeats
O Let Me Dream The Dreams Of Long Ago
Call me not back, O cold and crafty world:I scorn your thankless thanks and hollow praise.Wiser than seer or scientist contentTo tread no paths beyond these bleating hills,Here let me lie beneath this dear old elm,Among the blossoms of the clover-fields,And listen to the humming of the bees.Here in those far-off, happy, boyhood years,When all my world was bounded by these hills,I dreamed my first dreams underneath this elm.Dreamed? Aye, and builded castles in the clouds;Dreamed, and made glad a fond, proud mother's heart,Now moldering into clay on yonder hill;Dreamed till my day-dreams paved the world with gold;Dreamed till my mad dreams made one desolate;Dreamed O my soul, and was it all a dream?As I lay dreaming under this old elm,
Hanford Lennox Gordon
The Dream
All trembling in my arms Aminta lay,Defending of the bliss I strove to take;Raising my rapture by her kind delay,Her force so charming was and weak.The soft resistance did betray the grant,While I pressed on the heaven of my desires;Her rising breasts with nimbler motions pant;Her dying eyes assume new fires.Now to the height of languishment she grows,And still her looks new charms put on;Now the last mystery of Love she knows,We sigh, and kiss: I waked, and all was done.`Twas but a dream, yet by my heart I knew,Which still was panting, part of it was true:Oh how I strove the rest to have believed;Ashamed and angry to be undeceived!
Aphra Behn
The Glimpse
Art thou asleep? or have thy wingsWearied of my unchanging skies?Or, haply, is it fading dreamsAre in my eyes?Not even an echo in my heartTells me the courts thy feet trod last,Bare as a leafless wood it is,The summer past.My inmost mind is like a bookThe reader dulls with lassitude,Wherein the same old lovely wordsSound poor and rude.Yet through this vapid surface, ISeem to see old-time deeps; I see,Past the dark painting of the hour,Life's ecstasy.Only a moment; as when dayIs set, and in the shade of night,Through all the clouds that compassed her,Stoops into sightPale, changeless, everlasting Dian,Gleams on the prone Endymion,Troubles the dulness of his dreams:And then i...
Walter De La Mare
A Dreamer Of Dreams
He lived beyond men, and so stoodAdmitted to the brotherhoodOf beauty: - dreams, with which he trodCompanioned like some sylvan god.And oft men wondered, when his thoughtMade all their knowledge seem as naught,If he, like Uther's mystic son,Had not been born for Avalon.When wandering mid the whispering trees,His soul communed with every breeze;Heard voices calling from the glades,Bloom-words of the Leimoniäds;Or Dryads of the ash and oak,Who syllabled his name and spokeWith him of presences and powersThat glimpsed in sunbeams, gloomed in showers.By every violet-hallowed brook,Where every bramble-matted nookRippled and laughed with water sounds,He walked like one on sainted grounds,Fearing intrusion on the spe...
Dream-Song.
Cam'st thou not nigh to meIn that one glimpse of theeWhen thy lips, tremblingly, Said: "My Beloved."'Twas but a moment's space,And in that crowded placeI dared not scan thy face O! my Beloved.Yet there may come a time(Though loving be a crimeOnly allowed in rhyme To us, Beloved),When safe 'neath sheltering armI may, without alarm,Hear thy lips, close and warm, Murmur: "Beloved!"
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Golden Dream
Golden dream of summer morn, By a well-remembered streamIn the land where I was born, Golden dream!Ripples, by the glancing beam Lightly kissed in playful scorn,Meadows moist with sunlit steam.When I lift my eyelids worn Like a fair mirage you seem,In the winter dawn forlorn, Golden dream!
Robert Fuller Murray
Let Them Go.
Let the dream go. Are there not other dreams In vastness of clouds hid from thy sightThat yet shall gild with beautiful gold gleams, And shoot the shadows through and through with light? What matters one lost vision of the night? Let the dream go!Let the hope set. Are there not other hopes That yet shall rise like new stars in thy sky?Not long a soul in sullen darkness gropes Before some light is lent it from on high; What folly to think happiness gone by! Let the hope set!Let the joy fade. Are there not other joys, Like frost-bound bulbs, that yet shall start and bloom?Severe must be the winter that destroys The hardy roots locked in their silent tomb. What cares the earth for her brief time of gloo...
Avalon
I Dreamed my soul went wandering inAn island dim with mystery;An island that, because of sin,No mortal eye shall ever see.And while I walked, one came, unseen,And gazed into my eyes: ah me!Her presence was a rose betweenThe wind and me, blown dreamily.The lily, that lifts up its dome,A tabernacle for the bee,A faery chapel fair as foam,Had not her absolute purity.The bird, that hymns the falling leaf,That breaks its heart in melody,Says to the soul no raptured griefSuch as her presence said to me.That moment when I felt her eyes,Their starry transport, instantlyI felt the indomitable skies,With all their worlds, were less to me.And when her hand lay in my own,Far intimations flashed th...
Gone
S. M. A.Gone! and there's not a gleam of you,Faces that float into far away;Gone! and we can only dream of youEach as you fade like a star away.Fade as a star in the sky from us,Vainly we look for your light again;Hear ye the sound of a sigh from us?"Come!" and our hearts will be bright again.Come! and gaze on our face once more,Bring us the smiles of the olden days;Come! and shine in your place once more,And change the dark into golden days.Gone! gone! gone! Joy is fled for us;Gone into the night of the nevermore,And darkness rests where you shed for usA light we will miss ~forevermore~.Faces! ye come in the night to us;Shadows! ye float in the sky of sleep;Shadows! ye bring nothing bright to us;...
From Dewy Dreams, My Soul, Arise
From dewy dreams, my soul, arise,From loves deep slumber and from death,For lo! the treees are full of sighsWhose leaves the morn admonisheth.Eastward the gradual dawn prevailsWhere softly-burning fires appear,Making to tremble all those veilsOf grey and golden gossamer.While sweetly, gently, secretly,The flowery bells of morn are stirredAnd the wise choirs of faeryBegin (innumerous!) to be heard.
James Joyce
Scenes Of The Mind
I have run where festival was loudWith drum and brass among the crowdOf panic revellers, whose criesAffront the quiet of the skies;Whose dancing lights contract the deepInfinity of night and sleepTo a narrow turmoil of troubled fire.And I have found my heart's desireIn beechen caverns that autumn fillsWith the blue shadowiness of distant hills;Whose luminous grey pillars bearThe stooping sky: calm is the air,Nor any sound is heard to marThat crystal silence - as from far,Far off a man may seeThe busy world all utterlyHushed as an old memorial scene.Long evenings I have sat and beenStrangely content, while in my handsI held a wealth of coloured strands,Shimmering plaits of silk and skeinsOf soft bright wool. Each co...
Aldous Leonard Huxley