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Other Stars.
The night is dark, and yet it is not quite:Those stars are hid that other orbs may shine;Twin stars, whose rays illuminate the night,And cheer her gloom, but only deepen mine;For these fair stars are not what they do seem,But vanish'd eyes remember'd in a dream.The night is dark, and yet it brings no rest;Those eager eyes gaze on and banish sleep;Though flaming Mars has lower'd his crimson crest,And weary Venus pales into the deep,These two with tender shining mock my woeFrom out the distant heaven of long ago.The night is dark, and yet how bright they gleam!Oh! empty vision of a vanish'd light!Sweet eyes! must you for ever be a dreamDeep in my heart, and distant from my sight?For could you shine as once you shone before,The s...
Juliana Horatia Ewing
Hymn To Spiritual Desire
IMother 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 thy 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.IILike palpable music thou comest, like moonlight; and far, -Resonant bar upon bar, -The vibrating lyreOf the spirit responds with melodious fir...
Madison Julius Cawein
If
If life were but a dream, my Love,And death the waking time;If day had not a beam, my Love,And night had not a rhyme,--A barren, barren world were thisWithout one saving gleam;I 'd only ask that with a kissYou 'd wake me from the dream.If dreaming were the sum of days,And loving were the bane;If battling for a wreath of baysCould soothe a heart in pain,--I 'd scorn the meed of battle's might,All other aims aboveI 'd choose the human's higher right,To suffer and to love!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Land Of Hearts Made Whole
Do you know the way that goesOver fields of rue and rose,Warm of scent and hot of hue,Roofed with heaven's bluest blue,To the Vale of Dreams Come True?Do you know the path that twines,Banked with elder-bosks and vines,Under boughs that shade a stream,Hurrying, crystal as a gleam,To the Hills of Love a-Dream?Tell me, tell me, have you goneThrough the fields and woods of dawn,Meadowlands and trees that roll,Great of grass and huge of bole,To the Land of Hearts Made Whole?On the way, among the fields,Poppies lift vermilion shields,In whose hearts the golden Noon,Murmuring her drowsy tune,Rocks the sleepy bees that croon.On the way, amid the woods,Mandrakes muster multitudes,'Mid whose blo...
The Wishes.
Within the Great Mogul's domains there areFamiliar sprites of much domestic use:They sweep the house, and take a tidy careOf equipage, nor garden work refuse;But, if you meddle with their toil,The whole, at once, you're sure to spoil.One, near the mighty Ganges flood,The garden of a burgher goodWork'd noiselessly and well;To master, mistress, garden, boreA love that time and toil outwore,And bound him like a spell.Did friendly zephyrs blow,The demon's pains to aid?(For so they do, 'tis said.)I own I do not know.But for himself he rested not,And richly bless'd his master's lot.What mark'd his strength of love,He lived a fixture on the place,In spite of tendency to roveSo natural to his race.But brother sprites...
Jean de La Fontaine
The Morning Sun.
Perhaps you sleep now, fifty miles to the south, While I sit here and dream of you by night. The thick soft blankets drawn about your mouth Have made for you a nest of warm delight; Your short crisp hair is thrown abroad and spilled Upon the pillow's whiteness and your eyes Are quiet and the round soft lids are filled With sleep. But I shall watch until sunrise Creeps into chilly clouds and heavy air, Across the lands where you sleep and I wake, And I shall know the sun has seen you there, Unmoving though the winter morning break. Next, you will lift your hands and rub your eyes And turn to sleep again but wake and start And feel, half dreaming, with a dear surprise,...
Edward Shanks
The Wakeful Sleeper
When things are holding wonted pace In wonted paths, without a trace Or hint of neighbouring wonder, Sometimes, from other realms, a tone, A scent, a vision, swift, alone, Breaks common life asunder. Howe'er it comes, whate'er its door, It makes you ponder something more-- Unseen with seen things linking: To neighbours met one festive night, Was given a quaint and lovely sight, That set some of them thinking. They stand, in music's fetters bound By a clear brook of warbled sound, A canzonet of Haydn, When the door slowly comes ajar-- A little further--just as far As shows a tiny maiden. Softly she enters, her pink toes Daintily peeping, as she goes,...
George MacDonald
Desire We Past Illusions To Recall
Desire we past illusions to recall?To reinstate wild Fancy, would we hideTruths whose thick veil Science has drawn aside?No, let this Age, high as she may, installIn her esteem the thirst that wrought man's fall,The universe is infinitely wide;And conquering Reason, if self-glorified,Can nowhere move uncrossed by some new wallOr gulf of mystery, which thou alone,Imaginative Faith! canst overleap,In progress toward the fount of Love, the throneOf Power whose ministers the records keepOf periods fixed, and laws established, lessFlesh to exalt than prove its nothingness.
William Wordsworth
I Dream'd I Lay.
I. I dream'd I lay where flowers were springing Gaily in the sunny beam; List'ning to the wild birds singing, By a falling crystal stream: Straight the sky grew black and daring; Thro' the woods the whirlwinds rave; Trees with aged arms were warring. O'er the swelling drumlie wave.II. Such was my life's deceitful morning, Such the pleasure I enjoy'd: But lang or noon, loud tempests storming, A' my flowery bliss destroy'd. Tho' fickle fortune has deceiv'd me, She promis'd fair, and perform'd but ill; Of mony a joy and hope bereav'd me, I bear a heart shall support me still.
Robert Burns
Bereft, She Thinks She Dreams
I dream that the dearest I ever knew Has died and been entombed.I am sure it's a dream that cannot be true, But I am so overgloomedBy its persistence, that I would gladly Have quick death take me,Rather than longer think thus sadly; So wake me, wake me!It has lasted days, but minute and hour I expect to get arousedAnd find him as usual in the bower Where we so happily housed.Yet stays this nightmare too appalling, And like a web shakes me,And piteously I keep on calling, And no one wakes me!
Thomas Hardy
Desire
Sleep is a striking woman accosted by various men while in a dance; the warring desires thus present themselves as on a battlefield - hunger comes arrayed with red plumes to befit his appetites, sensuality somewhat decked out as a dandy in a mauve waistcoat and, of course, there is Fear, the most thwarted of the suitors, bejewelled with a flashing sabre, rattling it from the tail of his skinny stick horse, the pale charger riding to intercept the beautiful courtesan Sleep bestowing her favours illicitly wherein she would but choose.
Paul Cameron Brown
A Dream That Was Not All A Dream.
Through the half-curtained window stoleAn Autumn sunset's glow,As languid on my couch I layWith pulses weak and low.And then methought a presence stood,With shining feet and fair,Amid the waves of golden lightThat rippled through the air,And laid upon my heaving breast,With earnest glance and true,A babe, whose fair and gentle browNo shade of sorrow knew.A solemn joy was in my heart,--Immortal life was givenTo Earth, upon her battle-fieldTo discipline for Heaven.Soft music thrilled the quiet room,--An unseen host were nigh,Who left the infant pilgrim atThe threshold of our sky.A new, strange love woke in my heart,Defying all control,As on the soft air rose and fellThat birt...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
The Dream of the Children
The children awoke in their dreaming While earth lay dewy and still:They followed the rill in its gleaming To the heart-light of the hill.Its sounds and sights were forsaking The world as they faded in sleep,When they heard a music breaking Out from the heart-light deep.It ran where the rill in its flowing Under the star-light gayWith wonderful colour was glowing Like the bubbles they blew in their play.From the misty mountain under Shot gleams of an opal star:Its pathways of rainbow wonder Rayed to their feet from afar.From their feet as they strayed in the meadow It led through caverned aisles,Filled with purple and green light and shadow For mystic miles on miles.<...
George William Russell
The Fairies' Siege
I have been given my charge to keep,Well have I kept the same!Playing with strife for the most of my life,But this is a different game.I'11 not fight against swords unseen,Or spears that I cannot view,Hand him the keys of the place on your knees,'Tis the Dreamer whose dreams come true!Ask him his terms and accept them at once.Quick, ere we anger him, go!Never before have I flinched from the guns,But this is a different show.I'11 not fight with the Herald of God(I know what his Master can do!)Open the gate, he must enter in state,'Tis the Dreamer whose dreams come true!I'd not give way for an Emperor,I'd hold my road for a King,To the Triple Crown I would not bow down,But this is a different thing.I'11 not fig...
Rudyard
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 spellThat k...
The Vision In The Wood.
The husht September afternoon was sweet With rich and peaceful light. I could not hear On either side the sound of moving feet Although the hidden road was very near. The laden wood had powdered sun in it, Slipped through the leaves, a quiet messenger To tell me of the golden world outside Where fields of stubble stretched through counties wide. And yet I did not move. My head reposed Upon a tuft of dry and scented grass And, with half-seeing eyes, through eyelids closed, I watched the languid chain of shadows pass, Light as the slowly moving shade imposed By summer clouds upon a sea of glass, And strove to banish or to make more clear The elusive and persistent drea...
Foreshadowings
Fifteen miles and then the harbour! Here we cannot choose but stand,Faces thrust towards the day-break, listening for our native land!Close-reefed topsails shuddering over, straining down the groaning mast;For a tempest cleaves the darkness, hissing, howling, shrieking past!Lo! the air is flecked with stormbirds, and their melancholy wailLends a tone of deeper pathos to the melancholy gale!Whilst away they wheel to leeward, leaving in their rapid flightWind and water grappling wildly through the watches of the night.Yesterday we both were happy; but my soul is filled with change,And Im sad, my gallant comrade, with foreshadowings vague and strange!Dear old place, are we so near you? Like to one that speaks in sleep,Im talking, thinking wildly oer this moaning, madd...
Henry Kendall
Zeila (A Story from a Star)
From the mystic sidereal spaces,In the noon of a night 'mid of May,Came a spirit that murmured to me --Or was it the dream of a dream?No! no! from the purest of places,Where liveth the highest of races,In an unfallen sphere far away(And it wore Immortality's gleam)Came a Being. Hath seen on the seaThe sheen of some silver star shimmer'Thwart shadows that fall dim and dimmerO'er a wave half in dream on the deep?It shone on me thus in my sleep.Was I sleeping? Is sleep but the closing,In the night, of our eyes from the light?Doth the spirit of man e'en then rest?Or doth it not toil all the more?When the earth-wearied frame is reposing,Is the vision then veiled the less bright?When the earth from our sight hath been taken,
Abram Joseph Ryan