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Sonnet XXVIII.
The edge of the green wave whitely doth hissUpon the wetted sand. I look, yet dream.Surely reality cannot be this!Somehow, somewhere this surely doth but seem!The sky, the sea, this great extent disclosedOf outward joy, this bulk of life we feel,Is not something, but something interposed.Only what in this is not this is real.If this be to have sense, if to be awakeBe but to see this bright, great sleep of things,For the rarer potion mine own dreams I'll takeAnd for truth commune with imaginings, Holding a dream too bitter, a too fair curse, This common sleep of men, the universe.
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
The Realm Of Azure
O realm of azure! O realm of light and colour, of youth and happiness! I have beheld thee in dream. We were together, a few, in a beautiful little boat, gaily decked out. Like a swan's breast the white sail swelled below the streamers frolicking in the wind.I knew not who were with me; but in all my soul I felt that they were young, light-hearted, happy as I!But I looked not indeed on them. I beheld all round the boundless blue of the sea, dimpled with scales of gold, and overhead the same boundless sea of blue, and in it, triumphant and mirthful, it seemed, moved the sun.And among us, ever and anon, rose laughter, ringing and gleeful as the laughter of the gods!And on a sudden, from one man's lips or another's, would flow words, songs of divine beauty and inspiration, and power ... it seeme...
Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev
Absence
Good-night, my love, for I have dreamed of theeIn waking dreams, until my soul is lost--Is lost in passion's wide and shoreless sea,Where, like a ship, unruddered, it is tostHither and thither at the wild waves' will.There is no potent Master's voice to stillThis newer, more tempestuous Galilee!The stormy petrels of my fancy flyIn warning course across the darkening green,And, like a frightened bird, my heart doth cryAnd seek to find some rock of rest betweenThe threatening sky and the relentless wave.It is not length of life that grief doth crave,But only calm and peace in which to die.Here let me rest upon this single hope,For oh, my wings are weary of the wind,And with its stress no more may strive or cope.One cry has dulle...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Beyond.
Beyond yon dim old mountain's shadowy height, The restless sun droops low his grand old face;While downward sweeps the trembling veil of night, To hide the earth; the frost king's filmy laceRests on the mountain's hoary snow-crowned head, And adds to it a softened grace; the lightWhich dies afar in faint and fading red In purple shadows circles near. The flightOf birds across the vast and silent plains Awakes the echoes of the sleeping earth;Of all the summer beauty naught remains, There come no tidings of the spring's glad birth.Beyond the valley and far-off height The birds in wandering do take their way;Ah, whither is their strange and trackless flight Amid the dying embers of the day;
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
The Dream
Love, if I weep it will not matter, And if you laugh I shall not care; Foolish am I to think about it, But it is good to feel you there. Love, in my sleep I dreamed of waking,-- White and awful the moonlight reached Over the floor, and somewhere, somewhere, There was a shutter loose,--it screeched! Swung in the wind,--and no wind blowing!-- I was afraid, and turned to you, Put out my hand to you for comfort,-- And you were gone! Cold, cold as dew, Under my hand the moonlight lay! Love, if you laugh I shall not care, But if I weep it will not matter,-- Ah, it is good to feel you there!
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Elusion
IMy soul goes out to her who says,"Come, follow me and cast off care!"Then tosses back her sun-bright hair,And like a flower before me swaysBetween the green leaves and my gaze:This creature like a girl, who smilesInto my eyes and softly laysHer hand in mine and leads me miles,Long miles of haunted forest ways.IISometimes she seems a faint perfume,A fragrance that a flower exhaledAnd God gave form to; now, unveiled,A sunbeam making gold the gloomOf vines that roof some woodland roomOf boughs; and now the silvery soundOf streams her presence doth assume -Music, from which, in dreaming drowned,A crystal shape she seems to bloom.IIISometimes she seems the light that liesOn foam of w...
Madison Julius Cawein
November, 1851
What dost thou here, O soul,Beyond thy own control,Under the strange wild sky?0 stars, reach down your hands,And clasp me in your silver bands,I tremble with this mystery!--Flung hither by a chanceOf restless circumstance,Thou art but here, and wast not sent;Yet once more mayest thou drawBy thy own mystic lawTo the centre of thy wonderment. Why wilt thou stop and start?Draw nearer, oh my heart,And I will question thee most wistfully;Gather thy last clear resolutionTo look upon thy dissolution. The great God's life throbs far and free,And thou art but a sparkKnown only in thy dark,Or a foam-fleck upon the awful ocean,Thyself thy slender dignity,Thy own thy vexing mystery,In the vast...
George MacDonald
To Elia
Elia, thy reveries and visioned themesTo care's lorn heart a luscious pleasure prove;Wild as the mystery of delightful dreams,Soft as the anguish of remembered love:Like records of past days their memory dancesMid the cool feelings manhood's reason brings,As the unearthly visions of romancesPeopled with sweet and uncreated things;--And yet thy themes thy gentle worth enhances!Then wake again thy wild harp's tenderest strings,Sing on, sweet Bard, let fairy loves againSmile in thy dreams, with angel ecstasies;Bright over our souls will break the heavenly strainThrough the dull gloom of earth's realities.
John Clare
Perception
While I have vision, while the glowing-bodied,Drunken with light, untroubled clouds, with all this cold sphered sky,Are flushed above trees where the dew falls secretly,Where no man goes, where beasts move silently,As gently as light feathered winds that fallChill among hollows filled with sighing grass;While I have vision, while my mind is borneA finger's length above reality,Like that small plaining bird that drifts and dropsAmong these soft lapped hollows;Robed gods, whose passing fills calm nights with sudden wind,Whose spears still bar our twilight, bend and fillWind-shaken, troubled spaces with some peace,With clear untroubled beauty;That I may rise not chill and shrilling through perpetual day,Remote, amazèd, larklike, but may holdThe ho...
Peter Courtney Quennell, Sir
A Vision Of Philosophy.
'Twas on the Red Sea coast, at morn, we metThe venerable man;[1] a healthy bloomMingled its softness with the vigorous thoughtThat towered upon his brow; and when he spoke'Twas language sweetened into song--such holy soundsAs oft, they say, the wise and virtuous hear,Prelusive to the harmony of heaven,When death is nigh; and still, as he unclosed[2]His sacred lips, an odor, all as blandAs ocean-breezes gather from the flowersThat blossom in Elysium, breathed around,With silent awe we listened, while he toldOf the dark veil which many an age had hungO'er Nature's form, till, long explored by man,The mystic shroud grew thin and luminous,And glimpses of that heavenly form shone through:--Of magic wonders, that were known and ...
Thomas Moore
The Body
When I had dreamed and dreamed what woman's beauty was,And how that beauty seen from unseen surely flowed,I turned and dreamed again, but sleeping now no more:My eyes shut and my mind with inward vision glowed."I did not think!" I cried, seeing that wavering shapeThat steadied and then wavered, as a cherry bough in JuneLifts and falls in the wind--each fruit a fruit of light;And then she stood as clear as an unclouded moon.As clear and still she stood, moonlike remotely near;I saw and heard her breathe, I years and years away.Her light streamed through the years, I saw her clear and still,Shape and spirit together mingling night with day.Water falling, falling with the curve of timeOver green-hued rock, then plunging to its poolFar, far b...
John Frederick Freeman
Aedh Tells Of A Valley Full Of Lovers
I dreamed that I stood in a valley, and amid sighs,For happy lovers passed two by two where I stood;And I dreamed my lost love came stealthily out of the woodWith her cloud-pale eyelids falling on dream-dimmed eyes:I cried in my dream O women bid the young men layTheir heads on your knees, and drown their eyes with your hair,Or remembering hers they will find no other face fairTill all the valleys of the world have been withered away.
William Butler Yeats
The Ruling Thought.
Most sweet, most powerful, Controller of my inmost soul; The terrible, yet precious gift Of heaven, companion kind Of all my days of misery, O thought, that ever dost recur to me; Of thy mysterious power Who speaketh not? Who hath not felt Its subtle influence? Yet, when one is by feeling deep impelled Its secret joys and sorrows to unfold, The theme seems ever new however old. How isolated is my mind, Since thou in it hast come to dwell! As by some magic spell, My other thoughts have all, Like lightning, disappeared; And thou, alone, like some huge tower, In a deserted plain, Gigantic, solitary, dost remain. How worthless quite, S...
Giacomo Leopardi
Hymn To 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, yearn for 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 respond...
Longing
Come to me in my dreams, and thenBy day I shall be well again!For so the night will more than payThe hopeless longing of the day.Come, as thou cam'st a thousand times,A messenger from radiant climes,And smile on thy new world, and beAs kind to others as to me!Or, as thou never cam'st in sooth,Come now, and let me dream it truth,And part my hair, and kiss my brow,And say, My love why sufferest thou?Come to me in my dreams, and thenBy day I shall be well again!For so the night will more than payThe hopeless longing of the day.
Matthew Arnold
The Meeting Of Spirits.
From out the dark of death, before the gatesFlung wide, that open into paradise--More radiant than the white gates of the morn--A human soul, new-born,Stood with glad wonder in its luminous eyes,For all the glory of that blessed placeFlowed thence, and made a halo round the face--gentle, and strong with the rapt faith that waitsAnd faints not: sweet with hallowing painThe face was, as a sunset after rain,with a grave tender brightness. Now it turnedFrom the white splendours where God's glory burned,And the long ranks of quiring cherubim--Each with wing-shaded eyelids, near the throne,Who sang--and ceased not--the adoring hymnOf Holy, Holy! And the cloud of smokeWent up from the waved censers, with the prayersOf saints, that wafted outward...
Kate Seymour Maclean
The Ideal.
Thee have I seen in some waste Arden old,A white-browed maiden by a foaming stream,With eyes profound and looks like threaded gold,And features like a dream.Upon thy wrist the jessied falcon fleet,A silver poniard chased with imageriesHung at a buckled belt, while at thy feetThe gasping heron dies.Have fancied thee in some quaint ruined keepA maiden in chaste samite, and her mienLike that of loved ones visiting our sleep,Or of a fairy queen.She, where the cushioned ivy dangling hoarDisturbs the quiet of her sable hair,Pores o'er a volume of romantic lore,Or hums an olden air.Or a fair Bradamant both brave and just,Intense with steel, her proud face lit with scorn,At heathen castles, demons' dens of lust,
Parting
As from our dream we died awayFar off I felt the outer things;Your wind-blown tresses round me play,Your bosom's gentle murmurings.And far away our faces metAs on the verge of the vast spheres;And in the night our cheeks were wet,I could not say with dew or tears.As one within the Mother's heartIn that hushed dream upon the heightWe lived, and then we rose to part,Because her ways are infinite.
George William Russell