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Rites Of Intensification
Did time on the Hegelian spirit, Freudian id, the totemic response to the unknowable where each phenomenon of nature became dream time itself, the electric crackle of God's Voice- movement from shadowy spectre to tight-lipped showmanship the learned empathy of tires careening around their throttled load.
Paul Cameron Brown
In Rome
At last the dream of youthStands fair and bright before me,The sunshine of the home of truthFalls tremulously o'er me.And tower, and spire, and lofty domeIn brightest skies are gleaming;Walk I, to-day, the ways of Rome,Or am I only dreaming?No, 'tis no dream; my very eyesGaze on the hill-tops seven;Where crosses rise and kiss the skies,And grandly point to Heaven.Gray ruins loom on ev'ry side,Each stone an age's story;They seem the very ghosts of prideThat watch the grave of glory.There senates sat, whose sceptre soughtAn empire without limit;There grandeur dreamed its dream and thoughtThat death would never dim it.There rulers reigned; yon heap of stonesWas once their gorgeous palace;...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Dream-March
"Wasn't it a funny dream! - perfectly bewild'rin'! - Last night, and night before, and night before that,Seemed like I saw the march o' regiments o' children, Marching to the robin's fife and cricket's rat-ta-tat!Lily-banners overhead, with the dew upon 'em, On flashed the little army, as with sword and flame;Like the buzz o' bumble-wings, with the honey on 'em, Came an eerie, cheery chant, chiming as it came: -Where go the children? Travelling! Travelling! Where go the children, travelling ahead?Some go to kindergarten; some go to day-school; Some go to night-school; and some go to bed!Smooth roads or rough roads, warm or winter weather, On go the children, tow-head and brown,Brave b...
James Whitcomb Riley
Little Elfie.
I have an elfish maiden child; She is not two years old;Through windy locks her eyes gleam wild, With glances shy and bold.Like little imps, her tiny hands Dart out and push and take;Chide her--a trembling thing she stands, And like two leaves they shake.But to her mind a minute gone Is like a year ago;So when you lift your eyes anon, They're at it, to and fro.Sometimes, though not oppressed with thought, She has her sleepless fits;Then to my room in blanket brought, In round-backed chair she sits;Where, if by chance in graver mood, A hermit she appears,Seated in cave of ancient wood, Grown very still with years.Then suddenly the pope she is, A playful ...
George MacDonald
The Landscape
You and your landscape! There it liesStripped, resuming its disguise,Clothed in dreams, made bare again,Symbol infinite of pain,Rapture, magic, mysteryOf vanished days and days to be.There's its sea of tidal grassOver which the south winds pass,And the sun-set's Tuscan goldWhich the distant windows holdFor an instant like a sphereBursting ere it disappear.There's the dark green woods which throveIn the spell of Leese's Grove.And the winding of the road;And the hill o'er which the skyStretched its pallied vacancyEre the dawn or evening glowed.And the wonder of the townSomewhere from the hill-top downNestling under hills and woodsAnd the meadow's solitudes. * * * * *
Edgar Lee Masters
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - February.
1. I TO myself have neither power nor worth, Patience nor love, nor anything right good; My soul is a poor land, plenteous in dearth-- Here blades of grass, there a small herb for food-- A nothing that would be something if it could; But if obedience, Lord, in me do grow, I shall one day be better than I know. 2. The worst power of an evil mood is this-- It makes the bastard self seem in the right, Self, self the end, the goal of human bliss. But if the Christ-self in us be the might Of saving God, why should I spend my force With a dark thing to reason of the light-- Not push it rough aside, and hold obedient course?
The Unattained
A vision beauteous as the morn, With heavenly eyes and tresses streaming,Slow glided o'er a field late shorn Where walked a poet idly dreaming.He saw her, and joy lit his face, "Oh, vanish not at human speaking,"He cried, "thou form of magic grace, Thou art the poem I am seeking."I've sought thee long! I claim thee now - My thought embodied, living, real."She shook the tresses from her brow. "Nay, nay!" she said, "I am ideal.I am the phantom of desire - The spirit of all great endeavour,I am the voice that says, 'Come higher,' That calls men up and up for ever."'Tis not alone thy thought supreme That here upon thy path has risen;I am the artist's highest dream, The ray of light he c...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Norsemen
Gift from the cold and silent Past!A relic to the present cast,Left on the ever-changing strandOf shifting and unstable sand,Which wastes beneath the steady chimeAnd beating of the waves of Time!Who from its bed of primal rockFirst wrenched thy dark, unshapely block?Whose hand, of curious skill untaught,Thy rude and savage outline wrought?The waters of my native streamAre glancing in the sun's warm beam;From sail-urged keel and flashing oarThe circles widen to its shore;And cultured field and peopled townSlope to its willowed margin down.Yet, while this morning breeze is bringingThe home-life sound of school-bells ringing,And rolling wheel, and rapid jarOf the fire-winged and steedless car,And voices from the wayside nea...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Congenial Horror
From this bizarre and livid skyTormented by your destiny,Into your vacant spirit flyWhat tho~ghts? respond, you libertine.Voracious in my appetiteFor the uncertain and unknown,I do not whine for paradiseAs Ovid did, expelled from Rome.Skies tom apart like wind-swept sands,You are the mirrors of my pride;Your mourning clouds, so black and wide,Are hearses that my dreams command,And you reflect in flashing lightThe Hell in which my heart delights.
Charles Baudelaire
Middle Harbour
Lonely wonder, delight past hoping!Sky-line broken by stirring trees,Grey rocks hither and shoreward sloping,Silent bracken about my knees.Dusky scrub where the sunlight splashes,Glimmer of waters barely seenHere the hope that was dust and ashesLeaps and flashes in flames of green.Through the boughs that are still before me,Misty blue of the harbour hills;Mighty Spirit of Earth who bore me,Here the peace of thy love distils.Fools have harried me; hell has driven,Bidding me toil for its fading shows:Back I spring to your arms, forgiven,Back to the truth that a dreamer knows.Gold and glory and fleeting pleasurePass in dust or as melting cloud:You can dower with eternal treasureHeart uplifted and head unbo...
John Le Gay Brereton
Heart's Encouragement.
Nor time nor all his minionsOf sorrow or of pain,Shall dash with vulture pinionsThe cup she fills againWithin the dream-dominionsOf life where she doth reign.Clothed on with bright desireAnd hope that makes her strong,With limbs of frost and fire,She sits above all wrong,Her heart, a living lyre,Her love, its only song.And in the waking pausesOf weariness and care,And when the dark hour draws hisBlack weapon of despair,Above effects and causesWe hear its music there.The longings life hath near itOf love we yearn to see;The dreams it doth inheritOf immortality;Are callings of her spiritTo something yet to be.
Madison Julius Cawein
Lines Written At Night.
Oh, thou surpassing beauty! that dost liveShrined in yon silent stream of glorious light!Spirit of harmony! that through the vastAnd cloud-embroidered canopy art spreadingThy wings, that o'er our shadowy earth hang brooding,Like a pale silver haze, betwixt the moonAnd the world's darker orb: beautiful, hail!Hail to thee! from her midnight throne of ether,Night looks upon the slumbering universe.There is no breeze on silver-crowned tree,There is no breath on dew-bespangled flower,There is no wind sighs on the sleepy wave,There is no sound hangs in the solemn air.All, all are silent, all are dreaming, all,Save those eternal eyes, that now shine forthWinking the slumberer's destinies. The moonSails on the horizon's verge, a moving glory,P...
Frances Anne Kemble
Songs Of The Night Watches, - The Morning Watch.
THE COMING IN OF THE "MERMAIDEN."The moon is bleached as white as wool,And just dropping under;Every star is gone but three,And they hang far asunder, -There's a sea-ghost all in gray,A tall shape of wonder!I am not satisfied with sleep, -The night is not ended.But look how the sea-ghost comes,With wan skirts extended,Stealing up in this weird hour,When light and dark are blended.A vessel! To the old pier endHer happy course she's keeping;I heard them name her yesterday:Some were pale with weeping;Some with their heart-hunger sighed,She's in, - and they are sleeping.O! now with fancied greetings blest,They comfort their long aching:The sea of sleep hath borne to themWhat would not come...
Jean Ingelow
In Midnight Sleep
In midnight sleep, of many a face of anguish,Of the look at first of the mortally wounded - of that indescribable look;Of the dead on their backs, with arms extended wide,I dream, I dream, I dream.Of scenes of nature, fields and mountains;Of skies, so beauteous after a storm - and at night the moon so unearthly bright,Shining sweetly, shining down, where we dig the trenches and gather the heaps,I dream, I dream, I dream.Long, long have they pass'd - faces and trenches and fields;Where through the carnage I moved with a callous composure - or away from the fallen,Onward I sped at the time - But now of their forms at night,I dream, I dream, I dream.
Walt Whitman
The House Of Dust: Part 02: 03: Interlude
The warm sun dreams in the dust, the warm sun fallsOn bright red roofs and walls;The trees in the park exhale a ghost of rain;We go from door to door in the streets again,Talking, laughing, dreaming, turning our faces,Recalling other times and places . . .We crowd, not knowing why, around a gate,We crowd together and wait,A stretcher is carried out, voices are stilled,The ambulance drives away.We watch its roof flash by, hear someone sayA man fell off the building and was killed,Fell right into a barrel . . . We turn againAmong the frightened eyes of white-faced men,And go our separate ways, each bearing with himA thing he tries, but vainly, to forget,A sickened crowd, a stretcher red and wet.A hurdy-gurdy sings in the crowded str...
Conrad Aiken
You Will Forget Me.
You will forget me. The years are so tender, They bind up the wounds which we think are so deep; This dream of our youth will fade out as the splendor Fades from the skies when the sun sinks to sleep; The cloud of forgetfulness, over and over Will banish the last rosy colors away, And the fingers of time will weave garlands to cover The scar which you think is a life-mark to-day. You will forget me. The one boon you covet Now above all things will soon seem no prize; And the heart, which you hold not in keeping to prove it True or untrue, will lose worth in your eyes. The one drop to-day, that you deem only wanting To fill your life-cup to the brim, soon will seem But a val...
Hope Deferred
Summer is come again. The sun is bright, And the soft wind is breathing. Airy joy Is sparkling in thine eyes, and in their light My soul is shining. Come; our day's employ Shall be to revel in unlikely things, In gayest hopes, fondest imaginings, And make-believes of bliss. Come, we will talk Of waning moons, low winds, and a dim sea; Till this fair summer, deepening as we walk, Has grown a paradise for you and me. But ah, those leaves!--it was not summer's mouth Breathed such a gold upon them. And look there-- That beech how red! See, through its boughs, half-bare, How low the sun lies in the mid-day south!-- The sweetness is but one pined memory flown Back from our summer, wandering alone!
The Captive's Dream
Methought I saw him but I knew him not;He was so changed from what he used to be,There was no redness on his woe-worn cheek,No sunny smile upon his ashy lips,His hollow wandering eyes looked wild and fierce,And grief was printed on his marble brow,And O I thought he clasped his wasted hands,And raised his haggard eyes to Heaven, and prayedThat he might die, I had no power to speak,I thought I was allowed to see him thus;And yet I might not speak one single word;I might not even tell him that I livedAnd that it might be possible if search were made,To find out where I was and set me free,O how I longed to clasp him to my heart,Or but to hold his trembling hand in mine,And speak one word of comfort to his mind,I struggled wildly but it was ...
Anne Bronte