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A Fancy
The world of dreams is all my own, Wherein I wander - free, alone; - And each weird, fervid fantasy Is dearer than earth's joys to me. The waking world I share with you; And yours, as mine, is the ocean's blue. For us both spring's early flowers are fair, Or the cold stars gleam through the frosty air. But in the world of dreams I rove Over sunny fields, or in shaded grove, - Such beauty your eyes never saw - And all is mine without let or law. Ah! the hopes and fears that come and go With my flying fancy, none may know; Though unsubstantial, it seems My real world - this world of dreams.
Helen Leah Reed
On Dreams, An Imitation Of Petronius
Petronii Fragmenta, xxx.THOSE dreams, that on the silent night intrude,And with false flitting shades our minds deludeJove never sends us downward from the skies;Nor can they from infernal mansions rise;But are all mere productions of the brain,And fools consult interpreters in vain.[1]For when in bed we rest our weary limbs,The mind unburden'd sports in various whims;The busy head with mimic art runs o'erThe scenes and actions of the day before.[2]The drowsy tyrant, by his minions led,To regal rage devotes some patriot's head.With equal terrors, not with equal guilt,The murderer dreams of all the blood he spilt.The soldier smiling hears the widow's cries,And stabs the son before the mother's eyes.With like r...
Jonathan Swift
The Dreams
Two dreams came down to earth one nightFrom the realm of mist and dew;One was a dream of the old, old days,And one was a dream of the new.One was a dream of a shady laneThat led to the pickerel pondWhere the willows and rushes bowed themselvesTo the brown old hills beyond.And the people that peopled the old-time dreamWere pleasant and fair to see,And the dreamer he walked with them againAs often of old walked he.Oh, cool was the wind in the shady laneThat tangled his curly hair!Oh, sweet was the music the robins madeTo the springtime everywhere!Was it the dew the dream had broughtFrom yonder midnight skies,Or was it tears from the dear, dead yearsThat lay in the dreamer's eyes?The other
Eugene Field
Dreams of Autumn
When through the heat of some long afternoonIn blazing August, on the grass I lie,And watch the white clouds move across the sky,On whose azure is faintly etched the moon,That, when the evening deepens, will be soonThe brightest figure of those hosts on high,My heart is discontented, and I sigh,For Autumn and its vapours; till I swoonUpon the vision of October daysIn dreaming London, when each mighty treeSheds daily more brown showers through the haze,Which lends each street Romance and Mystery -When pallid silver Sunshine only gleamsOn that grey Lovers' City of Sweet Dreams.Isle of Grain, 1916.
Paul Bewsher
A Man Dreams That He Is The Creator
I sat in heaven like the sunAbove a storm when winter was:I took the snowflakes one by oneAnd turned their fragile shapes to glass:I washed the rivers blue with rainAnd made the meadows green again.I took the birds and touched their springs,Until they sang unearthly joys:They flew about on golden wingsAnd glittered like an angel's toys:I filled the fields with flowers' eyes,As white as stars in Paradise.And then I looked on man and knewHim still intent on death - still proud;Whereat into a rage I flewAnd turned my body to a cloud:In the dark shower of my soulThe star of earth was swallowed whole.
Fredegond Shove
Life In A Dream
There is nothing so sweet as our life in our dreams, When we soar far on fancy's swift wing;For a thing in our dreams is all that it seems, And the songs are so sweet that we sing.Ah! the sun shines the brightest, and stars twinkle lightest At the moon in her silvery beams!There is nothing so gay as the life in our dreams, With its joy and its laughter and mirth;For the pleasure that teems is far greater, one deems, Than any he finds in the earth.There are homes are our natal, and nothing is fatal In the beautiful land of our dreams!There is nothing so bright as the life in our dreams, Far away from earth's trickery chance;There the music's wild screams and the wine in its streams Are both lost in the song and the ...
Edward Smyth Jones
Dreams.
I love a woman tenderly,But cannot know if she loves me.I press her hand, her lips I kiss,But still love's full assurance miss.Our waking life for ever seemsCleft by a veil of doubt and dreams.But love and night and sleep combineIn dreams to make her wholly mine.A sure love lights her eyes' deep blue,Her hands and lips are warm and true.Always the fact unreal seems,And truth I find alone in dreams.
John Hay
The Dream
This was my dream:It seemed the afternoonOf some deep tropic day; and yet the moonStood round and bright with golden alchemyHigh in a heaven bluer than the sea.Long lawny lengths of perishable cloudHung in a west o'er rolling forests bowed;Clouds raining colours, gold and violet,That, opening, seemed from mystic worlds to letHints down of Parian beauty and lost charmsOf dim immortals, young, with floating forms.And all about me fruited orchards grew,Pear, quince and peach, and plums of dusty blue;Rose-apricots and apples streaked with fire,Kissed into ripeness by the sun's desireAnd big with juice. And on far, fading hills,Down which it seemed a hundred torrent rillsFlashed rushing silver, vines and vines and vinesOf purple vi...
Madison Julius Cawein
A Reverie ["Did I dream of a song? or sing in a dream?"]
Did I dream of a song? or sing in a dream?Why ask when the night only knoweth?The night -- and the angel of sleep!But ever since then a music deep,Like a stream thro' a shadow-land, flowethUnder each thought of my spirit that growethInto the blossom and bloom of speech --Under each fancy that cometh and goeth --Wayward, as waves when evening breeze blowethOut of the sunset and into the beach.And is it a wonder I wept to-day?For I mused and thought, but I cannot sayIf I dreamed of a song, or sang in a dream.In the silence of sleep, and the noon of night;And now -- even now -- 'neath the words I write,The flush of the dream or the flow of the song --I cannot tell which -- moves strangely along.But why write more? I am puzzled sore:Did...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Dream
Because her eyes were far too deepAnd holy for a laugh to leapAcross the brink where sorrow triedTo drown within the amber tide;Because the looks, whose ripples kissedThe trembling lids through tender mist,Were dazzled with a radiant gleam -Because of this I called her "Dream."Because the roses growing wildAbout her features when she smiledWere ever dewed with tears that fellWith tenderness ineffable;Because her lips might spill a kissThat, dripping in a world like this,Would tincture death's myrrh-bitter streamTo sweetness - so I called her "Dream."Because I could not understandThe magic touches of a handThat seemed, beneath her strange control,To smooth the plumage of the soulAnd calm it, till, with folded ...
James Whitcomb Riley
Dreams Old And Nascent - Old
I have opened the window to warm my hands on the sillWhere the sunlight soaks in the stone: the afternoonIs full of dreams, my love, the boys are all stillIn a wistful dream of Lorna Doone.The clink of the shunting engines is sharp and fine,Like savage music striking far off, and thereOn the great, uplifted blue palace, lights stir and shineWhere the glass is domed in the blue, soft air.There lies the world, my darling, full of wonder and wistfulness and strangeRecognition and greetings of half-acquaint things, as I greet the cloudOf blue palace aloft there, among misty indefinite dreams that rangeAt the back of my life's horizon, where the dreamings of past lives crowd.Over the nearness of Norwood Hill, through the mellow veilOf the afternoon ...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Dream Voyageurs
To ports of balm through isles of muskThe gentle airs are leading us;To curtained calm and tents of dusk,The wood-wild things unheeding usWill share their hoards of hardihood,Cool dew and roots of fern for food,Frail berries full of the sun's blood.To planets bland with dales of dreamA tranquil life is leading us,We shall land from the languid stream,The musing shades, unheeding us,Will share their veils of angelhood,Thoughts that are tranced with mystic food,Still broodings tinct with a seraph's blood.
Duncan Campbell Scott
Only A Dream
Only a dream! Her head is bentOver the keys of the instrument,While her trembling fingers go astrayIn the foolish tune she tries to play.He smiles in his heart, though his deep, sad eyesNever change to a glad surpriseAs he finds the answer he seeks confessedIn glowing features, and heaving breast.Only a dream! Though the fete is grand,And a hundred hearts at her command,She takes no part, for her soul is sickOf the Coquette's art and the Serpent's trick, -She someway feels she would like to flingHer sins away as a robe, and springUp like a lily pure and white,And bloom alone for HIM to-night.Only a dream That the fancy weaves.The lids unfold like the rose's leaves,And th...
Dreams Old And Nascent - Nascent
My world is a painted fresco, where coloured shapesOf old, ineffectual lives linger blurred and warm;An endless tapestry the past has woven drapesThe halls of my life, compelling my soul to conform.The surface of dreams is broken,The picture of the past is shaken and scattered.Fluent, active figures of men pass along the railway, and I am wokenFrom the dreams that the distance flattered.Along the railway, active figures of men.They have a secret that stirs in their limbs as they moveOut of the distance, nearer, commanding my dreamy world.Here in the subtle, rounded fleshBeats the active ecstasy.In the sudden lifting my eyes, it is clearer,The fascination of the quick, restless Creator moving through the meshOf men, vibrating in ecst...
Thank God for dreams! I, desolate and lone, In the dark curtained night, did seem to beThe centre where all golden sun-rays shone, And, sitting there, held converse sweet with thee.No shadow lurked between us; all was bright And beautiful as in the hours gone by,I smiled, and was rewarded by the light Of olden days soft beaming from thine eye.Thank God, thank God for dreams!I thought the birds all listened; for thy voice Pulsed through the air, like beat of silver wings.It made each chamber of my soul rejoice And thrilled along my heart's tear-rusted strings.As some devout and ever-prayerful nun Tells her bright beads, and counts them o'er and o'er,Thy golden words I gathered, one by one, And slipped them into memo...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
I Dream
Oh, I have dreams. I sometimes dream of Life In the full meaning of that splendid word. Its subtle music which few men have heard,Though all may hear it, sounding through earth's strife.Its mountain heights by mystic breezes kissed Lifting their lovely peaks above the dust; Its treasures which no touch of time can rust,Its emerald seas, its dawns of amethyst, Its certain purpose, its serene repose, Its usefulness, that finds no hour for woes, This is my dream of Life.Yes, I have dreams. I ofttimes dream of Love As radiant and brilliant as a star. As changeless, too, as that fixed light afarWhich glorifies vast worlds of space above.Strong as the tempest when it holds its breath, Before it bursts in fury...
The Death-Dream
Who, now, put dreams into thy slumbering mind?Who, with bright Fear's lean taper, crossed a handAthwart its beam, and stooping, truth maligned,Spake so thy spirit speech should understand,And with a dread "He's dead!" awaked a pealOf frenzied bells along the vacant waysOf thy poor earthly heart; waked thee to steal,Like dawn distraught upon unhappy days,To prove nought, nothing? Was it Time's large voiceOut of the inscrutable future whispered so?Or but the horror of a little noiseEarth wakes at dead of night? Or does Love knowWhen his sweet wings weary and droop, and evenIn sleep cries audibly a shrill remorse?Or, haply, was it I who out of dreamStole but a little where shadows course,Called back to thee across the eternal stream?
Walter De La Mare
A Dream-Song
The stars are spinning their threads, And the clouds are the dust that flies,And the suns are weaving them up For the day when the sleepers arise.The ocean in music rolls, The gems are turning to eyes,And the trees are gathering souls For the day when the sleepers arise.The weepers are learning to smile, And laughter to glean the sighs,And hearts to bury their care and guile For the day when the sleepers arise.Oh, the dews and the moths and the daisy-red, The larks and the glimmers and flows!The lilies and sparrows and daily bread, And the something that nobody knows!
George MacDonald