Dreams



Run with me, elves, and lay me on that bed
    Bud-strewn beneath my cirque of sister trees,
Wherethrough the young Moon hath embroidered
    Faint soothing-spell in silver traceries;
Run with me, for I feel the need of dreams;
Earth palls, and naught is fair but that which seems.

Fashion thin horns of blossom-tubes and blow;
    Tinkle the lucent pebbles of the rill;
Fetch me a mating bird to twitter low;
    Spin sounds of night, fine-drawn, remote and shrill;
And let that elfin whom I hold most dear
Whisper a certain name within mine ear.

Then, while I sleep, the very tender Moon
    Ne'er dreamed such sport with her Endymion,
Nor any love-rapt mortal, late or soon,
    Such snatch of rapture from the Immortals won
As I, that, waking, have become so dull,
But in my dreams, so glad and beautiful.



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From Joy, and Other Poems, by Danske Dandridge. Second Edition. New York and London: G.P. Putnam's Sons - Knickerbocker Press, 1900.