Classic and Contemporary Poetry
A NIGHT VISION, by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: I had a vision in the depth of night Last Line: And my breast heaving with sepulchral fears. Alternate Author Name(s): Brown, Isaac | ||||||||
Lucina shyning in silence of the nicht; The hevin being all full of starris bricht; To bed I went, bot there I tuke no rest, With hevy thocht I was so sair oppressed, That sair I langit after dayis licht. Of fortoun I complainit hevely, That echo to me stude so contrarously; And at the last, quhen I had turnyt oft For werines, on me ane slummer soft Came, with ane dreming and a fantesy. -- Dunbar. I HAD a vision in the depth of night -- A dream of glory -- one long thrill of gladness -- A thing of strangest meaning and delight; And yet upon my heart there came such sadness, And dim forebodings of my after years, That I awoke in sorrow and in tears! There stood revealed before me a bright maid, Clad in a white silk tunic, which displayed The beautiful proportions of her frame; And she did call upon me by my name -- And I did marvel at her voice, and shook With terror, but right soon the smiling look Of gentleness, that radiant maiden threw From her large sparkling eyes of deepest blue, Did reassure me. Breathless, I did gaze Upon that lovely one, in fond amaze, And marked her long white hair as it did flow, With wanton dalliance, o'er the pillared snow Of her swan-like neck; -- and then my eye grew dim With an exceeding lustre, for the slim And gauze-wove raiment of her bosom fair, Was somewhat ruffled by the midnight air; And as it gently heaved, there sprung to view Such glories underneath -- such sisters two Of rival loveliness! Oh, 'twere most vain For fond conceit to fancy such again. The robe she wore was broidered fetouslye With flower and leaf of richest imagerye; And threads of gold therein were entertwined With quaintest needlecraft; and to my mind It seemed, the waist of this most lovely one, Was clipped within a broad and azure zone, Studded with strange devices -- One small hand Waved gracefully a slender ivory wand, And with the other, ever and anon, She shook a harp, which, as the winds sighed past, Gave a right pleasant and bewitching tone To each wild vagrant blast. Meseems, After this wondrous guise, that maiden sweet Stood visible before me, while the beams Of Dian pale, laughed round her little feet With icy lustre, through the narrow pane; And this discourse she held in merry vein; Although methought 'twas counterfeited, and The matter strange, that none might understand. She told me, that the moon was in her wane -- And life was tiding on, and that the world Was waxen old -- that nature grew unkind, And men grew selfish quite, and sore bechurled -- That Honour was a bubble of the mind -- And Virtue was a nothing undefined -- And as for Woman, She, indeed, could claim A title all her own -- She had a name And place in Time's long chronicles, DECEIT -- And Glory was a phantom -- Death a cheat! She said I might remember her, for she Had trifled with me in mine infancy; And in those days, that now are long agone, Has tended me, as if I were her own And only offspring. When a very child, She said, her soothing whispers oft beguiled The achings of my heart -- that in my youth, She, too, had given me dreams of Honour, Truth, Of Glory and of Greatness -- and of Fame -- And the bright vision of a deathless name! And she had turned my eye, with upward look, To read the bravely star-enamelled book Of the blue skies -- and in the rolling spheres To con strange lessons, penned in characters Of most mysterious import -- she had made Life's thorny path to be all sown with flowers Of diverse form and fragrance, of each shade Of loveliness that glitters in the bowers Of princely damoisels, -- Nay, more, her hand Had plucked the bright flowers of another land, Belike of Faerye, and had woven them Like to a chaplet, or gay diadem, For me to wear in triumph -- But that she Had fostered me so long, she feared, I'd spoil With very tenderness, nor ever be Fit for this world's coarse drudgery and moil; Did she not even now take leave of me, And her protecting, loving arms uncoil For ever and for ever, -- and though late, Now leave me to self-guidance, and to fate. Then passed that glorious spirit, and the smile She whilome wore fled from her beauteous cheek; And paleness, and a troubled grief the while Subdued her voice. -- Methought I strove to speak Some words of tender sympathy, and caught Her small white trembling hand, but, she, distraught, Turned her fair form away, and nearer drew To where the clustering ivy leaves thick grew, And shaded half the casement -- There she stood, Like a tall crystal column, in the flood Of the fair moonshine, and right thoughtful-wise She seemed to scan the aspect of the skies; Sudden a tremulous tear filled either eye, Yet fell not on her cheek, but dubiously, Like dew gems upon a flower, hung quivering there; And, like a love-crazed maiden, she half sang, Half uttered mournful fancies in despair; And indistinctly in my ear there rung Something of years to be, -- of dark, dark years, Laden with sorrow, madness, fury, tears -- Of days that had no sunshine -- and of nights Estranged from slumber -- of harsh worldly slights -- Of cruel disappointments -- of a hell That gloweth in the bosom, fierce and fell, Which may not be extinguished -- of the pains Of journeying through lone and trackless plains Which have no limits -- and of savage faces, That showed no trait of pity! Then that maid Stretched her long arms to heaven, and wept for shame; And as upon her soul dim bodements came, Once more, in veriest sadness, thus she said: "I may not cheer him more! I may not breathe Life in his wasting limbs, nor healthy fire In his grief-sunken eye -- I may not wreathe Fresh flowers for him to gaze on, nor inspire Delicious dreamings when the paly host Of cares and troubles weigh his spirit down, And hopes delayed, in worse despair are lost; Unaided, he may sink upon the path, No hand of succour near, nor melting eye To yield its pittance poor of sympathy; Already, too successful have I weaved My tiny web of folly; undeceived, At length, he'll view his baseless fabric pass, Like fleeting shadows o'er the brittle glass, Leaving no substance there; and he may curse, With bitter malison, his too partial nurse, And charge her with his sufferings!" So wept That maid, in seeming sorrow, till there fell From her lips Grief's volume-word -- Farewell! And then, methought, she softly passed away, As a thin mist of glory on a ray Of purest moonshine; or like starlet bright Sailed onward through the ocean of the night! And then, meseems, I heard the wailing sound Of a wind-harp afar, and voice of one Who sung thereto a plaintive melody; And some words reached me, but the rest were drowned In dimest distance, and the hollow moan Of the night-breezes fitful sweeping by; Yet these stray words, erewhile on earth they fell, Told Hope had pitying smiled before her last farewell. Then all grew dark and loveless, and afar I saw the falling down of many a star, As the moon paled in sorrow -- And the roar Of darkly tumbling floods I heard, that dashed Through the deep fissures of the rifted rock -- While phantoms flitted by with ghastly mock, And jeers malign -- and demons on me glar'd Looks of infernal meaning; then in silence Troop'd onwards to their doom! Starting, I broke Sleep's leaden bonds of sorrow, and awoke, Wondering to find my eye-balls red with tears! And my breast heaving with sepulchral fears. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CAVALIER'S SONG by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL THE MERRY SUMMER MONTHS by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL A CAVEAT TO THE WIND by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL A MONODY by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL A SABBATH SUMMER NOON by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL A SOLEMN CONCEIT by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL CERTAIN PLEASANT VERSES TO THE LADY OF MY HEART by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL CHOICE OF DEATH by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL CLERKE RICHARD AND MAID MARGARET by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL COME DOWN, YE SPIRITS by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL |
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