IT is no dream! yet haunting visions come, Most like remembrance, to my troubled mind, Thoughts that I cannot crush or fling behind, Of some old grouped trees, and cottage home, And hills, which in a boyhood I did roam The livelong summer day: I cannot find Realities for things like these, which bind My heart into a strange belief of some Life before living. Does the spirit sleep, Since 'tis immortal, until tardy fate Shuts it within this frail and wayward heap Of clay? Or, as the wise of old relate, Are Lethe's waters not too dull or deep, To quench all memory of a former state? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MEMORY by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH THE DESERTED GARDEN by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING THE GHOSTS OF THE BUFFALOES by NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY CLORINDA AND DAMON by ANDREW MARVELL THE BLACKBIRD by ALFRED TENNYSON ECCE IN DESERTO by HENRY AUGUSTIN BEERS PSALM 7; UPON WORDS OF CHUSH THE BENJAMITE; AUGUST 14, 1653 by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE |