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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


DAY DREAM by THOMAS MOORE

First Line: THEY BOTH WERE HUSH'D, THE VOICE, THE CHORDS

THEY both were hush'd, the voice, the chords, -
I heard but once that witching lay;
And few the notes, and few the words,
My spell-bound memory brought away;


Traces, remember'd here and there,
Like echoes of some broken strain;
Links of a sweetness lost in air,
That nothing now could join again. -


Ev'n these, too, ere the morning, fled;
And, though the charm still linger'd on,
That o'er each sense her song had shed,
The song itself was faded, gone;


Gone, like the thoughts that once were ours,
On summer days, ere youth had set;
Thoughts bright, we know, as summer flowers,
Though what they were, we now forget.


In vain, with hints from other strains,
I woo'd this truant air to come -
As birds are taught, on eastern plains,
To lure their wilder kindred home.




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