Nightin the narrow darkness of my garret, I dream that I am dead: The ages close and open, And stagnant breezes mock my life; And yellow sands are shifting slowly, And shallow women laugh. A sour-faced saint is singing The anthems of an ancient faith; And far away, at sea, White sails are glimmering in the moonlight, And drunken men play dice on board Of galleons slowly sinking ... The ages close and open, The saint, the ships are gone And lonely wolves are roaming Over a dreary desert land, And someone blows a trumpet, And I awaken from my dream. Dawnand through the window of my garret, I watch a crimson circle rise, And ask myself in silence: Is this the dream, and was I awake before Or has a dream just vanished with the dawn? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FOR A' THAT AND A' THAT by CHARLES WILLIAM SHIRLEY BROOKS A SHROPSHIRE LAD: 54 by ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN A TRIP TO PARIS AND BELGIUM: 16. ANTWERP TO GHENT by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI TRANQUIL HABIT by AUGUSTE ANGELLIER A PRAYER FOR THE NEW YEAR by LAURA F. ARMITAGE HYMN TO THE WINDS by JOACHIM DU BELLAY |