What though the truth may set us free? Better in bondage to have perished, Than to have lost eternally Each dear delusion we have cherished. Only a fool dsires a knife To scrape the glamour from his star, And holds a mirror up to life To see things as they really are. So, deaf to disapproving shout, I clutch my phantoms, bright or dim. For man grows very cold without A cloak of dreams to cover him. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A FIESOLAN IDYL by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR GOOD-NIGHT TO THE SEASON by WINTHROP MACKWORTH PRAED STILL, STILL WITH THEE by HARRIET BEECHER STOWE THE PLEASURES OF IMAGINATION; A POEM. ENLARGED VERSION: BOOK 1 by MARK AKENSIDE EPIGRAM by FRANCOIS GUILLAUME JEAN STANISLAS ANDRIEUX EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 22. 'TIS HONOURABLE TO BE LOVE'S MARTYR by PHILIP AYRES |