Rest, rest; the troubled breast Panteth evermore for rest: -- Be it sleep, or be it death, Rest is all it coveteth. Tell me, dost thou remember the old time We sat together by that sunny stream, And dreamed our happiness was too sublime Only to be a dream? Gazing, till steadfast gazing made us blind, We watched the fishes leaping at their play; Thinking our love too tender and too kind Ever to pass away. And some of all our thoughts were true at least What time we thought together by that stream; THY happiness has evermore increased, -- MY love was not a dream. And now that thou art gone, I often sit On its green margin, for thou once wert there; And see the clouds that, floating over it, Darken the quiet air. Yes, oftentimes I sit beside it now, Harkning the wavelets ripple o'er the sands; Until again I hear thy whispered vow And feel thy pressing hands. Then the bright sun seems to stand still in heaven, The stream sings gladly as it onward flows, The rushes grow more green, the grass more even, Blossoms the budding rose. I say: "It is a joy-dream; I will take it; He is not gone; he will return to me." What found'st thou in my heart that thou should'st break it? -- How have I injured thee? Oh! I am weary of life's passing show, -- Its pageant and its pain. I would I could lie down lone in my woe, Ne'er to rise up again; I would I could lie down where none might know; For truly love is vain. Truly love's vain; but oh! how vainer still Is that which is not love, but seems; Concealed indifference, a covered ill, A very dream of dreams. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WOMAN'S INCONSTANCY by ROBERT AYTON TO HIS SON, VINCENT CORBET, ON HIS THIRD BIRTHDAY by RICHARD CORBET THE RETIREMENT; TO MR. IZAAK WALTON by CHARLES COTTON THE NIGHT [NICHT] IS NEAR [NIGH] GONE by ALEXANDER MONTGOMERIE TO MY BOOKS by CAROLINE ELIZABETH SARAH SHERIDAN NORTON THE CLIFF SWALLOWS by DEBRA NYSTROM |