47
A DREAM.
T that still, calm, and awful hour,
When sleep with all her silent power,
Sheds sweet forgetfulness and rest
O'er many a glad or aching breast;
When mimic scenes of joy or pain
Sweep swiftly o'er the slumbering brain,
Illumed by Fancy's vivid beam,
I dreamt (alas! 'twas but a dream!)
That o'er a path, unknown, untried,
I slowly wandered by thy side;
And though for long our footsteps trod
The mountain heath, the verdant sod,
Or wound along some mossy dell,
No weariness I seemed to feel:
For as in many a long past day,
Thy converse sweet beguiled the way,
Till hill, and vale, and streamlet past,
We reached the mountain height at last.
There, bathed in evening's golden ray,
A lovely land before us lay;
It seemed a calm and beauteous spot,
Where care and pain might be forgot,
And worn out heart, or weary breast,
At last find happiness and rest.
When sleep with all her silent power,
Sheds sweet forgetfulness and rest
O'er many a glad or aching breast;
When mimic scenes of joy or pain
Sweep swiftly o'er the slumbering brain,
Illumed by Fancy's vivid beam,
I dreamt (alas! 'twas but a dream!)
That o'er a path, unknown, untried,
I slowly wandered by thy side;
And though for long our footsteps trod
The mountain heath, the verdant sod,
Or wound along some mossy dell,
No weariness I seemed to feel:
For as in many a long past day,
Thy converse sweet beguiled the way,
Till hill, and vale, and streamlet past,
We reached the mountain height at last.
There, bathed in evening's golden ray,
A lovely land before us lay;
It seemed a calm and beauteous spot,
Where care and pain might be forgot,
And worn out heart, or weary breast,
At last find happiness and rest.