Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Dream Child by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Dream Child

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    There is a place (I know it well)
    Where beech trees crowd into a gloom,
    And where a twinkling woodland well
    Flings from a rock a rippling plume,
    And, like a Faun beneath a spell,
    The silence breathes of beam and bloom.

    And here it was I met with her,
    The child I never hoped to see,
    Who long had been heart's-comforter,
    And soul's-companion unto me,
    Telling me oft of myths that were,
    And of far faerylands to-be.

    She stood there smiling by the pool,
    The cascade made below the rocks;
    Innocent, naked, beautiful,
    The frail gerardia in her locks,
    A flower, elfin-sweet and cool,
    Freckled as faery four-o -clocks.

    Her eyes were rain-bright; and her hair
    An amber gleam like that which tips
    The golden leaves when Fall comes fair;
    And twin red berries were her lips;
    Her beauty, pure and young and bare,
    Shone like a star from breasts to hips.

    Oft had I seen her thus, of old,
    In dreams, where she played many parts:
    A form, possessing in its mold
    The high perfection of all Arts,
    With all the hopes to which men hold,
    And loves for which they break their hearts.

    And she was mine. Within her face
    I read' her soul. . . . Then, while she smiled,
    A sudden wind swept through the place
    And she was gone. My heart beat wild;
    The leaves shook and, behold, no trace
    Was there of her, the faery child.

    Only a ray of gold that hung
    Above the water; and a bough,
    Rain-bright and berried, low that swung:
    Yet, in my heart of hearts, somehow,
    I felt (I need not search among
    The trees) that she was hiding now.



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