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But in beginning, trust me well, I shall make an invocation With especial devotion Unto the god of sleep anon, Who dwells in a cave of stone By a stream that comes from Lethe, That flows out of Hell un-sweetly, Near a folk men call Cimmerians. There ever sleeps this god of dreams With his thousand sleepy sons For whom sleep ever is their wont. And of this god whom I discuss I pray that he’ll grant me success My dream for to tell aright, If over all dreams he has might. And he that Mover is of all That is and was and ever shall, Grant them joy, who do this hear, Of all that they dream this year, And may they stand in good grace With their loves, or in that place Where they would most prefer to be, Shield them from harm and poverty And from misfortune and disease, And send them what may them please Who take it well and scorn it not Nor condemn it in their thought Through malicious inclination. And whoever from presumption Or hate or scorn, or out of envy, Disdain, contempt or villainy, Condemns it, pray I Jesus God That – dream he barefoot, dream he shod – Every harm that any man Has known since the world began, Befall him thereof, ere he end, And grant he may the whole attend, Lo, with such a conclusion As he had, from his vision, Croesus, King of Lydia, high Who there upon a gibbet died! This prayer shall he have of me; For I am no better in charity! Now hearken, as I have spoken, To what I dreamed ere I had woken.
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Mar 18, 2015
Mar 18, 2015 at 4:52 AM UTC
The House of Fame "Part 2" The Invocation
But in beginning, trust me well, I shall make an invocation With especial devotion Unto the god of sleep anon, Who dwells in a cave of stone By a stream that comes from Lethe, That flows out of Hell un-sweetly, Near a folk men call Cimmerians. There ever sleeps this god of dreams With his thousand sleepy sons For whom sleep ever is their wont. And of this god whom I discuss I pray that he’ll grant me success My dream for to tell aright, If over all dreams he has might. And he that Mover is of all That is and was and ever shall, Grant them joy, who do this hear, Of all that they dream this year, And may they stand in good grace With their loves, or in that place Where they would most prefer to be, Shield them from harm and poverty And from misfortune and disease, And send them what may them please Who take it well and scorn it not Nor condemn it in their thought Through malicious inclination. And whoever from presumption Or hate or scorn, or out of envy, Disdain, contempt or villainy, Condemns it, pray I Jesus God That – dream he barefoot, dream he shod – Every harm that any man Has known since the world began, Befall him thereof, ere he end, And grant he may the whole attend, Lo, with such a conclusion As he had, from his vision, Croesus, King of Lydia, high Who there upon a gibbet died! This prayer shall he have of me; For I am no better in charity! Now hearken, as I have spoken, To what I dreamed ere I had woken.
By Sir Geoffrey Chaucer
sherovin
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Mar 18, 2015
Mar 18, 2015 at 4:52 AM UTC
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