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"Time flowing in the night" Alfred Lord Tennyson "Have I dreamt my life, or was it a true one?" Walter Von der Vogelweide Look for the sleepers on Their backs, eyes closed, Their palms upturned to sacrifice Their dreaming bodies to the night. Not knowing that even as the Sun rises wearing a halo of liquid gold, And as their long dark lashes lazily open, They are not waking from their dreams. Outside the hummingbird whirring in Dizzying aeronautics, and the barn owl Shutting its fierce yellow eyes Are dreams too; All dreams. The morning routine: The taste of honey and oats On the tongue, the orange-yellow Melon scooped and swallowed hard, Waking the senses; the bitter coffee, The slightly burned toast Dreams, All dreams. It was a book delivered to him By a misty-eyed stranger in rags Who spoke but a few words barely Audible and, with a toothless grin, Hobbled away, though his gait was Somehow a noble one. This had happened a few nights ago, Only the book remained unopened, He was too tired at the end of the Day and there was work to do in The fields and that stubborn tractor Breaking down each midday. It was last evening that his curiosity Got to him and he kicked off his Work boots and sat with it in the Reclining chair; he put on his spectacles And began to read. He was not a reader much; his time Reading was mostly spent on the Good Book, which he found somewhat Difficult to stay focused on. But this book was different: he was Engaged after the first sentence. There was a stirring in his chest And he intuited from the incredible Words that there was something here That was true. He read until the moon was high In the night sky and he turned the Last page at sometime after midnight, Falling into an easy sleep in which He dreamed that he was a Persian Prince and each night he was told A story by a beautiful girl. He KNEW that he was dreaming and he knew There was such a thing as magic, even In his mundane world. Now the sun in a heat haze. The old chipped weathervane on the Tin roof of the barn, casting a long Shadow on the rows of wheat, Waiting to be harvested. As he climbed onto the rusty Tractor he felt a sense of wonder Present in all these things. As the old tractor belched and Caught fire, he had the thought That if he was still dreaming, As the book had said, he felt more Awake than he had ever been in His life.
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Oct 2, 2010
Oct 2, 2010 at 5:56 PM UTC
Dreamer Wake
"Time flowing in the night" Alfred Lord Tennyson "Have I dreamt my life, or was it a true one?" Walter Von der Vogelweide Look for the sleepers on Their backs, eyes closed, Their palms upturned to sacrifice Their dreaming bodies to the night. Not knowing that even as the Sun rises wearing a halo of liquid gold, And as their long dark lashes lazily open, They are not waking from their dreams. Outside the hummingbird whirring in Dizzying aeronautics, and the barn owl Shutting its fierce yellow eyes Are dreams too; All dreams. The morning routine: The taste of honey and oats On the tongue, the orange-yellow Melon scooped and swallowed hard, Waking the senses; the bitter coffee, The slightly burned toast Dreams, All dreams. It was a book delivered to him By a misty-eyed stranger in rags Who spoke but a few words barely Audible and, with a toothless grin, Hobbled away, though his gait was Somehow a noble one. This had happened a few nights ago, Only the book remained unopened, He was too tired at the end of the Day and there was work to do in The fields and that stubborn tractor Breaking down each midday. It was last evening that his curiosity Got to him and he kicked off his Work boots and sat with it in the Reclining chair; he put on his spectacles And began to read. He was not a reader much; his time Reading was mostly spent on the Good Book, which he found somewhat Difficult to stay focused on. But this book was different: he was Engaged after the first sentence. There was a stirring in his chest And he intuited from the incredible Words that there was something here That was true. He read until the moon was high In the night sky and he turned the Last page at sometime after midnight, Falling into an easy sleep in which He dreamed that he was a Persian Prince and each night he was told A story by a beautiful girl. He KNEW that he was dreaming and he knew There was such a thing as magic, even In his mundane world. Now the sun in a heat haze. The old chipped weathervane on the Tin roof of the barn, casting a long Shadow on the rows of wheat, Waiting to be harvested. As he climbed onto the rusty Tractor he felt a sense of wonder Present in all these things. As the old tractor belched and Caught fire, he had the thought That if he was still dreaming, As the book had said, he felt more Awake than he had ever been in His life.
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Oct 2, 2010
Oct 2, 2010 at 5:56 PM UTC
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