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The Dread Voyage: Poems

Chapter 10: THE DREAMERS.
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About This Book

The collection gathers lyrical and narrative poems that move between storm-borne sea voyages, winter and seasonal landscapes, and intimate meditations on love, guilt, death, and memory. Imagery is vivid and elemental—wind, ice, waves, and night recur—while voices shift from elegiac solitude to dramatic confession. Several pieces use dreamlike and mythic resonance to explore fate and remorse; others observe rural and shoreline scenes with tonal shifts from awe to foreboding. The sequence alternates compressed narrative episodes and reflective lyrics, creating an atmosphere of haunting inevitability and contemplative mourning.

THE DREAMERS.

They lingered on the middle heights, Betwixt the brown earth and the heaven; They whispered, “We are not the night’s, But pallid children of the even.”
They muttered, “We are not the day’s, For the old struggle and endeavor, The rugged and unquiet ways, Are dead and driven past for ever.”
They dreamed upon the cricket’s tune, The winds that stirred the withered grasses: But never saw the blood-red moon, That lit the spectre mountain-passes.
They sat and marked the brooklet steal In smoke-mist o’er its silvered surges: But marked not, with its peal on peal, The storm that swept the granite gorges.
They dreamed the shimmer and the shade, And sought in pools for haunted faces: Nor heard again the cannonade, In dreams from earth’s old battle-places.
They spake, “The ages all are dead, The strife, the struggle and the glory; We are the silences that wed, Betwixt the story and the story.
“We are the little winds that moan Between the woodlands and the meadows, We are the ghosted leaves, wind-blown Across the gust-light and the shadows.”
Then came a soul across those lands, Whose face was all one glad, rapt wonder; And spake: “The skies are ribbed with bands Of fire, and heaven all racked with thunder.
“Climb up and see the glory spread, High over cliff and ’scarpment yawning: The night is past, the dark is dead, Behold the triumph of the dawning!”
Then laughed they with a wistful scorn, “You are a ghost, a long-dead vision; You passed by ages ere was born This twilight of the days elysian.
“There is no hope, there is no strife, But only haunted hearts that hunger, About a dead, scarce dreamed-of life, Old ages when the earth was younger.”
Then came by one in mad distress, “Haste, haste, below where strong arms weaken, The fighting ones grow less and less! Great cities of the world are taken!
“Dread evil rolls by like a flood, Men’s bones beneath his surges whiten, Go where the ages mark in blood The footsteps that their days enlighten.”
Still they but heard, discordant mirth, The thin winds through the dead stalks rattle; While out from far-off haunts of earth, There smote the mighty sound of battle.
Now there was heard an awful cry, Despair that rended heaven asunder, White pauses when a cause would die, Where love was lost and souls went under.
The while these feebly dreamed and talked, Betwixt the brown earth and the heaven, Faint ghosts of men who breathed and walked, But deader than the dead ones even.
And out there on the middle height, They sought in pools for haunted faces, Nor heard the cry across the night, That swept from earth’s dread battle-places.