| Poems by Women |
The Dream of Aengus Og
When the rose of Morn through the Dawn was
breaking,
And white on the hearth was last night's flame,
Thither to
me 'twixt sleeping and waking,
Singing out of the mists she came.
And grey as the mists on the spectre meadows
Were the eyes that on
my eyes she laid,
And her hair's red splendor through the
shadows
Like to the marsh-fire gleamed and played.
And she sang of the wondrous far-off places
That a man may only see
in dreams,
The death-still, odorous, starlit spaces
Where Time is
lost and no life gleams.
And there till the day had its crest uplifted,
She stood with her
still face bent on me,
Then forth with the Dawn departing
drifted
Light as a foam-fleck on the sea.
And now my heart is the heart of a swallow
That here no solace of
rest may find,
Forevermore I follow and follow
Her white feet
glancing down the wind.
And forevermore in my ears are ringing --
(Oh, red lips yet shall I
kiss you dumb!)
Twain sole words of that May morn's singing,
Calling
to me "Hither"! and "Come"!
From flower-bright fields to the wild lake-sedges
Crying my steps
when the Day has gone,
Till dim and small down the Night's pale
edges
The stars have fluttered one by one.
And light as the thought of a love forgotten,
The hours skim past,
while before me flies
That face of the Sun and Mist begotten,
Its
singing lips and death-cold eyes.
From: Rittenhouse, Jessie B.
The Second Book of Modern Verse (1919).
This poet:
[Author index]
This collection assembled by Jone Johnson Lewis.
Collection © 1999-2002 Jone Johnson Lewis.
Citing poems from these pages:
| Author. "Poem Title." Women's History: Poems by Women. Jone Johnson Lewis, editor. URL: (date of logon) |

