A Dream Of Age Poem by Thomas MacDonagh

A Dream Of Age



I dreamt last night that I was very old,
And very lonesome, very sad of heart;
And, shunning men, dwelt in a place apart
Where none my barren sorrow might behold;
There brooded grim beside my hearth-stone cold
Cold days of shadow, dying, till with flame
Of happy memory once more you came
With laughing eyes and hair of burning gold.

-- O eyes of sudden joy! O storm-blown hair!
O pale face of my love! why do you rise
Amid the haunting spectres of despair
To trouble their gaunt vigil with my cries?--
In tears I woke and knew the dream was true:
My youth was lost, and lost the love of you.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
1 / 92
Thomas MacDonagh

Thomas MacDonagh

Cloughjordan / Ireland
Close
Error Success