I. Introduction
Like wind-born words from a faraway country
in a language like that of the sonorous sea
this poem arrived as I lay in the golden hour
beside Mystic Lake, amidst somnolent dreams.
Troubled by thoughts of loves I had squandered
out of carelessness and foolish pride,
I hadn’t slept the night before and I saw visions
as the water rippled beneath the sunlight.
Women I saw, dressed in Victorian dresses,
being helped into carriages by men in suits,
and soldiers upon their silver horses riding,
blowing their trumpets in victorious pursuit.
So beautiful it was, I strained so as not to fall asleep
for I knew that an empty blackness awaited me there,
and once I’d waken, I’d have to return to the life
whose burdens and responsibilities I hated to bear.
But my eyes were so heavy, and I could not resist.
And just as my eyes were beginning to close,
this poem was whispered into my ear,
and as if I’d been electrocuted, I awoke.
I stood and, full of vitality, ran back to my home
where I took up my pen and wrote down this poem.
Now, I offer it to you, my friend, as one who, so it seems,
is bound by chains to his life, and to his pen:
II. The Poem
Dreams are fickle, flighty and fleeting.
Conjured as quickly as they come to quiescence,
like a tempest or zephyr they pass
in their own singular and mysterious cadence,
always leaving behind a changed mind—
more aware of death and more awakened
to the beauty and brevity of life and its pleasures
which are manifold and ever nascent.
And who’s to say whether a dream of day
which comes to us in the night
is not the soul’s way of telling us
to be bold and walk out into the light?
Or whether a dream of falling to our doom
is truly a warning from our soul
to live our lives to the fullest
before we die and pass from this world?
It is up to us to decide the meaning behind our dreams,
which ones we let go and which ones we follow,
though we may never truly decipher them
and though they might bring us only sorrow.
But whether our dreams bring us misery or joy,
there is wisdom to be gained from all.
They teach us to linger long in what is healing
and to rise up quickly when we fall.
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