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I Met At Eve

Topics: classic

I met at eve the Prince of Sleep,      His was a still and lovely face,      He wandered through a valley steep         Lovely in a lonely place.      His garb was grey of lavender,      About his brows a poppy-wreath      Burned like dim coals, and everywhere         The air was sweeter for his breath.      His twilight feet no sandals wore,      His eyes shone faint in their own flame,      Fair moths that gloomed his steps before         Seemed letters of his lovely name.      His house is in the mountain ways,      A phantom house of misty walls,      Whose golden flocks at evening graze,         And witch the moon with muffled calls.      Upwelling from his shadowy springs      Sweet waters shake a trembling sound,      There flit the hoot-owl's silent wings,         There hath his web the silkworm wound.      Dark in his pools clear visions lurk,      And rosy, as with morning buds,      Along his dales of broom and birk         Dreams haunt his solitary woods.      I met at eve the Prince of Sleep,      His was a still and lovely face,      He wandered through a valley steep,         Lovely in a lonely place.

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"I met at eve the Prince of Sleep,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Walter De La Mare delivers a powerful performance in "I Met At Eve"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"Have you been catching of fish, Tom Noddy?        ..."

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