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Sleep Flies Me

Topics: classic

Sleep flies me like a lover          Too eagerly pursued,     Or like a bird to cover          Within some distant wood,     Where thickest boughs roof over          Her secret solitude.     The nets I spread to snare her,          Although with cunning wrought,     Have only served to scare her,          And now she'll not be caught.     To those who best could spare her,          She ever comes unsought.     She lights upon their pillows;          She gives them pleasant dreams,     Grey-green with leaves of willows,          And cool with sound of streams,     Or big with tranquil billows,          On which the starlight gleams.     No vision fair entrances          My weary open eye,     No marvellous romances          Make night go swiftly by;     But only feverish fancies          Beset me where I lie.     The black midnight is steeping          The hillside and the lawn,     But still I lie unsleeping,          With curtains backward drawn,     To catch the earliest peeping          Of the desired dawn.     Perhaps, when day is breaking;          When birds their song begin,     And, worn with all night waking,          I call their music din,     Sweet sleep, some pity taking,          At last may enter in.

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"Sleep flies me like a lover..."

Robert Fuller Murray's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Sleep Flies Me"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"In the hard familiar horse-box I am sitting once a..."

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