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The Dream Land

By Arthur Hugh Clough

Topics: classic

I     To think that men of former days     In naked truth deserved the praise     Which, fain to have in flesh and blood     An image of imagined good,     Poets have sung and men received,     And all too glad to be deceived,     Most plastic and most inexact,     Posterity has told for fact;     To say what was, was not as we,     This also is a vanity. II     Ere Agamemnon, warriors were,     Ere Helen, beauties equalling her,     Brave ones and fair, whom no one knows,     And brave or fair as these or those.     The commonplace whom daily we     In our dull streets and houses see,     To think of other mould than these     Were Cato, Solon, Socrates,     Or Mahomet or Confutze,     This also is a vanity. III     Hannibal, Csar, Charlemain,     And he before, who back on Spain     Repelled the fierce inundant Moor;     Godfrey, St. Louis, wise and pure,     Washington, Cromwell, John, and Paul,     Columbus, Luther, one and all,     Go mix them up, the false and true,     With Sindbad, Crusoe, or St. Preux,     And say as he was, so was he,     This also is a vanity. IV     Say not: Behold it here or there,     Or on the earth, or in the air.     That better thing than can be seen     Is neither now nor eer has been;     It is not in this land or that,     But in a place we soon are at,     Where all can seek and some can find,     Where hope is liberal, fancy kind,     And what we wish for we can see,     Which also is a vanity.

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Exploring the themes of classic, Arthur Hugh Clough delivers a powerful performance in "The Dream Land"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Arthur Hugh Clough

About Arthur Hugh Clough

Arthur Hugh Clough (1819–1861) was an English poet whose work explores Victorian doubt and moral uncertainty. His poems "Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth" and "The Latest Decalogue" are sharp, thoughtful, and still widely anthologized.

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