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a traveller from altruria

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For other versions of this work, see A Traveller from Altruria (Coates).

A TRAVELLER FROM ALTRURIA

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He came to us with dreams to sell—

Ah, long ago it seems!

From regions where enchantments dwell,

He came to us with dreams to sell—

And we had need of dreams.

Our thought had planned with artful care,

Our patient toil had wrought,

The roomy treasure-houses where

Were heaped the costly and the rare—

But dreams we had not bought:

Nay; we had felt no need of these,

Until with dulcet strain,

Alluring as the melodies

That mock the lonely on the seas,

He made all else seem vain;

Bringing an aching sense of dearth,

A troubled, vague unrest,

A fear that we, whose care on Earth

Had been to garner things of worth,

Had somehow missed the best.

​Then, as had been our wont before—

Unused in vain to sigh—

We turned our treasure o'er and o'er,

But found in all our vaunted store

No coin that dreams would buy.

We stood with empty hands: but gay

As though upborne on wings,

He left us; and at set of day

We heard him singing, far away,

The joy of simple things!

He left us, and with apathy

We gazed upon our gold;

But to the world's ascendancy

Submissive, soon we came to be

Much as we were of old.

Yet sometimes when the fragrant dawn

In early splendor beams,

And sometimes when, the twilight gone,

The moon o'er-silvers wood and lawn,

An echo of his dreams

Brings to the heart a swift regret

That is not wholly pain,

And, grieving, we would not forget

The vision, hallowed to us yet—

The hope that seemed so vain.

​And then we envy not the throng

That careless passes by,

With no remembrance of the song,

Though we must listen still, and long

To hear it till we die!

Lyrics of Life

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