Stanzas
["Oh, come to me in dreams, my love!"]
Oh, come to me in dreams, my love!
I will not ask a dearer bliss;
Come with the starry beams, my love,
And press mine eyelids with thy kiss.
’Twas thus, as ancient fables tell,
Love visited a Grecian maid,
Till she disturbed the sacred spell,
And woke to find her hopes betrayed.
But gentle sleep shall veil my sight,
And Psyche’s lamp shall darkling be,
When, in the visions of the night,
Thou dost renew thy vows to me.
Then come to me in dreams, my love,
I will not ask a dearer bliss;
Come with the starry beams, my love,
And press mine eyelids with thy kiss.
Enjoy the poem with beautiful music.
Poem Videoπ
Who wrote the poem 'Stanzas ["Oh, come to me in dreams, my love!"]'?
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (August 30, 1797 – February 1, 1851)
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley was an English
novelist who wrote the famous novel “Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus”
(1818). Her husband was the Romantic poet and philosopher Percy Bysshe Shelley.
Her father was the political philosopher William Godwin. Her mother died soon
after giving birth to her. In 1814, she fell in love with one of her father’s
political followers, Percy Bysshe Shelley, a married man. They married in 1816
after Percy Shelley’s first wife committed suicide. Out of 4 children they had,
3 except the last son died prematurely. After her husband drowned in a sailing
accident in 1822, she focused on raising her son and writing professionally.
She remained a political radical throughout her life. She died presumably of a
brain tumor at the age of 53.
'Stanzas [“Oh, come to me in dreams, my
love!”]' explanation.
In this beautiful love poem, the poet is
referring to the classical myth of Cupid and Psyche. Psyche, a beautiful girl,
made Venus, a goddess of love and beauty, jealous and hateful, who ordered her
son, Cupid, to go punish Psyche by making her fall in love with the most
hideous thing around. Psyche’s beauty, however, made even Cupid get clumsy and
scratch himself with his own arrow, falling helplessly in love with her. He
brought her to his palace but visited her only at night, not allowing her to
know who he really was. Psyche’s jealous sisters urged her to look at him when
he’s asleep with a lamp. This act of violating trust separated them, and she
had to overcome many trials to get him back.