The Lathe of Morpheus; or, The dream song. A tribute to B.C. from E.M

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The Lathe of Morpheus; or, The dream song. A tribute to B.C. from E.M

by E. M.

EN·~21 minutes·8 chapters

Chapters

8 total
1

THE LATHE OF MORPHEUS OR THE DREAM SONG

0:26
2

Part I. TO BRIDGET. THE INVOCATION.

1:54
3

Part II. THE GARDEN OF SLEEP.

2:52
4

Part III.

4:38
5

Part IV. THE VISION GLORIOUS.

2:13
6

Part V. THE LEADEN TABLET.

5:18
7

Part VI. THE APOLOGIA.

1:44
8

TO BRIDGET. - “CARMEN TRISTIS.”

2:17

Description

Through a series of lyrical fragments, the narrator pours out an intense, almost ritualistic address to a beloved named Bridget. The opening unfolds as an invocation, weaving together classical allusions, the language of myth, and a restless yearning that blurs the line between memory and imagination. The verses tumble over themselves like a midnight chant, conjuring images of ash‑grey curtains, basalt doors, and a phantom love that feels both haunting and radiant.

The second section drifts into the Garden of Sleep, a lush, hallucinatory landscape where jasmine, lilac, and rose mingle with strange, color‑named flowers. Here the speaker describes a jeweled princess moving among silver fountains, bronze bowls, and fluttering dragonflies, all rendered in a cascade of vivid, almost synesthetic detail. The poem’s texture is rich with plant, stone, and water motifs, inviting listeners to linger in a world where dreams and desire intertwine.

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Details

Full title

The Lathe of Morpheus; or, The dream song. A tribute to B.C. from E.M A tribute to B.C. from E.M

Language

en

Duration

~21 minutes (20K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2020-09-03

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

E. M.

E. M.

Best known for A Room with a View, Howards End, and A Passage to India, this sharp, humane English writer explored class, empire, and the hard work of truly understanding other people. His famous call to "only connect" still captures the spirit that runs through his fiction and essays.

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