Rock me to sleep, ye waves, and drift my boat, 
With undulations soft, far out to sea; 
Perchance, where sky and wave wear one blue coat, 
My heart shall find some hidden rest remote. 
My spirit swoons, and all my senses cry
For ocean's breast and covering of the sky.
Rock me to sleep, ye waves, and, outward bound,
Just let me drift far out toil and care,
Where lapping of the waves shall be the sound
Which, mingled with the winds that gently bear
Me on between a peaceful sea and sky,
To make my soothing, slumberous lullaby.
Thus drifting on and on upon thy breast,
My heart shall go to sleep and rest, and rest. 

This poem is in the public domain. 

It is a huge curtain,

stretched at a distance around me.

Aimless gypsies crawl up and over the curtain.

They are my days.

They neither sing nor laugh

but hop over the top of my sadness.

Here and there one wears a gay shirt.

He is faster than the rest.

Even in my sleep with closed eyes

I cannot pierce this drapery.

Some day I will wind a child’s smile around my face

and thus disguised

Slip through the curtain and jump ...

Where?

Ah, yes, where?

This poem is in the public domain, and originally appeared in Others for 1919: An Anthology of the New Verse (Nicholas L. Brown, 1920).