Which dreames indeed are Ambition: for the very substance of the Ambitious, is meerely the shadow of a Dreame Ham.
You had best go dreame againe, To keepe you from the tempest of the field.
Weepe not faire loue, let not thy wofull teares Bode mee, I knowe what thou wouldest not haue to hap It will distaine mine honor wonne in fight To say a womans dreame could me affright.
But wil Brute alwaies in this dreame remaine, And not bee mooued with his Countries mone.
And yet thou naught dost dreame but blood and death.
In bed a sleepe while they do dreame things true Mer.
He backe returning by the Yvorie dore, Remounted up as light as chearefull Larke, And on his litle winges the dreame he bore 395 In hast unto his Lord, where he him left afore.
The King hath note of all that they intend, By interception, which they dreame not of Exe.
Rom: In bed a sleepe while they doe dreame things true.
What I told you then, I hope I shall haue leisure to make good, If this be not a dreame I see and heare Goldsmith.
If I dreame not, thou art Aemilia, If thou art she, tell me, where is that sonne That floated with thee on the fatall rafte Abb.
King No more of that, ere many dayes be done, You shall heare that you do not dreame vpon.
Dreame of Chaucer in mye opynyone may well (naye rather of righte sholde) contynewe his former title of The Dreame of Chaucer.
Dreame of Chaucer, is his Temple of Glasse; as I haue seene the title thereof noted, and the thinge yt selfe confirmethe.
That > [So that] rehearse > relate, give an account of 565 E.
Canto viii Sir Guyon laid in swowne is by Acrates sonnes despoyld, Whom Arthur soone hath reskewed And Paynim brethren foyld.
Her seruile beast yet would not leaue her so, But followes her farre off, ne ought he feares, 8 To be partaker of her wandring woe, More mild in beastly kind, then that her beastly foe.
That > [So that the] moan > lamentation, lamentations 108.
The eye of man hath not heard, the eare of man hath not seen, mans hand is not able to taste, his tongue to conceiue, nor his heart to report, what my dreame was.
As heart can thinke: There is not such a word spoke of in Scotland, At this Dreame of Feare.
Dreame on, dreame on, of bloody deeds and death, Fainting dispaire; dispairing yeeld thy breath.
I told you what would come of this: Beseech you Of your owne state take care: This dreame of mine Being now awake, Ile Queene it no inch farther, But milke my Ewes, and weepe Cam.
You were best to go to bed, and dreame againe, To keepe thee from the Tempest of the field Old Clif.
Poore Wretches, that depend On Greatnesse, Fauour; Dreame as I haue done, Wake, and finde nothing.
If sleep charge Nature, To breake it with a fearfull dreame of him, And cry my selfe awake?
My eyes to so much darkenes; yet my dreame Was full of rapture, such as I with all My wakeing sence would flie to meet.
Great Alexander, does notdreame of this, I warrant yee.
Nay, sweet hart, you sha'not leave me till I ha told What a cruell Dreame I had.
Tis my husbands pleasure, Affrighted with some Dreame he had last night; For I can guess no other cause.
Why, you dare fight, it seemes, and I was told You were no Cavellier, a very dreame [droane?
I did dreame every night of't, and the Ravens With their unlucky throates never leave croaking Some danger to us all.
If you did dreame it may be as neare truth: I wish the contrary, but know them daring Enemyes.
Oh you have delivered me From such a dreame I quake to thinke upon't.
Hum, it will not be safe to dreame of a knave shortly.
This man hath left me in a laborinth: 420 He biddeth me give more than all, Till dead mens bones come at thy call: He biddeth me dreame of no rest, Till I repent that I do best.
How many maides this night lyes in their beds, And dreame that they have lost their maidenheads!
Farewell, my sonne, dreame of no rest, Til thou repent that thou didst best.
No more of that, ere many days be done, You shall heare that you do not dreame vpon.
This by Calphurnia's Dreame is signified Caes And this way haue you well expounded it Deci.
Did'st thou dreame Lucius, that thou so cryedst out?
Dreame on his Mistris my Ladie Glammes quoted, 221.
James did not make frequent use of this metre, but he adopted it for another poem of a very different kind, "A Dreame on his Mistris my Ladie Glammes", in which he displays some ingenuity and inventive skill.
In speciall for the wrytinge of that fantasie or dreamecalled by my name, that I am thought fawltles, as in deade I am, but still greeved that I am so charged, but that waye seeke no farther to please then with my deutie maye stonde.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "dreame" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.