"Dreams are true while they last, and do we not live in dreams?"
About this Quote
The subtext is Victorian and sharply modern. Tennyson wrote in an era rattled by new science, industrial acceleration, and religious doubt. Old anchors of meaning were wobbling; private consciousness started to look less like a window onto reality and more like a projector. His phrasing reflects that cultural unease: the mind manufactures worlds, and we spend much of life inside those constructions - not only asleep, but awake, narrating ourselves through ambition, grief, romance, patriotism, faith. "Do we not live in dreams?" is less a mystical flourish than a critique of human self-certainty.
The line’s power comes from its refusal to scold. Tennyson doesn’t label dreams as delusion; he grants them legitimacy "while they last", then quietly exposes the bargain we make with perception. It’s romanticism with a skeptical edge: a poet admitting that the imagination is both our greatest resource and our most elegant trap.
Quote Details
| Topic | Deep |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Holy Grail and Other Poems (Alfred Lord Tennyson, 1870)
Evidence:
Dreams are true while they last, and do we not live in dreams? (Poem: "The Higher Pantheism" (page number varies by edition)). This line is from Tennyson’s poem “The Higher Pantheism.” A standard primary-print appearance is in Tennyson’s collection The Holy Grail and Other Poems (London: Strahan and Co., 1870; bibliographies note it was issued/published in December 1869 even though the title page date is 1870). The poem was also read aloud (by James Knowles, with Tennyson not present) at the first meeting of the Metaphysical Society on 2 June 1869, which is evidence of an early *spoken* circulation, but that is secondary testimony (recorded later in Hallam Tennyson’s memoir) rather than the original printed publication. For a scan/verification of the poem in the 1870 volume, see the University of South Carolina Thomas Cooper Library exhibit transcription showing the poem and the line in context. ([paperzz.com](https://paperzz.com/doc/8946609/alfred-tennyson--1809-1892---thomas-cooper-library?utm_source=openai)) |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Tennyson, Alfred Lord. (2026, February 16). Dreams are true while they last, and do we not live in dreams? FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/dreams-are-true-while-they-last-and-do-we-not-16752/
Chicago Style
Tennyson, Alfred Lord. "Dreams are true while they last, and do we not live in dreams?" FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/dreams-are-true-while-they-last-and-do-we-not-16752/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Dreams are true while they last, and do we not live in dreams?" FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/dreams-are-true-while-they-last-and-do-we-not-16752/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.










