Arthur Davison Ficke

Arthur Davison Ficke

Gray-robed Wanderer in sleep ... Wanderer ...You also move amongThose silent hallsDim on the shore of the unsailed deep?And your footfalls, yours also, Wanderer,Faint through those twilight corridors have rung?Of late my eyes have seen ... Wanderer ...Amid the shadows’ gloomOf that sleep-girdled placeI should have known such joy could not have been—To see your face: and yet, Wanderer,What hopes seem vain beneath the night in bloom?Wearily I awake ... Wanderer ...Your look of old despair,Like a dying star,In morning vanishes. But for all memories’ sake,Though you are far, tonight, O Wanderer,Tonight come, though in silence, to the shadows there ...

Gray-robed Wanderer in sleep ... Wanderer ...You also move amongThose silent hallsDim on the shore of the unsailed deep?And your footfalls, yours also, Wanderer,Faint through those twilight corridors have rung?Of late my eyes have seen ... Wanderer ...Amid the shadows’ gloomOf that sleep-girdled placeI should have known such joy could not have been—To see your face: and yet, Wanderer,What hopes seem vain beneath the night in bloom?Wearily I awake ... Wanderer ...Your look of old despair,Like a dying star,In morning vanishes. But for all memories’ sake,Though you are far, tonight, O Wanderer,Tonight come, though in silence, to the shadows there ...

Gray-robed Wanderer in sleep ... Wanderer ...You also move amongThose silent hallsDim on the shore of the unsailed deep?And your footfalls, yours also, Wanderer,Faint through those twilight corridors have rung?

Gray-robed Wanderer in sleep ... Wanderer ...

You also move among

Those silent halls

Dim on the shore of the unsailed deep?

And your footfalls, yours also, Wanderer,

Faint through those twilight corridors have rung?

Of late my eyes have seen ... Wanderer ...Amid the shadows’ gloomOf that sleep-girdled placeI should have known such joy could not have been—To see your face: and yet, Wanderer,What hopes seem vain beneath the night in bloom?

Of late my eyes have seen ... Wanderer ...

Amid the shadows’ gloom

Of that sleep-girdled place

I should have known such joy could not have been—

To see your face: and yet, Wanderer,

What hopes seem vain beneath the night in bloom?

Wearily I awake ... Wanderer ...Your look of old despair,Like a dying star,In morning vanishes. But for all memories’ sake,Though you are far, tonight, O Wanderer,Tonight come, though in silence, to the shadows there ...

Wearily I awake ... Wanderer ...

Your look of old despair,

Like a dying star,

In morning vanishes. But for all memories’ sake,

Though you are far, tonight, O Wanderer,

Tonight come, though in silence, to the shadows there ...

AMONG SHADOWS

In halls of sleep you wandered by,This time so indistinguishablyI cannot remember aught of it,Save that I know last night we met.I know it by the cloudy thrillThat in my heart is quivering still;And sense of loveliness forgotTeases my fancy out of thought.Though with the night the vision wanes,Its haunting presence still may last—As odor of flowers faint remainsIn halls where late a queen has passed.

In halls of sleep you wandered by,This time so indistinguishablyI cannot remember aught of it,Save that I know last night we met.I know it by the cloudy thrillThat in my heart is quivering still;And sense of loveliness forgotTeases my fancy out of thought.Though with the night the vision wanes,Its haunting presence still may last—As odor of flowers faint remainsIn halls where late a queen has passed.

In halls of sleep you wandered by,This time so indistinguishablyI cannot remember aught of it,Save that I know last night we met.I know it by the cloudy thrillThat in my heart is quivering still;And sense of loveliness forgotTeases my fancy out of thought.Though with the night the vision wanes,Its haunting presence still may last—As odor of flowers faint remainsIn halls where late a queen has passed.

In halls of sleep you wandered by,

This time so indistinguishably

I cannot remember aught of it,

Save that I know last night we met.

I know it by the cloudy thrill

That in my heart is quivering still;

And sense of loveliness forgot

Teases my fancy out of thought.

Though with the night the vision wanes,

Its haunting presence still may last—

As odor of flowers faint remains

In halls where late a queen has passed.

Gone are the three, those sisters rareWith wonder-lips and eyes ashine.One was wise and one was fair,And one was mine.Ye mourners, weave for the sleeping hairOf only two, your ivy vine.For one was wise and one was fair,But one was mine.

Gone are the three, those sisters rareWith wonder-lips and eyes ashine.One was wise and one was fair,And one was mine.Ye mourners, weave for the sleeping hairOf only two, your ivy vine.For one was wise and one was fair,But one was mine.

Gone are the three, those sisters rareWith wonder-lips and eyes ashine.One was wise and one was fair,And one was mine.

Gone are the three, those sisters rare

With wonder-lips and eyes ashine.

One was wise and one was fair,

And one was mine.

Ye mourners, weave for the sleeping hairOf only two, your ivy vine.For one was wise and one was fair,But one was mine.

Ye mourners, weave for the sleeping hair

Of only two, your ivy vine.

For one was wise and one was fair,

But one was mine.

She limps with halting painful pace,Stops, wavers, and creeps on again;Peers up with dim and questioning faceVoid of desire or doubt or pain.Her cheeks hang gray in waxen foldsWherein there stirs no blood at all.A hand like bundled cornstalks holdsThe tatters of a faded shawl.Where was a breast, sunk bones she clasps;A knot jerks where were woman-hips;A ropy throat sends writhing gaspsUp to the tight line of her lips.Here strong the city’s pomp is poured ...She stands, unhuman, bleak, aghast:An empty temple of the LordFrom which the jocund Lord has passed.He has builded him another house,Whenceforth his flame, renewed and bright,Shines stark upon these weathered browsAbandoned to the final night.

She limps with halting painful pace,Stops, wavers, and creeps on again;Peers up with dim and questioning faceVoid of desire or doubt or pain.Her cheeks hang gray in waxen foldsWherein there stirs no blood at all.A hand like bundled cornstalks holdsThe tatters of a faded shawl.Where was a breast, sunk bones she clasps;A knot jerks where were woman-hips;A ropy throat sends writhing gaspsUp to the tight line of her lips.Here strong the city’s pomp is poured ...She stands, unhuman, bleak, aghast:An empty temple of the LordFrom which the jocund Lord has passed.He has builded him another house,Whenceforth his flame, renewed and bright,Shines stark upon these weathered browsAbandoned to the final night.

She limps with halting painful pace,Stops, wavers, and creeps on again;Peers up with dim and questioning faceVoid of desire or doubt or pain.

She limps with halting painful pace,

Stops, wavers, and creeps on again;

Peers up with dim and questioning face

Void of desire or doubt or pain.

Her cheeks hang gray in waxen foldsWherein there stirs no blood at all.A hand like bundled cornstalks holdsThe tatters of a faded shawl.

Her cheeks hang gray in waxen folds

Wherein there stirs no blood at all.

A hand like bundled cornstalks holds

The tatters of a faded shawl.

Where was a breast, sunk bones she clasps;A knot jerks where were woman-hips;A ropy throat sends writhing gaspsUp to the tight line of her lips.

Where was a breast, sunk bones she clasps;

A knot jerks where were woman-hips;

A ropy throat sends writhing gasps

Up to the tight line of her lips.

Here strong the city’s pomp is poured ...She stands, unhuman, bleak, aghast:An empty temple of the LordFrom which the jocund Lord has passed.

Here strong the city’s pomp is poured ...

She stands, unhuman, bleak, aghast:

An empty temple of the Lord

From which the jocund Lord has passed.

He has builded him another house,Whenceforth his flame, renewed and bright,Shines stark upon these weathered browsAbandoned to the final night.

He has builded him another house,

Whenceforth his flame, renewed and bright,

Shines stark upon these weathered brows

Abandoned to the final night.

I am weary of being bitter and weary of being wise,And the armor and the mask of these fall from me, after long.I would go where the islands sleep, or where the sea-dawns rise,And lose my bitter wisdom in the wisdom of a song.There are magics in melodies, unknown of the sages;The powers of purest wonder on secret wings go by.Doubtless out of the silence of dumb preceding agesSong woke the chaos-world—and light swept the sky.All that we know is idle; idle is all we cherish;Idle the will that takes loads that proclaim it strong.For the knowledge, the strength, the burden—all shall perish:One thing only endures, one thing only—song.

I am weary of being bitter and weary of being wise,And the armor and the mask of these fall from me, after long.I would go where the islands sleep, or where the sea-dawns rise,And lose my bitter wisdom in the wisdom of a song.There are magics in melodies, unknown of the sages;The powers of purest wonder on secret wings go by.Doubtless out of the silence of dumb preceding agesSong woke the chaos-world—and light swept the sky.All that we know is idle; idle is all we cherish;Idle the will that takes loads that proclaim it strong.For the knowledge, the strength, the burden—all shall perish:One thing only endures, one thing only—song.

I am weary of being bitter and weary of being wise,And the armor and the mask of these fall from me, after long.I would go where the islands sleep, or where the sea-dawns rise,And lose my bitter wisdom in the wisdom of a song.

I am weary of being bitter and weary of being wise,

And the armor and the mask of these fall from me, after long.

I would go where the islands sleep, or where the sea-dawns rise,

And lose my bitter wisdom in the wisdom of a song.

There are magics in melodies, unknown of the sages;The powers of purest wonder on secret wings go by.Doubtless out of the silence of dumb preceding agesSong woke the chaos-world—and light swept the sky.

There are magics in melodies, unknown of the sages;

The powers of purest wonder on secret wings go by.

Doubtless out of the silence of dumb preceding ages

Song woke the chaos-world—and light swept the sky.

All that we know is idle; idle is all we cherish;Idle the will that takes loads that proclaim it strong.For the knowledge, the strength, the burden—all shall perish:One thing only endures, one thing only—song.

All that we know is idle; idle is all we cherish;

Idle the will that takes loads that proclaim it strong.

For the knowledge, the strength, the burden—all shall perish:

One thing only endures, one thing only—song.

FROM “SONNETS OF A PORTRAIT PAINTER”

I am in love with high far-seeing placesThat look on plains half-sunlight and half-storm,In love with hours when from the circling facesVeils pass, and laughing fellowship glows warm.You who look on me with grave eyes where raptureAnd April love of living burn confessed—The Gods are good! the world lies free to capture!Life has no walls. Oh, take me to your breast!Take me—be with me for a moment’s span!I am in love with all unveilèd faces.I seek the wonder at the heart of man;I would go up to the far-seeing places.While youth is ours, turn toward me for a spaceThe marvel of your rapture-lighted face!There are strange shadows fostered of the moon,More numerous than the clear-cut shade of day....Go forth, when all the leaves whisper of June,Into the dusk of swooping bats at play;Or go into that late November duskWhen hills take on the noble lines of death,And on the air the faint astringent muskOf rotting leaves pours vaguely troubling breath.Then shall you see shadows whereof the sunKnows nothing—aye, a thousand shadows thereShall leap and flicker and stir and stay and run,Like petrels of the changing foul or fair;Like ghosts of twilight, of the moon, of himWhose homeland lies past each horizon’s rim....

I am in love with high far-seeing placesThat look on plains half-sunlight and half-storm,In love with hours when from the circling facesVeils pass, and laughing fellowship glows warm.You who look on me with grave eyes where raptureAnd April love of living burn confessed—The Gods are good! the world lies free to capture!Life has no walls. Oh, take me to your breast!Take me—be with me for a moment’s span!I am in love with all unveilèd faces.I seek the wonder at the heart of man;I would go up to the far-seeing places.While youth is ours, turn toward me for a spaceThe marvel of your rapture-lighted face!There are strange shadows fostered of the moon,More numerous than the clear-cut shade of day....Go forth, when all the leaves whisper of June,Into the dusk of swooping bats at play;Or go into that late November duskWhen hills take on the noble lines of death,And on the air the faint astringent muskOf rotting leaves pours vaguely troubling breath.Then shall you see shadows whereof the sunKnows nothing—aye, a thousand shadows thereShall leap and flicker and stir and stay and run,Like petrels of the changing foul or fair;Like ghosts of twilight, of the moon, of himWhose homeland lies past each horizon’s rim....

I am in love with high far-seeing placesThat look on plains half-sunlight and half-storm,In love with hours when from the circling facesVeils pass, and laughing fellowship glows warm.You who look on me with grave eyes where raptureAnd April love of living burn confessed—The Gods are good! the world lies free to capture!Life has no walls. Oh, take me to your breast!Take me—be with me for a moment’s span!I am in love with all unveilèd faces.I seek the wonder at the heart of man;I would go up to the far-seeing places.While youth is ours, turn toward me for a spaceThe marvel of your rapture-lighted face!

I am in love with high far-seeing places

That look on plains half-sunlight and half-storm,

In love with hours when from the circling faces

Veils pass, and laughing fellowship glows warm.

You who look on me with grave eyes where rapture

And April love of living burn confessed—

The Gods are good! the world lies free to capture!

Life has no walls. Oh, take me to your breast!

Take me—be with me for a moment’s span!

I am in love with all unveilèd faces.

I seek the wonder at the heart of man;

I would go up to the far-seeing places.

While youth is ours, turn toward me for a space

The marvel of your rapture-lighted face!

There are strange shadows fostered of the moon,More numerous than the clear-cut shade of day....Go forth, when all the leaves whisper of June,Into the dusk of swooping bats at play;Or go into that late November duskWhen hills take on the noble lines of death,And on the air the faint astringent muskOf rotting leaves pours vaguely troubling breath.Then shall you see shadows whereof the sunKnows nothing—aye, a thousand shadows thereShall leap and flicker and stir and stay and run,Like petrels of the changing foul or fair;Like ghosts of twilight, of the moon, of himWhose homeland lies past each horizon’s rim....

There are strange shadows fostered of the moon,

More numerous than the clear-cut shade of day....

Go forth, when all the leaves whisper of June,

Into the dusk of swooping bats at play;

Or go into that late November dusk

When hills take on the noble lines of death,

And on the air the faint astringent musk

Of rotting leaves pours vaguely troubling breath.

Then shall you see shadows whereof the sun

Knows nothing—aye, a thousand shadows there

Shall leap and flicker and stir and stay and run,

Like petrels of the changing foul or fair;

Like ghosts of twilight, of the moon, of him

Whose homeland lies past each horizon’s rim....

LIKE HIM WHOSE SPIRIT

Like him whose spirit in the blaze of noonStill keeps the memory of one secret starThat in the dusk of a remembered JuneThrilled the strange hour with beauty from afar—And perilous spells of twilight snare his heart,And wistful moods his common thoughts subdue,And life seethes by him utterly apart—Last night I dreamed, today I dream, of you.Gleams downward strike; bright bubbles upward hoverThrough the charmed air; far sea-winds cool my brow.Invisible lips tell me I shall discoverToday a temple, a mystery, a vow ...The cycle rounds: only the false seems true.Last night I dreamed, today I dream, of you.

Like him whose spirit in the blaze of noonStill keeps the memory of one secret starThat in the dusk of a remembered JuneThrilled the strange hour with beauty from afar—And perilous spells of twilight snare his heart,And wistful moods his common thoughts subdue,And life seethes by him utterly apart—Last night I dreamed, today I dream, of you.Gleams downward strike; bright bubbles upward hoverThrough the charmed air; far sea-winds cool my brow.Invisible lips tell me I shall discoverToday a temple, a mystery, a vow ...The cycle rounds: only the false seems true.Last night I dreamed, today I dream, of you.

Like him whose spirit in the blaze of noonStill keeps the memory of one secret starThat in the dusk of a remembered JuneThrilled the strange hour with beauty from afar—And perilous spells of twilight snare his heart,And wistful moods his common thoughts subdue,And life seethes by him utterly apart—Last night I dreamed, today I dream, of you.Gleams downward strike; bright bubbles upward hoverThrough the charmed air; far sea-winds cool my brow.Invisible lips tell me I shall discoverToday a temple, a mystery, a vow ...The cycle rounds: only the false seems true.Last night I dreamed, today I dream, of you.

Like him whose spirit in the blaze of noon

Still keeps the memory of one secret star

That in the dusk of a remembered June

Thrilled the strange hour with beauty from afar—

And perilous spells of twilight snare his heart,

And wistful moods his common thoughts subdue,

And life seethes by him utterly apart—

Last night I dreamed, today I dream, of you.

Gleams downward strike; bright bubbles upward hover

Through the charmed air; far sea-winds cool my brow.

Invisible lips tell me I shall discover

Today a temple, a mystery, a vow ...

The cycle rounds: only the false seems true.

Last night I dreamed, today I dream, of you.


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