There are some hours when I seem so indifferent; all things fade
To an indifferent greyness, like that grey of the sky;
Always at evening-ends, on grey days; and I know not why,
But life, and art, and love, and death, are the shade of a shade.
Then, in those hours, I hear old voices murmur aloud,
And memory forgoes desire, too weary at heart for regret;
Dreams come with beckoning fingers, and I forget to forget;
The world as a cloud drifts by, or I drift by as a cloud.
(Arthur Symons)
More Poetry from Arthur Symons:
Arthur Symons Poems based on Topics: Love, World, Death & Dying, Life, Dreams, Desire, Art- A Brother Of The Battuti (Arthur Symons Poems)
- Alle Zattere (Arthur Symons Poems)
- A Litany of Lethe (Arthur Symons Poems)
- Airs for the Lute (Arthur Symons Poems)
- At the Stage Door (Arthur Symons Poems)
- At the Foresters (Arthur Symons Poems)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Love Poems, Life Poems, World Poems, Death & Dying Poems, Dreams Poems, Art Poems, Desire PoemsBased on Keywords: greyness, forgoes, evening-ends
- The Vision Of Piers Plowman - Part 14 (William Langland Poems)
- Alma; or, The Progress of the Mind. In Three Cantos. - Canto I. (Matthew Prior Poems)
- Convict Once - Part Second. (James Brunton Stephens Poems)
- Hermann And Dorothea - IX. Urania (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Poems)
- The Believer's Espousals : Chapter I. (Ralph Erskine Poems)