Lyrics Ode to a Nightingale - Sir Ralph Richardson
My
heart
aches,
and
a
drowsy
numbness
pains
My
sense,
as
though
of
hemlock
I
had
drunk,
Or
emptied
some
dull
opiate
to
the
drains
One
minute
past,
and
Lethe-wards
had
sunk:
′Tis
not
through
envy
of
thy
happy
lot,
But
being
too
happy
in
thine
happiness–
That
thou,
light-wingèd
Dryad
of
the
trees,
In
some
melodious
plot
Of
beechen
green,
and
shadows
numberless,
Singest
of
summer
in
full-throated
ease.
O,
for
a
draught
of
vintage!
that
hath
been
Cooled
a
long
age
in
the
deep-delved
earth,
Tasting
of
Flora
and
the
country
green,
Dance,
and
Provençal
song,
and
sunburnt
mirth!
O
for
a
beaker
full
of
the
warm
South,
Full
of
the
true,
the
blushful
Hippocrene,
With
beaded
bubbles
winking
at
the
brim,
And
purple-stained
mouth;
That
I
might
drink,
and
leave
the
world
unseen,
And
with
thee
fade
away
into
the
forest
dim:
Fade
far
away,
dissolve,
and
quite
forget
What
thou
among
the
leaves
hast
never
known,
The
weariness,
the
fever,
and
the
fret
Here,
where
men
sit
and
hear
each
other
groan;
Where
palsy
shakes
a
few,
sad,
last
gray
hairs,
Where
youth
grows
pale,
and
spectre-thin,
and
dies;
Where
but
to
think
is
to
be
full
of
sorrow
And
leaden-eyed
despairs;
Where
Beauty
cannot
keep
her
lustrous
eyes,
Or
new
Love
pine
at
them
beyond
tomorrow.
Away!
away!
for
I
will
fly
to
thee,
Not
charioted
by
Bacchus
and
his
pards,
But
on
the
viewless
wings
of
Poesy,
Though
the
dull
brain
perplexes
and
retards:
Already
with
thee!
tender
is
the
night,
And
haply
the
Queen-Moon
is
on
her
throne,
Clustered
around
by
all
her
starry
Fays;
But
here
there
is
no
light,
Save
what
from
heaven
is
with
the
breezes
blown
Through
verdurous
glooms
and
winding
mossy
ways.
I
cannot
see
what
flowers
are
at
my
feet,
Nor
what
soft
incense
hangs
upon
the
boughs,
But,
in
embalmèd
darkness,
guess
each
sweet
Wherewith
the
seasonable
month
endows
The
grass,
the
thicket,
and
the
fruit-tree
wild;
White
hawthorn,
and
the
pastoral
eglantine;
Fast
fading
violets
covered
up
in
leaves;
And
mid-May's
eldest
child,
The
coming
musk-rose,
full
of
dewy
wine,
The
murmurous
haunt
of
flies
on
summer
eves.
Darkling
I
listen;
and,
for
many
a
time
I
have
been
half
in
love
with
easeful
Death,
Called
him
soft
names
in
many
a
musèd
rhyme,
To
take
into
the
air
my
quiet
breath;
Now
more
than
ever
seems
it
rich
to
die,
To
cease
upon
the
midnight
with
no
pain,
While
thou
art
pouring
forth
thy
soul
abroad
In
such
an
ecstasy!
Still
wouldst
thou
sing,
and
I
have
ears
in
vain–
To
thy
high
requiem
become
a
sod.
Thou
wast
not
born
for
death,
immortal
bird!
No
hungry
generations
tread
thee
down;
The
voice
I
hear
this
passing
night
was
heard
In
ancient
days
by
emperor
and
clown:
Perhaps
the
self-same
song
that
found
a
path
Through
the
sad
heart
of
Ruth,
when,
sick
for
home,
She
stood
in
tears
amid
the
alien
corn;
The
same
that
oft-times
hath
Charmed
magic
casements,
opening
on
the
foam
Of
perilous
seas,
in
fairy
lands
forlorn.
Forlorn!
the
very
word
is
like
a
bell
To
toll
me
back
from
thee
to
my
sole
self!
Adieu!
The
fancy
cannot
cheat
so
well
As
she
is
famed
to
do,
deceiving
elf.
Adieu!
adieu!
thy
plaintive
anthem
fades
Past
the
near
meadows,
over
the
still
stream,
Up
the
hill-side;
and
now
′tis
buried
deep
In
the
next
valley-glades:
Was
it
a
vision,
or
a
waking
dream?
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