Not to sleep
Not to sleep all the night long, for pure joy,
Counting no sheep and careless of chimes
Welcoming the dawn confabulation
Of birch, her children, who discuss idly
Fanciful details of the promised coming -
Will she be wearing red, or russet, or blue,
Or pure white? - whatever she wears, glorious:
Not to sleep all the night long, for pure joy,
This is given to few but at last to me,
So that when 1 laugh and stretch and leap from bed
I shall glide downstairs, my feet brushing the carpet
In courtesy to civilized progression,
Though, did 1 wish, I could soar through the open window
And perch on a branch above, acceptable ally
Of the birds still alert, grumbling gently together.
Robert Graves
Other poems of Robert Graves
1915
I?ve watched the Seasons passing slow, so slow,
In the...
A Boy in Church
?Gabble-gabble,? brethren,? gabble-gabble!?
My window...
A Child's Nightmare
Through long nursery nights he stood
By my bed...
A Dead Boche
To you who?d read my songs of War
And only hear of blood...
A Pinch of Salt
When a dream is born in you
With a sudden clamorous...
An English Wood
This valley wood is pledged
To the set shape of things,
An Old Twenty-Third Man
?Is that the Three-and-Twentieth, Strabo mine,
Marching...
Babylon
The child alone a poet is:
Spring and Fairyland are...
Call It a Good Marriage
Call it a good marriage -
For no one ever questioned
Careers
Father is quite the greatest poet
That ever lived...
Previous poems
Waking in the Blue
The night attendant, a B.U. sophomore,
rouses from the...
To Speak of Woe That Is in Marriage
"It is the future generation that presses into being by...
The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket
Let man have dominion over the fishes of the sea and the...
The Old Flame
My old flame, my wife!
Remember our lists of birds?
The Drunken Fisherman
Wallowing in this bloody sty,
I cast for fish that pleased...

