Early Waking

Four hooves rang out and now are still. 
In the dark wall the casements hold 
Essential day above each sill, 
Just light, and colored like thin gold. 
Behind those hooves a drowsy course
All night I rode where hearts were clear, 
And wishes blessed at the source, 
And for no shape of time stop here.

No more to raise that lively ghost
Which ran quicksilver to the bone:
By a whim’s turn the whole was lost
When all its marrow worth was known. 
Ghosts can cast shadows in the breast,
And what was present tears to weep, 
Not heart nor mind would bid from rest
As far as sorrow’s, ten years deep.

I travel, not for a ghost’s sake, 
One step from sleep, and not for one
Left sleeping at my side I wake. 
Before bricks rosy with the dawn,
The hooves will sound beyond the light:
There are dark roads enough to go 
To last us through the end of night, 
And I will make my waking slow,

It was for unconcerning light 
That has not fallen on earth, to stare
An instant only out of night 
And with night’s cloudy character,
Before the laden mind shall slip
Past dream and on to brightmost dream
And fetterless high morning dip
Her two cold sandals in the stream.

This poem is in the public domain. Published in Poem-a-Day on August 30, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.