I HIED me off to Arcady -- The month it was the month of May, And all along the pleasant way The morning birds were mad with glee, And all the flowers sprang up to see, As I went on to Arcady. But slow I fared to Arcady -- The way was long, the winding way -- Sometimes I watched the children play, And then I laid me down to see The great white clouds sail over me -- I thought they sailed to Arcady. Then by me sped to Arcady Two lovers, each on palfrey gray, And blithe with love, and blithe with May, And they were rich, and held in fee The whole round world: and Youth is he Who knows the path to Arcady. I followed on to Arcady -- But I was all alone that day, And shadows stole along the way, And somehow I had lost the key That makes an errant mortal free Of the dear fields of Arcady. But still I fared toward Arcady, Until I slept at set of day, And in my dreams I found the way; And all the Fates were kind to me; So that I woke beneath a tree In the dear land of Arcady. What did I find in Arcady? -- Ah, that I never must betray: I learned the secrets of the May; And why the winds are fresh and free, And all the birds are mad with glee That soar and sing in Arcady. I dwell no more in Arcady: -- But when the sky is blue with May, And flowers spring up along the way, And birds are blithe, and winds are free, I know what message is for me, -- For I have been in Arcady. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ROBERT OF LINCOLN by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT JACK CREAMER [OCTOBER 25, 1812] by JAMES JEFFREY ROCHE THE FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER VERSES TO HER WHO IS JUSTLY ENTITLED TO THEM by BERNARD BARTON SAD MADRIGAL, SELECTION by CHARLES BAUDELAIRE THE DROWNED HIDALGO DREAMS by WILLIAM ROSE BENET |