Skip to content
Linespedia

Nocturne ["I Sit To-Night By The Firelight,"]

Topics: classic

I sit to-night by the firelight,      And I look at the glowing flame,     And I see in the bright red flashes      A Heart, a Face, and a Name.     How often have I seen pictures      Framed in the firelight's blaze,     Of hearts, of names, and of faces,      And scenes of remembered days!     How often have I found poems      In the crimson of the coals,     And the swaying flames of the firelight      Unrolled such golden scrolls.     And my eyes, they were proud to read them,      In letters of living flame,     But to-night, in the fire, I see only      One Heart, one Face, and one Name.     But where are the olden pictures?      And where are the olden dreams?     Has a change come over my vision?      Or over the fire's bright gleams?     Not over my vision, surely;      My eyes -- they are still the same,     That used to find in the firelight      So many a face and name.     Not over the firelight, either,      No change in the coals or blaze     That flicker and flash, as ruddy      To-night as in other days.     But there must be a change -- I feel it.      To-night not an old picture came;     The fire's bright flames only painted      One Heart, one Face, and one Name.     Three pictures?    No! only one picture;      The Face belongs to the Name,     And the Name names the Heart that is throbbing      Just back of the beautiful flame.     Who said it, I wonder:    "All faces      Must fade in the light of but one;     The soul, like the earth, may have many      Horizons, but only one sun?"     Who dreamt it?    Did I?    If I dreamt it      'Tis true -- every name passes by     Save one; the sun wears many cloudlets      Of gold, but has only one sky.     And out of the flames have they faded,      The hearts and the faces of yore?     Have they sunk 'neath the gray of the ashes      To rise to my vision no more?     Yes, surely, or else I would see them      To-night, just as bright as of old,     In the white of the coal's silver flashes,      In the red of the restless flames' gold.     Do you say I am fickle and faithless?      Else why are the old pictures gone?     And why should the visions of many      Melt into the vision of one?     Nay! list to the voice of the Heavens,      "One Eternal alone reigns above."     Is it true? and all else are but idols,      So the heart can have only one love?     Only one, all the rest are but idols,      That fall from their shrines soon or late,     When the Love that is Lord of the temple,      Comes with sceptre and crown to the gate.     To be faithless oft means to be faithful,      To be false often means to be true;     The vale that loves clouds that are golden      Forgets them for skies that are blue.     To forget often means to remember      What we had forgotten too long;     The fragrance is not the bright flower,      The echo is not the sweet song.     Am I dreaming?    No, there is the firelight,      Gaze I ever so long, all the same     I only can see in its glowing      A Heart, a Face, and a Name.     Farewell! all ye hearts, names, and faces!      Only ashes now under the blaze,     Ye never again will smile on me,      For I'm touching the end of my days.     And the beautiful fading firelight      Paints, now, with a pencil of flame,     Three pictures -- yet only one picture --      A Heart, a Face, and a Name.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"I sit to-night by the firelight,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Abram Joseph Ryan delivers a powerful performance in "Nocturne ["I Sit To-Night By The Firelight,"]"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"When I am dead, and all will soon forget      My words, and face, and ways --     I, somehow, think I'll walk beside thee yet      Adown thy af"

"He walked alone beside the lonely sea,     The slanting sunbeams fell upon his face,     His shadow fluttered on the pure white sands     Like"

"At the golden gates of the visions      I knelt me adown one day;     But sudden my prayer was a silence,      For I heard from the "Far away""

"Back to where the roses rest     Round a shrine of holy name,     (Yes -- they knew me when I came)     More of peace and less of fame      S"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Continue Reading

"When I am dead, and all will soon forget      My w..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.