One feather is a bird,
I claim; one tree, a wood;
In her low voice I heard
More than a mortal should;
And so I stood apart,
Hidden in my own heart.
And yet I roamed out where
Those notes went, like the bird,
Whose thin song hung in air,
Diminished, yet still heard:
I lived with open sound,
Aloft, and on the ground.
That ghost was my own choice,
The shy cerulean bird;
It sang with her true voice,
And it was I who heard
A slight voice reply;
I heard; and only I.
Desire exults the ear:
Bird, girl, and ghostly tree,
The earth, the solid air--
Their slow song sang in me;
The long noon pulsed away,
Like any summer day.
The Voice
Theodore Roethke
(1)
Poem topics: away, girl, heart, summer, desire, hidden, earth, feather, claim, long, choice, true, ghost, open, slow, sound, Valentine's Day, song, tree, voice, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
About The Voice
The Voice is a poem by Theodore Roethke. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
Write your comment about The Voice poem by Theodore Roethke
Best Poems of Theodore Roethke