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Home  »  Modern Russian Poetry  »  Fyodor Tyutchev (1803–1873)
(Trans. Avrahm Yarmolinsky)

Deutsch and Yarmolinsky, comps. Modern Russian Poetry. 1921.

Silentium

Fyodor Tyutchev (1803–1873)
(Trans. Avrahm Yarmolinsky)

BE silent, hidden, and conceal

Whate’er you dream, whate’er you feel.

Oh, let your visions rise and die

Within your heart’s unfathomed sky,

Like stars that take night’s darkened route.

Admire and scan them and be mute.

The heart was born dumb; who can sense

Its tremors, recondite and tense?

And who can hear its silent cry?

A thought when spoken is a lie.

Uncovered springs men will pollute,—

Drink hidden waters, and be mute.

Your art shall inner living be.

The world within your fantasy

A kingdom is that waits its Saul.

The outer din shall still its call,

Day’s glare its secret suns confute.

Oh, quaff its singing, and be mute.