| Song | Stone Angels |
| Artist | Ulver |
| Album | Wars of the Roses |
| Download | Image LRC TXT |
| 作曲 : Daniel O'Sullivan | |
| 作词 : Keith Waldrop | |
| (The full lyrics to Stone Angels are printed in the album booklets. | |
| It is a poem written by Keith Waldrop first published in 1997 by homonimous title | |
| Reedited in Transcendental Studies: A Trilogy on 2009) | |
| Angels go - we | |
| merely stray, image of | |
| a wandering deity, searching for | |
| wells or for work. They scale | |
| rungs of air, ascending | |
| and descending - we are a little | |
| lower. The grass covers us. | |
| But statues, here, they stand, simple as | |
| horizon. Statements, | |
| yes - but what they stand for | |
| is long fallen. | |
| Angels of memory: they point | |
| to the death of time, not | |
| themselves timeless, and without | |
| recall. Their | |
| strength is to stand | |
| still, afterglow | |
| of an old religion. | |
| One can imagine them | |
| sentient - that is to say, we may | |
| attribute to stone-hardness, one after the | |
| other, our own five senses, until it spring | |
| to life and | |
| breathe and sneeze and step | |
| down among us. | |
| But in fact, they are | |
| the opposite of perception: we | |
| bury our gaze in them. For all my | |
| sympathy, I | |
| suppose they see | |
| nothing at all, eyeless to indicate | |
| our calamity, breathless and graceful | |
| above the ruins they inspire. | |
| I could close my eyes now and | |
| evade, maybe, the blind | |
| fear that their wings hold. | |
| The visible body expresses our | |
| body as a whole, its | |
| internal asymmetries, and also the broken | |
| symmetry we wander through. | |
| With practice I might | |
| regard people and things - the field | |
| around me - as blots: objects | |
| for fantasy, shadowy but | |
| legible. All these | |
| words have other meanings. A little | |
| written may be far too | |
| much to read. | |
| A while and a while and a while, after a | |
| while make something like forever. | |
| From ontological bric-a-brac, and | |
| without knowing quite what they | |
| mean, I select my | |
| four ambassadors: my | |
| double, my shadow, my shining | |
| covering, my name. | |
| The graven names are not their | |
| names, but ours. | |
| Expectation, endlessly | |
| engraved, is a question | |
| to beg. Blemishes on exposed | |
| surfaces - perpetual | |
| corrosion - enliven features | |
| fastened to the stone. | |
| Expecting nothing without | |
| struggle, I come to expect nothing | |
| but struggle. | |
| The primal Adam, our | |
| archetype - light at his back, heavy | |
| substance below him - glanced | |
| down into uncertain depths, fell in | |
| love with and fell | |
| into his own shadow. | |
| Legend or history: footprints | |
| of passing events. Lord | |
| how our information | |
| increaseth. | |
| I see only | |
| a surface - complex enough, its | |
| interruptions of | |
| deep blue - suggesting that the earth | |
| is hollow, stretched around | |
| what must be all the rest. | |
| My "world" is parsimoniuos - a few | |
| elements which | |
| combine, like tricks of light, to | |
| sketch the barest outline. But my | |
| void is lavish, breaking | |
| its frame, tempting me always to | |
| turn again, again, for each | |
| glimpse suggests more and more in some | |
| other, farther emptiness. | |
| To reach empty space, think | |
| away each object - without destroying | |
| its position. Ghostly then, with | |
| contents gone, the | |
| vacuum will not, as you | |
| might expect, collapse, but | |
| hang there, | |
| vacant, waiting an inrush of | |
| reappointments seven times | |
| worse than anything you know, seven other dimensions | |
| curled into our three. | |
| But time empties, on | |
| occasion, more quickly than | |
| that. Breathe in our out. No | |
| motion moves. | |
| Trees go down, random and | |
| planted, the | |
| way we think. | |
| The sacrificial animal is | |
| consumed by fire, ascends in greasy | |
| smoke, an offering | |
| to the sky. Earthly | |
| refuse assaults | |
| heaven, as we are contaminated by | |
| notions of eternity. It is as if | |
| a love letter - or everything I | |
| have written - were to be | |
| torn up and the pieces | |
| scattered, in | |
| order to reach the beloved. | |
| No entrance after | |
| sundown. Under how vast a | |
| night, what we call day. | |
| What stands still is merely | |
| extended - what | |
| moves is in space. | |
| Immobile figures, here in a | |
| race with death gloom about their | |
| heads like a dark nimbus. | |
| Still, they do - while standing - | |
| go: they've a motion | |
| like the flow of water, like | |
| ice, only slower. Our | |
| time is a river, theirs | |
| the glassy sea. | |
| They drift, as | |
| we do, in this garden so swank, so grandly | |
| indiscriminate. Frail | |
| wings, fingers too fragile. Their faces | |
| freckle, weathering. | |
| Pure spirit, saith the Angelic | |
| Doctor. But not these | |
| angels: pure visibility, hovering, | |
| lifting horror into the day, | |
| to cancel and preserve it. | |
| The worst death, worse | |
| than death, would be to die, leaving | |
| nothing unfinished. | |
| Somewhere in my life, there | |
| must have been - buried now under | |
| long accumulation - some extreme | |
| joy which, never spoken, cannot | |
| be brought to mind. How else, in this | |
| unconscious city, could I have | |
| such a sense of dwelling? | |
| I would | |
| raise . . . What's the opposite | |
| of Ebenezer? | |
| Night, with its crypt, its | |
| cradlesong. Rage | |
| for day's end: impatience, | |
| like a boat in the evening. Toward | |
| the horizon, as | |
| down a sounding line. Barcarolle, | |
| funeral march. | |
| Nocturne at high noon. |
| zuo qu : Daniel O' Sullivan | |
| zuo ci : Keith Waldrop | |
| The full lyrics to Stone Angels are printed in the album booklets. | |
| It is a poem written by Keith Waldrop first published in 1997 by homonimous title | |
| Reedited in Transcendental Studies: A Trilogy on 2009 | |
| Angels go we | |
| merely stray, image of | |
| a wandering deity, searching for | |
| wells or for work. They scale | |
| rungs of air, ascending | |
| and descending we are a little | |
| lower. The grass covers us. | |
| But statues, here, they stand, simple as | |
| horizon. Statements, | |
| yes but what they stand for | |
| is long fallen. | |
| Angels of memory: they point | |
| to the death of time, not | |
| themselves timeless, and without | |
| recall. Their | |
| strength is to stand | |
| still, afterglow | |
| of an old religion. | |
| One can imagine them | |
| sentient that is to say, we may | |
| attribute to stonehardness, one after the | |
| other, our own five senses, until it spring | |
| to life and | |
| breathe and sneeze and step | |
| down among us. | |
| But in fact, they are | |
| the opposite of perception: we | |
| bury our gaze in them. For all my | |
| sympathy, I | |
| suppose they see | |
| nothing at all, eyeless to indicate | |
| our calamity, breathless and graceful | |
| above the ruins they inspire. | |
| I could close my eyes now and | |
| evade, maybe, the blind | |
| fear that their wings hold. | |
| The visible body expresses our | |
| body as a whole, its | |
| internal asymmetries, and also the broken | |
| symmetry we wander through. | |
| With practice I might | |
| regard people and things the field | |
| around me as blots: objects | |
| for fantasy, shadowy but | |
| legible. All these | |
| words have other meanings. A little | |
| written may be far too | |
| much to read. | |
| A while and a while and a while, after a | |
| while make something like forever. | |
| From ontological bricabrac, and | |
| without knowing quite what they | |
| mean, I select my | |
| four ambassadors: my | |
| double, my shadow, my shining | |
| covering, my name. | |
| The graven names are not their | |
| names, but ours. | |
| Expectation, endlessly | |
| engraved, is a question | |
| to beg. Blemishes on exposed | |
| surfaces perpetual | |
| corrosion enliven features | |
| fastened to the stone. | |
| Expecting nothing without | |
| struggle, I come to expect nothing | |
| but struggle. | |
| The primal Adam, our | |
| archetype light at his back, heavy | |
| substance below him glanced | |
| down into uncertain depths, fell in | |
| love with and fell | |
| into his own shadow. | |
| Legend or history: footprints | |
| of passing events. Lord | |
| how our information | |
| increaseth. | |
| I see only | |
| a surface complex enough, its | |
| interruptions of | |
| deep blue suggesting that the earth | |
| is hollow, stretched around | |
| what must be all the rest. | |
| My " world" is parsimoniuos a few | |
| elements which | |
| combine, like tricks of light, to | |
| sketch the barest outline. But my | |
| void is lavish, breaking | |
| its frame, tempting me always to | |
| turn again, again, for each | |
| glimpse suggests more and more in some | |
| other, farther emptiness. | |
| To reach empty space, think | |
| away each object without destroying | |
| its position. Ghostly then, with | |
| contents gone, the | |
| vacuum will not, as you | |
| might expect, collapse, but | |
| hang there, | |
| vacant, waiting an inrush of | |
| reappointments seven times | |
| worse than anything you know, seven other dimensions | |
| curled into our three. | |
| But time empties, on | |
| occasion, more quickly than | |
| that. Breathe in our out. No | |
| motion moves. | |
| Trees go down, random and | |
| planted, the | |
| way we think. | |
| The sacrificial animal is | |
| consumed by fire, ascends in greasy | |
| smoke, an offering | |
| to the sky. Earthly | |
| refuse assaults | |
| heaven, as we are contaminated by | |
| notions of eternity. It is as if | |
| a love letter or everything I | |
| have written were to be | |
| torn up and the pieces | |
| scattered, in | |
| order to reach the beloved. | |
| No entrance after | |
| sundown. Under how vast a | |
| night, what we call day. | |
| What stands still is merely | |
| extended what | |
| moves is in space. | |
| Immobile figures, here in a | |
| race with death gloom about their | |
| heads like a dark nimbus. | |
| Still, they do while standing | |
| go: they' ve a motion | |
| like the flow of water, like | |
| ice, only slower. Our | |
| time is a river, theirs | |
| the glassy sea. | |
| They drift, as | |
| we do, in this garden so swank, so grandly | |
| indiscriminate. Frail | |
| wings, fingers too fragile. Their faces | |
| freckle, weathering. | |
| Pure spirit, saith the Angelic | |
| Doctor. But not these | |
| angels: pure visibility, hovering, | |
| lifting horror into the day, | |
| to cancel and preserve it. | |
| The worst death, worse | |
| than death, would be to die, leaving | |
| nothing unfinished. | |
| Somewhere in my life, there | |
| must have been buried now under | |
| long accumulation some extreme | |
| joy which, never spoken, cannot | |
| be brought to mind. How else, in this | |
| unconscious city, could I have | |
| such a sense of dwelling? | |
| I would | |
| raise . . . What' s the opposite | |
| of Ebenezer? | |
| Night, with its crypt, its | |
| cradlesong. Rage | |
| for day' s end: impatience, | |
| like a boat in the evening. Toward | |
| the horizon, as | |
| down a sounding line. Barcarolle, | |
| funeral march. | |
| Nocturne at high noon. |
| zuò qǔ : Daniel O' Sullivan | |
| zuò cí : Keith Waldrop | |
| The full lyrics to Stone Angels are printed in the album booklets. | |
| It is a poem written by Keith Waldrop first published in 1997 by homonimous title | |
| Reedited in Transcendental Studies: A Trilogy on 2009 | |
| Angels go we | |
| merely stray, image of | |
| a wandering deity, searching for | |
| wells or for work. They scale | |
| rungs of air, ascending | |
| and descending we are a little | |
| lower. The grass covers us. | |
| But statues, here, they stand, simple as | |
| horizon. Statements, | |
| yes but what they stand for | |
| is long fallen. | |
| Angels of memory: they point | |
| to the death of time, not | |
| themselves timeless, and without | |
| recall. Their | |
| strength is to stand | |
| still, afterglow | |
| of an old religion. | |
| One can imagine them | |
| sentient that is to say, we may | |
| attribute to stonehardness, one after the | |
| other, our own five senses, until it spring | |
| to life and | |
| breathe and sneeze and step | |
| down among us. | |
| But in fact, they are | |
| the opposite of perception: we | |
| bury our gaze in them. For all my | |
| sympathy, I | |
| suppose they see | |
| nothing at all, eyeless to indicate | |
| our calamity, breathless and graceful | |
| above the ruins they inspire. | |
| I could close my eyes now and | |
| evade, maybe, the blind | |
| fear that their wings hold. | |
| The visible body expresses our | |
| body as a whole, its | |
| internal asymmetries, and also the broken | |
| symmetry we wander through. | |
| With practice I might | |
| regard people and things the field | |
| around me as blots: objects | |
| for fantasy, shadowy but | |
| legible. All these | |
| words have other meanings. A little | |
| written may be far too | |
| much to read. | |
| A while and a while and a while, after a | |
| while make something like forever. | |
| From ontological bricabrac, and | |
| without knowing quite what they | |
| mean, I select my | |
| four ambassadors: my | |
| double, my shadow, my shining | |
| covering, my name. | |
| The graven names are not their | |
| names, but ours. | |
| Expectation, endlessly | |
| engraved, is a question | |
| to beg. Blemishes on exposed | |
| surfaces perpetual | |
| corrosion enliven features | |
| fastened to the stone. | |
| Expecting nothing without | |
| struggle, I come to expect nothing | |
| but struggle. | |
| The primal Adam, our | |
| archetype light at his back, heavy | |
| substance below him glanced | |
| down into uncertain depths, fell in | |
| love with and fell | |
| into his own shadow. | |
| Legend or history: footprints | |
| of passing events. Lord | |
| how our information | |
| increaseth. | |
| I see only | |
| a surface complex enough, its | |
| interruptions of | |
| deep blue suggesting that the earth | |
| is hollow, stretched around | |
| what must be all the rest. | |
| My " world" is parsimoniuos a few | |
| elements which | |
| combine, like tricks of light, to | |
| sketch the barest outline. But my | |
| void is lavish, breaking | |
| its frame, tempting me always to | |
| turn again, again, for each | |
| glimpse suggests more and more in some | |
| other, farther emptiness. | |
| To reach empty space, think | |
| away each object without destroying | |
| its position. Ghostly then, with | |
| contents gone, the | |
| vacuum will not, as you | |
| might expect, collapse, but | |
| hang there, | |
| vacant, waiting an inrush of | |
| reappointments seven times | |
| worse than anything you know, seven other dimensions | |
| curled into our three. | |
| But time empties, on | |
| occasion, more quickly than | |
| that. Breathe in our out. No | |
| motion moves. | |
| Trees go down, random and | |
| planted, the | |
| way we think. | |
| The sacrificial animal is | |
| consumed by fire, ascends in greasy | |
| smoke, an offering | |
| to the sky. Earthly | |
| refuse assaults | |
| heaven, as we are contaminated by | |
| notions of eternity. It is as if | |
| a love letter or everything I | |
| have written were to be | |
| torn up and the pieces | |
| scattered, in | |
| order to reach the beloved. | |
| No entrance after | |
| sundown. Under how vast a | |
| night, what we call day. | |
| What stands still is merely | |
| extended what | |
| moves is in space. | |
| Immobile figures, here in a | |
| race with death gloom about their | |
| heads like a dark nimbus. | |
| Still, they do while standing | |
| go: they' ve a motion | |
| like the flow of water, like | |
| ice, only slower. Our | |
| time is a river, theirs | |
| the glassy sea. | |
| They drift, as | |
| we do, in this garden so swank, so grandly | |
| indiscriminate. Frail | |
| wings, fingers too fragile. Their faces | |
| freckle, weathering. | |
| Pure spirit, saith the Angelic | |
| Doctor. But not these | |
| angels: pure visibility, hovering, | |
| lifting horror into the day, | |
| to cancel and preserve it. | |
| The worst death, worse | |
| than death, would be to die, leaving | |
| nothing unfinished. | |
| Somewhere in my life, there | |
| must have been buried now under | |
| long accumulation some extreme | |
| joy which, never spoken, cannot | |
| be brought to mind. How else, in this | |
| unconscious city, could I have | |
| such a sense of dwelling? | |
| I would | |
| raise . . . What' s the opposite | |
| of Ebenezer? | |
| Night, with its crypt, its | |
| cradlesong. Rage | |
| for day' s end: impatience, | |
| like a boat in the evening. Toward | |
| the horizon, as | |
| down a sounding line. Barcarolle, | |
| funeral march. | |
| Nocturne at high noon. |