THE last-lighted windows have darkened, The last courting pair have gone home; And moon and wind and the little shriek-owl All over the country roam. The chimneys and roofs of the village Like a mystical figure are drawn On a cloud's white veil that sleeps and shines From the church to the sign of the Swan. Between blue and silver the by-road Runs, hides and again gleams free; The moon seems loitering, like the wind That kisses the hawthorn tree. Far glistens that tree in the meadow, But the spirit of love hither borne In glimmerings and sighings, O can such a joy Be the wind in the moonlit thorn? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LORD, HEAR MY PRAYER; A PARAPHRASE OF THE 102ND PSALM by JOHN CLARE COWSLIPS AND LARKS by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES MEN WHO MARCH AWAY' (SONG OF THE SOLDIERS) by THOMAS HARDY TO MUSIC [TO BECALM HIS FEVER] by ROBERT HERRICK THE VANITY OF HUMAN WISHES; THE 10TH SATIRE OF JUVENAL, IMITATED by SAMUEL JOHNSON (1709-1784) RECONCILIATION by GEORGE WILLIAM RUSSELL SONNET: 25 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE |