THE longest night of the year, they say; By four of the clock, the dark comes down, And the hills loom dim and far away, While the lights wink out in the big, vague town. And yet, O Love, of the nights I know, This night was briefest, -- so brief, so blest. For you came and gave me your heart, and so Time was nothing and darkness best! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DOMESDAY BOOK: CONSIDER FREELAND by EDGAR LEE MASTERS THE SEA-MEW by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING ON THE DEATH OF MR. CRASHAW by ABRAHAM COWLEY IN THE HOLY NATIVITY [OF OUR LORD GOD]; AS SUNG BY SHEPHERDS by RICHARD CRASHAW THE MAN CHRIST by THERESE (KARPER) LINDSEY TO AMERICA, ON HER FIRST SONS FALLEN IN THE GREAT WAR by E. M. WALKER SONNET: 17 by RICHARD BARNFIELD |