WHEN o'er the world night spreads her mantle dun, In dreams, my love, I see those stars thine eyes Lighting the dark; but when the royal sun Looks o'er the pines and fires the orient skies, I bask no longer in thy beauty's ray, And lo! my world is bankrupt of delight: Murk night seemed lately fair-complexioned day: Hope-bringing day seems now most doleful night. End, weary day, that art no day to me! Return, fair night, to me the best of days! But oh, my rose, whom in my dreams I see, Enkindle with like bliss my waking gaze! Replete with thee, e'en hideous night grows fair, Then what would sweet morn be, if thou wert there! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...REMEMBERED WOMEN by CARL SANDBURG TWO SONGS OF A FOOL: 1 by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS THE FORSAKEN MERMAN by MATTHEW ARNOLD THALATTA! THALATTA!; CRY OF THE TEN THOUSAND by JOSEPH BROWNLEE BROWN A PRAYER TO THE WIND by THOMAS CAREW |