IT was the night when we expected news from France, To say the war was over, and the fighting done; The tidings that would make my heart rejoice at last, For foe as well as friend, and make the peoples one. And as I moved amidst that silent multitude, Feeling the presence of a wild excitement there, The world appeared to me so strange and wonderful -- I almost heard a cuckoo in Trafalgar Square! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MADEIRA FROM THE SEA by SARA TEASDALE SONNET: 94 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE THE HYMNARY: 361. ST. JOHN BAPTIST by BEDE IDYLL 5. LIFE TO BE ENJOYED by BION ROBERT E. LEE by GAMALIEL BRADFORD IN REFERENCE TO HER CHILDREN, 23 JUNE, 1659 by ANNE BRADSTREET POETICAL ADDRESS TO MR. WILLIAM TYTLER by ROBERT BURNS FROM THE GRASS by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON SIDNEY'S ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: CANTO SECUNDO. LOVE'S PILGRIMS by THOMAS CAMPION |