DAY gradual fades, in evening gray, Its last faint beam hath fled, And sinks the sun's declining ray In ocean's wavy bed. So o'er the loves and joys of youth Thy waves, Indifference, roll; So mantles round our days of truth That death-pool of the soul. Spreads o'er the heavens the shadowy night Her dim and shapeless form, So human pleasures, frail and light, Are lost in passion's storm. So fades the sunshine of the breast, So passion's dreamings fall, So friendship's fervours sink to rest, Oblivion shrouds them all. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TWO POEMS FROM THE WAR: 2 by ARCHIBALD MACLEISH EPISTLE TO AUGUSTA by GEORGE GORDON BYRON THE NEED OF BEING VERSED IN COUNTRY THINGS by ROBERT FROST INTO BATTLE by JULIAN GRENFELL SEVEN TIMES ONE [- CHILDHOOD. EXULTATION] by JEAN INGELOW OLD POETS by ALFRED JOYCE KILMER LINCOLN by NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY KINDNESS TO ANIMALS by JOSEPH ASHBY-STERRY THE STEAM-ENGINE: CANTO 4: LORD STANHOPE'S STEAMER by T. BAKER |