(1) Like timid girls the shades are pacing down The slopes of evening, trailing soberly Their vestments grey: Far, far away, The last, red tinge Is fading into brown; So far! So faint! Seen but surmisingly! And now the dusk of evening draws upon That memory of light, And light is gone! (2) The bee Speeds Home! The beetle's Wing of horn Is booming by! The darkness, Every side, Gathers around On air, And sky, And ground! The trees Sing on the darkness, Far and wide, In cadenced lift of leaves, A tale of morn! And the moon's circle, Silver-faint, and thin, Birds lovely on the earth: -- There is no sin! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CITY REVISITED by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET CONRAD AT TWILIGHT by JOHN CROWE RANSOM THE DAY-DREAM: THE SLEEPING BEAUTY by ALFRED TENNYSON EMIGRATION by LISA DOMINGUEZ ABRAHAM MAKE FRIENDS by ALI IBN ABU TALIB TO THE FONT-GEORGES by THEODORE FAULLAIN DE BANVILLE |