I ride through a dark, dark Land by night, Where moon is none and no stars lend light, And rueful winds are blowing; Yet oft have I trodden this way ere now, With summer zephyrs a-fanning my brow, And the gold of the sunshine glowing. I roam by a gloomy garden wall; The death-stricken leaves around me fall; And the night-blast wails its dolours; How oft with my love I have hitherward strayed When the roses flowered, and all I surveyed Was radiant with Hope's own colours! But the gold of the sunshine is shed and gone And the once bright roses are dead and wan, And my love in her low grave moulders, And I ride through a dark, dark land by night With never a star to bless me with light, And the Mantle of Age on my shoulders. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OLD SUSAN by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE ELEGY: 11. THE BRACELET; UPON THE LOSS OF HIS MISTRESS'S CHAIN by JOHN DONNE SPRING'S WELCOME, FR. ALEXANDER AND CAMPASPE by JOHN LYLY THE LAND OF NOD by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON THE PHOENIX REBORN FROM ITS ASHES by LOUIS ARAGON I WOULD NOT LIFT THY VEIL by A. LOUISE ASHWORTH |