WHEN the long day dies in summer and flowers are closing, They scatter their odours that thrill thro' the drowsy sense, And our eyelids fall, while the sense, alert, lies dozing And behind our slumber we gaze thro' a cloudless lens. Then the stars are brighter, the dark has more soft concealment, And over the dome of heav'n is a hue of day, And the shy, dim dawn, awaiting the sun's fulfilment, Lurks all night long low down on the skyline gray. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CALLING DREAMS by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON TO OUR MOCKING-BIRD; DIED OF A CAT, MAY, 1878 by SIDNEY LANIER TWO SONNETS: 2 by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON TWO TREES IN KATHMANDU by KAREN SWENSON MARCH by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS SICILIAN EMIGRANT'S SONG by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS AN ODE ON THE UNVEILING OF THE SHAW MEMORIA BOSTON COMMON, MAY 31, 1897 by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH |