The shadows fall as the sun sinks down And heavily droops the day; A leaden pall weighs on tower and town And the last of the dead leaves flutters down And the swallows fly away. And the road winds always across the plain, And always its milestones glimmer white; But the travellers there come not again: They are lost in the night. Will the swallows never fly back to our eaves? Will our branches never bear fresh green leaves? Will the sun never lift our load? Must we live weighed down in a twilight-town Or be lost on a midnight-road? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DESPAIR by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON OWL AGAINST ROBIN by SIDNEY LANIER SURFACES AND MASKS; 4 by CLARENCE MAJOR SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: IMANUEL EHRENHARDT by EDGAR LEE MASTERS SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: J. MILTON MILES by EDGAR LEE MASTERS FONTAINEBLEAU (AUTUMN) by SARA TEASDALE WINTER NIGHT SONG by SARA TEASDALE BALLADE MADE FOR HIS MOTHER THAT SHE MIGHTE PRAYE by FRANCOIS VILLON |