The daylight passes swiftly and it seems Unfinished labors that I love must lie. . . . I see the fir-trees black against the sky, The heavy drifted clouds, the danger-gleams A distant lighthouse sends; I hear the streams Of rain adown the dormered roof, the sigh Of dripping alders as the winds rush by, The roaring of the ocean, yet. . . . My dreams Reveal no portion of earth's pleasure gone; The somberness of night-time brings no fears; I know the gloom that greets my eyes and ears Is prelude of a gladness farther on; My faith is fixed upon a perfect dawn -- A dawn made fairer by this night of tears. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TREKKING THE HILLS OF NORTHERN THAILAND by KAREN SWENSON THE DISCOVERY; SONNET by JOHN COLLINGS SQUIRE BACCHANALIA; OR, THE NEW AGE by MATTHEW ARNOLD ISAIAH: FIFTY-SECOND CHAPTER by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE ONLY THE HEART IS HAUNTED by VERNE BRIGHT |