THE night wears on, the lawns are grey with dew, The Easter of the dawn will soon be here: And I must leave the happy world I knew, And front the Heaven I worship and I fear. Dawn that in awe and trembling I desire, Bloom in the skies as flaming and as bright As Enoch saw the chariot-wheels of fire Divide the darkness of the desert night. Ah, when beside that palm tree in the sand The fiery swiftness trembled, did his will Grow faint, to leave the long familiar land? Or did he feel a dizzier terror still Lest, like a dream, that chariot should be gone And leave him in the wilderness alone? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO JOANNA, ON SENDING ME THE LEAF OF A FLOWER ... WORDSWORTH'S GARDEN by BERNARD BARTON LOVE'S SECRET by ROBERT PECK BATES ROAD AND HILLS by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET O YE JOYS! by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON NAN'S SONG, FR. MIDSUMMER EVE by GORDON BOTTOMLEY CAELI by FRANCIS WILLIAM BOURDILLON TO THE RAINBOW by THOMAS CAMPBELL TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 4. THE BABE by EDWARD CARPENTER THE HUE AND THE CRY AFTER SIR JOHN PRESBYTER by JOHN CLEVELAND |