TO-NIGHT when you sit in the deep hours alone, And from the sleeps you snatch wake quick and feel You hear my step upon the threshold-stone, My hand upon the doorway latchward steal, Be sure 'tis but the white winds of the snow, For I shall come no more. And when the candle in the pane is wore, And moonbeams down the hill long shadows throw, When night's white eyes are in the chinky door, Think of a long road in a valley low, Think of a wanderer in the distance far, Lost like a voice among the scattered hills. And when the moon has gone and ocean spills Its waters backward from the trysting bar, And in dark furrows of the night there tills A jewelled plough, and many a falling star Moves you to prayer, then will you think of me On the long road that will not ever end. Jonah is hoarse in Nineveh -- I'd lend My voice to save the town -- and hurriedly Goes Abraham with murdering knife, and Ruth Is weary in the corn. . . . Yet will I stay, For one flower blooms upon the rocks of truth, God is in all our hurry and delay. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE FUTURE SPEAKS by LOUIS KAUFMAN ANSPACHER PSALM 73: INTRODUCTORY LINES by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE CORYDON'S SUPPLICATION TO PHILLIS by NICHOLAS BRETON GRACE AFTER MEAT (1) by ROBERT BURNS FAMILIAR EPISTLES ON A SERMON, 'OFFICE & OPERATIONS OF HOLY SPIRIT': 3 by JOHN BYROM STANZAS TO A LADY ON LEAVING ENGLAND by GEORGE GORDON BYRON LOVE by CHARLES STUART CALVERLEY |