Henry Kendall

The Earth Laments for Day

THERE’S music wafting on the air,
   The evening winds are sighing
Among the trees—and yonder stream
   Is mournfully replying,
Lamenting loud the sunny light
   That in the west is dying.
 
The moon is rising o’er the hill,
   Her slanting rays are creeping
Where Nature lies profoundly still
   In happy quiet sleeping,
And resting on her face, they’ll find
   The earth is wet with weeping.
 
She mourneth for the lovely day,
   Now deep in darkness shaded;
She sheds the dewy tear because
   Of morning’s mantle faded;
She misses from her breast the garb
   In which the moon array’d it.
 
The evening queen will strive in vain
   To break the spell which bound her;
A million stars can never throw
   Departed warmth around her;
They all must pass away and leave
   The earth as they had found her.
 
But why should gentle Nature weep
   That night has overtaken
The wearied world that needed sleep,
   Refreshed to re-awaken,
So richer light might burst around,
   The gloomy shadows breaking?
 
Oh, can she not from yonder sky
   That gleams above her, borrow
A single ray, or find a way
   To check the tear of sorrow?
A beam of hope would last her till
   The dawning of to-morrow.
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