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Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: Curfew

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

(1807-1882)


Curfew

I
Solemnly, mournfully,

Dealing its dole,

The Curfew Bell

Is beginning to toll.

 

Cover the embers,

And put out the light;

Toil comes with the morning,

And rest with the night.

 

Dark grow the windows,

And quenched is the fire;

Sound fades into silence,–

All footsteps retire.

 

No voice in the chambers,

No sound in the hall!

Sleep and oblivion

Reign over all!

 

II

The book is completed,

And closed, like the day;

And the hand that has written it

Lays it away.

 

Dim grow its fancies;

Forgotten they lie;

Like coals in the ashes,

They darken and die.

 

Song sinks into silence,

The story is told,

The windows are darkened,

The hearth-stone is cold.

 

Darker and darker

The black shadows fall;

Sleep and oblivion

Reign over all.

 

H. W. Longfellow poetry

kempis poetry magazine

More in: Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth

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