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Nightfall

Topics: classic

The last light fails - that shallow pool of day!      The coursers of the dark stamp down to drink,      Arch their wild necks, lift their wild heads and neigh;      Their drivers, gathering at the water-brink,      With eyes ashine from out their clustering hair,      Utter their hollow speech, or gaze afar,      Rapt in irradiant reverie, to where      Languishes, lost in light, the evening star.      Come the wood-nymphs to dance within the glooms,      Calling these charioteers with timbrels' din;      Ashen with twilight the dark forest looms      O'er the nocturnal beasts that prowl within      "O glory of beauty which the world makes fair!"      Pant they their serenading on the air.      Sound the loud hooves, and all abroad the sky      The lusty charioteers their stations take;      Planet to planet do the sweet Loves fly,      And in the zenith silver music wake.      Cities of men, in blindness hidden low,      Fume their faint flames to that arched firmament,      But all the dwellers in the lonely know      The unearthly are abroad, and weary and spent,      With rush extinguished, to their dreaming go.      And world and night and star-enclustered space      The glory of beauty are in one enravished face.

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"The last light fails - that shallow pool of day!..."

This evocative piece by Walter De La Mare, titled "Nightfall", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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"Have you been catching of fish, Tom Noddy?        ..."

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