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Time For Bed

Topics: classic

"Time for bed!" - the weary day     With its toils has passed away     Sol has wrapped his forehead bright     In the curtains of the night,     And his glorious lamp again     Lowered behind the western main     Leaving all heaven's pure expanse     Radiant with his parting glance         Just a few, faint stars are seen     Ranged around the midnight queen -     A select and glorious band     Who alone may waiting stand     Hound the monarch of the night,     Bearing up their urns of light,     Her majestic path to cheer     Till the shadows disappear.         "Time for bed!" the folded flowers     Hang their heads in forest bowers;     Nestled in each downy nest     Day's sweet songsters calmly rest;     And the night-bird's plaintive hymn     Echoes through the forest dim;     Dew-drops on the birchen-bough     In the star-beams sparkle now,     Scarce a zephyr stirs the rose     So profound is Earth's repose.         "Time for bed!" put by thy books,     Learner, with thy studious looks; -     Poet, lay the pen away,     Candle-light will spoil thy lay; -     Leave it till the morning hours     Come with sunshine to the flowers, -     Leave it till from shrub and tree     Birds pour forth their minstrelsy, -     Till the sun on wood and wold     Turns the drops of dew to gold, -     Till the bee comes forth to sip     Nectar from the flow'rets lip, -     Till the light-winged zephyrs wake     Dancing ripples on the lake,     And the cloudlets in the height     Don their fleecy robes of white; -     Then, with graceful Euterpe,     Seek the spreading greenwood tree,     And with joy, and light, and love,     AH around thee and above,     Tune thy lyre to praiseful mirth     With all happy things of Earth!         "Time for bed!" - thou man of toil,     Why consume the midnight oil? -     Night was made for slumbers blest,     Thou art weary, therefore rest!         "Time for bed!" - poor "Martha," thou     Long enough hast labored now;     All the day's bright hours are numbered,     Yet art thou "with toiling cumbered."     Lay that tedious work away     Till the blest return of day, -     Thou art care-worn and oppressed,     Thou art weary "Martha," rest!         "Time for bed!" - shut up the stove,     To its place the table move,     Lay the books into their case,     Wheel the sofa to its place,     Wind the clock, brush up the floor,     Close the shutters, lock the door,     That will do - put out the light,     Toil and trouble, all good night!

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""Time for bed!" - the weary day..."

This evocative piece by Pamela S. Vining, (J. C. Yule), titled "Time For Bed", 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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"Written for the Alumni of Albion College, Michigan..."

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