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night

“It s only a moment, but ye feel as though it will last forever. Strange, is it no? he said thoughtfully. Ye can almost see the light go as ye watch - and yet there s no time ye can look and say Now! Now it s night.”

— Diana Gabaldon, Drums of Autumn, Share via Whatsapp

“Eastern Standard Time Poetry speaks to all people, it is said, but here I would like to address only those in my own time zone, this proper slice of longitude that runs from pole to snowy pole down the globe through Montreal to Bogota. Oh, fellow inhabitants of this singular band, sitting up in your many beds this morning— the sun falling through the windows and casting a shadow on the sundial— consider those in other zones who cannot hear these words. They are not slipping into a bathrobe as we are, or following the smell of coffee in a timely fashion. Rather, they are at work already, leaning on copy machines, hammering nails into a house-frame. They are not swallowing a vitamin like us; rather they are smoking a cigarette under a half moon, even jumping around on a dance floor, or just now sliding under the covers, pulling down the little chains on their bed lamps. But we are not like these others, for at this very moment on the face of the earth, we are standing under a hot shower, or we are eating our breakfast, considered by people of all zones to be the most important meal of the day. Later, when the time is right, we might sit down with the boss, wash the car, or linger at a candle-lit table, but now is the hour for pouring the juice and flipping the eggs with one eye on the toaster. So let us slice a banana and uncap the jam, lift our brimming spoons of milk, and leave it to the others to lower a flag or spin absurdly in a barber s chair— those antipodal oddballs, always early or late. Let us praise Sir Stanford Fleming the Canadian genius who first scored with these lines the length of the spinning earth. Let us move together through the rest of this day passing in unison from light to shadow, coasting over the crest of noon into the valley of the evening and then, holding hands, slip into the deeper valley of night.”

— Billy Collins, The Trouble With Poetry - And Other Poems, Share via Whatsapp

“The bluish, pale face of the house rises above me like a wall of ice and the distant, solitary barking of an owl floats toward me. I half close my eyes. Over the damp dark of the garden flowers swing back and forth like small balloons. The solemn trees, each buried in a cloud of leaves, seem lost in sleep. It is late. I like in the grass, smoking, feeling at ease, pretending the end will be like this. Moonlight falls on my flesh. A breeze circles my wrist. I drift. I shiver. I know that soon the day will come to wash away the moon s white stain, that I shall walk in the morning sun invisible as anyone.”

— Mark Strand, Reasons for Moving, Share via Whatsapp

“I sat on the steps of my father s church thinking how much I loved the dark. The taste of what it offered sweet on the tongue of my imagination. The delicious burn of trespass on my conscience. I was a sinner. I knew that without a doubt. But I was not alone. And the night was the accomplice of us all.”

— William Kent Krueger, Ordinary Grace, Share via Whatsapp

“Violent Storm Those who have chosen to pass the night Entertaining friends And intimate ideas in the bright, Commodious rooms of dreams Will not feel the slightest tremor Or be wakened by what seems Only a quirk in the dry run Of conventional weather. For them, The long night sweeping over these trees And houses will have been no more than one In a series whose end Only the nervous or morbid consider. But for us, the wide-awake, who tend To believe the worst is always waiting Around the next corner or hiding in the dry, Unsteady branch of a sick tree, debating Whether or not to fell the passerby, It has a sinister air. How we wish we were sunning ourselves In a world of familiar views And fixed conditions, confined By what we know, and able to refuse Entry to the unaccounted for. For now, Deeper and darker than ever, the night unveils Its dubious plans, and the rain Beats down in gales Against the roof. We sit behind Closed windows, bolted doors, Unsure and ill at ease While the loose, untidy wind, Making an almost human sound, pours Through the open chambers of the trees. We cannot take ourselves or what belongs To us for granted. No longer the exclusive, Last resorts in which we could unwind, Lounging in easy chairs, Recalling the various wrongs We had been done or spared, our rooms Seem suddenly mixed up in our affairs. We do not feel protected By the walls, nor can we hide Before the duplicating presence Of their mirrors, pretending we are the ones who stare From the other side, collected In the glassy air. A cold we never knew invades our bones. We shake as though the storm were going to hurl us down Against the flat stones Of our lives. All other nights Seem pale compared to this, and the brilliant rise Of morning after morning seems unthinkable. Already now the lights That shared our wakefulness are dimming And the dark brushes against our eyes.”

— Mark Strand, Reasons for Moving, Share via Whatsapp

“do you see how my limbs s p r e a d when the night slips back into me? this is how i fall in love. ________ homecoming.”

— Vinati Bhola, Udaari, Share via Whatsapp

“I can be a hero and a villain all in one night.”

— Chelsea Sedoti, As You Wish, Share via Whatsapp

“...to hold twilight or watch it darken, describes the pleasure we take in pausing to observe as day slips into night. To stand at our window, wrapped in the half-dark and watch the day disappear... is a moment of hygge.”

— Louisa Thomsen Brits, The Book of Hygge: The Danish Art of Living Well, Share via Whatsapp

“Sunday,February 4th 2018 The night the City of Philadelphia cried together”

— Charmaine J Forde, Share via Whatsapp

“Night time You’ll find her there Blooming Like a night rose.”

— Melody Lee, Moon Gypsy, Share via Whatsapp

“The quest is ongoing The night forever young And someday, if you re lucky You, too, may see the stars.”

— Laurence Overmire, Gone Hollywood, Share via Whatsapp

“Even in Africa, I had never seen such a profusion of stars as I saw on these clear nights on Pacific isles - not only big beaming planets and small single pinpricks... but also glittering clouds of them - the whole dome of the sky crowded with thick shapes formed from stars, overlaid with more shapes, a brilliant density, like a storm of light over a black depthless sea, made brighter still by twisting auroras composed of tiny star grains - points of light so fine and numerous they seemed like luminous vapor, the entire sky hung with veils of light like dazzling smoke... they made night in Oceania as vast and dramatic as day.”

— Paul Theroux, The Happy Isles of Oceania: Paddling the Pacific, Share via Whatsapp

“The night kisses the fading day whispering to his ear, “I am death, your mother. I am to give you fresh birth.”

— Rabindranath Tagore, Collected Poems and Plays of Rabindranath Tagore, Share via Whatsapp

“They both closed their eyes and fell asleep in each other’s arms. For one night, it was as if their lives were normal and for a few hours they could forget about the rest of the world.”

— Jason Medina, The Manhattanville Incident: An Undead Novel, Share via Whatsapp

“Anyone who has experienced a debilitating sleep disorder knows what it is like to be the walking dead.”

— Steven Magee, Share via Whatsapp

“Light has to come at some point. Night can t stay here forever.”

— Rebekah Crane, The Upside of Falling Down, Share via Whatsapp

“I wonder if Linda would still come see me if she wasn t called sister. I wonder if light would still fade if weren t a word night.”

— Kendra Fortmeyer, Things I Know To Be True, Share via Whatsapp