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The Day is Done
by
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Home
Poetry
The Day is Done
Analysis
Symbolism, Imagery, Wordplay
Intro
The Poem
Summary
Analysis
Themes
Quotes
Study Questions
Best of the Web
How to Read a Poem
Symbolism, Imagery, Wordplay
Night
Eagle
Rain and Mist
Distant Footsteps
Corridors of Time
Tears
The Arabs
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Table of Contents
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The Day is Done Symbolism, Imagery & Wordplay
There’s more to a poem than meets the eye.
Night
This is the first major image in the poem. Longfellow really wants us to focus on the exact time of day, that moment where day shifts into night. To drive this home, he makes "Night" into somethi...
Eagle
The Eagle is introduced as another way of thinking of the night. As far as important poetic symbols go, the eagle is way up there. For thousands of years, poets have used this bird to represent p...
Rain and Mist
The rain comes up a few times in this poem, both as a literal description of what's going on and as a metaphor for other things. We think there are a few good reasons for that. Think of the way r...
Distant Footsteps
Here the speaker imagines that he can hear the footsteps of poets from the past. We think this is a really cool image for the traditions of poetry. In a way, these "grand old masters" become like...
Corridors of Time
Another neat image of the past. For the speaker, time isn't just a single straight line, but a kind of mysterious set of corridors. We imagine a labyrinth, the kind of thing you'd see in a Tim Bu...
Tears
You know how it can be fun to watch a really tear-jerking romantic comedy? Or maybe there's a sad song that makes you cry, but the crying always feels kind of good. Well, folks in the nineteenth...
The Arabs
This is a really interesting final image. We've spent the whole poem in a sort of cozy, sleepy homey atmosphere. Now all of a sudden these Arabs creep in at the end of the poem. Longfellow makes...