The poem that says "You have to go to bed by day" is written by Shel Silverstein. It appears in his poetry collection titled "A Light in the Attic."
Zebedee says "Time for bed" at the end of the day on the Magic Roundabout program.
The first poem recited by the professor on the first day of class was written by Emily Dickinson.
She read a poem that she wrote specially for the inauguration. It was called Praise Song for the Day.
Are you talking about the song "Those Were the Days" by Mary Hopkins?
The poem Ode to a Nightingale was written by John Keats. John Keats wrote Ode to a Nightingale in May of 1819 in Hampstead, London. John Keats wrote the poem in one day.
Go to your local library and have the librarian help you find the book Maya Angelou wrote that has that poem.
C Day-Lewis, in a poem entitled "Walking Away", says this: How selfhood begins with the walking away, and love is proved in the letting go. You can google the poem using the author's name and title.
There is no record of John Hewitt having written a poem titled "The Day of the Corncrake." John Hewitt was a Northern Irish poet and had a diverse body of work, but this specific poem does not appear to be part of his repertoire.
The poem Ode to a Nightingale was written by John Keats. John Keats wrote Ode to a Nightingale in May of 1819 in Hampstead, London. John Keats wrote the poem in one day.
The poem "For the Fallen" was written by Laurence Binyon. It is often recited during Anzac Day ceremonies to honor those who have died in war.
John Morris Reeve's most famous poem is likely "In Flanders Fields," which was written during World War I and has become a well-known tribute to fallen soldiers. It is often recited during Remembrance Day and Memorial Day ceremonies.
The last couplet of the sonnet says that the subject of the poem will live until judgment day, therefore, forever. However, the whole poem speaks of the immortality of the subject of the poem, and of the words themselves.