I spent my day on the scorching 
hot dust of the road. 
Now, in the cool of the evening, I 
knock at the door of the inn. It is  
deserted and in ruins. 
A grim ashath tree spreads its  
hungry clutching roots through the 
gaping fissures of the walls. 
Days have been when wayfarers 
came here to wash their weary feet. 
They spread their mats in the  
courtyard in the dim light of the 
early moon, and sat and talked of 
strange lands. 
They woke refreshed in the morning 
when birds made them glad, and  
friendly flowers nodded their heads  
at them from the wayside. 
But no lighted lamp awaited me 
when I came here. 
The black smudges of smoke left by 
many a forgotten evening lamp stare, 
like blind eyes, from the wall. 
Fireflies flit in the bush near the 
dried-up pond, and bamboo branches 
fling their shadows on the grass- 
grown path. 
I am the guest of no one at the end 
of my day. 
The long night is before me, and I 
am tired.
Rabindranath Tagore
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-gardener-lxiv-i-spent-my-day/