Good Morning Midnight — Roebuck

Roebuck is called girl in its second year. This poem tells how a roebuck was wandering the hills from sunshine to darkness, or indirectly a girl from the society to seclusion, because the Day or God turned her away.

Good Morning-Midnight-1
I'm coming Home-
Day-got tired of Me-
How could I-of Him?

Sunshine was a sweet place-5
I liked to stay-
But Morn-didn't want me-now-
So-Goodnight-Day!

I can look-can't I-9
When the East is Red?
The Hills-have a way-then-
That puts the Heart-abroad-

You-are not so fair-Midnight-13
I chose-Day-
But-please take a little Girl-
He turned away!
(F.382/J.425)
[1] Good Morning, Midnight:: to greet the darkness; to seclude, immure.
[2] I'm coming Home:: a girl, a roebuck in its second year, was wandering the hills and wanted to return now.
[3] Day:: daytime; God, possibly a sound play of day to dad, Father. Day, got:: a wordplay of God by spelling and sound, got to God.
[4] How could I, Him:: a hint on Day as God.
[5] Sunshine:: the society, a public place.
[7] Morn:: a new beginning.
[8] So Goodnight, Day:: the roebuck left the sunshine; the girl immured herself.
[9] I can look:: the girl wondered if she knew the risk.
[10] East is Red:: the mystic place is flaming to attract and burn.
[11] Hills, a way:: hilly places having the way to bewilder the girl.
[12] Heart abroad:: a wild heart wandering around the hilly world.
[13] not, fair Midnight:: the dark side of the world isn't fair to the girl.
[14] I chose, Day:: the girl in the dark still believed in sunshine, or God.
[15] Girl:: a roebuck in its second year (OED 3), a hint on the answer.
[16] He:: the Day in line 3, 8 and 14; God.

A roe-buck is the first year, a kid; the second year, a girl; the third year, a hemuse;——The Plays of William Shakespeare (1806)