When I came to Orlando, Florida for the Microsoft Convergence 2008 Conference I didn't expect to get such a treat. I found out yesterday, shortly after my arrival that we were going on an outing to watch the Space Shuttle launch. Boy was I excited! I had no idea it was going to launch in the first place, but was even more excited to be able to witness the launch in person, and at night.
I vividly recall when the Space Shuttle Columbia landed just 30 minutes from my house (a night landing) at White Sands in NM but I wasn't able to attend that event. In fact, I have wanted to see a shuttle launch since the Columbia first went into space; it set many of my dreams into motion, few of which will ever come true - though seeing a launch in-person has just now! 
The event was amazing. We were situated across the water from the launch pad (geographically, I'm not sure how far it actually was). Right at 2:28 AM we saw the first billows of smoke rise from the launch pad, then the bright flare of the flames from the rockets. The rocket, the size of a lit match's flame at arm's length, ascended rapidly but very silently into the night sky. Perhaps most astounding and brilliant was the entire sky...not just the horizon where the launch took place, but the ENTIRE SKY turned a bright orange during the launch. It appeared as though a small sun had risen. The rocket was then engulfed in the low cloud coverage.
The rocket disappeared. After a small delay of about 10 seconds or so we began to hear and actually feel the trembling and roar of the rocket boosters. This got increasingly louder and more rumbling before waning.
Poetry in motion.