Page:Fugitive Poetry 1600-1878.djvu/192
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174
A Thought in September.
We watch the summer leaves and flowers decay,
And feel a sadness o'er the spirit thrown,
As if the beauty fading fast away
Erom Nature's scenes, would leave our hearts more lone,
More desolate, when sunny hours are gone—
And much of joy from outward things we find,
But more from treasures that may be our own,
Through winter's storm the higher hopes of mind—
The trust which soars from earth—earth has no chains to bind
And feel a sadness o'er the spirit thrown,
As if the beauty fading fast away
Erom Nature's scenes, would leave our hearts more lone,
More desolate, when sunny hours are gone—
And much of joy from outward things we find,
But more from treasures that may be our own,
Through winter's storm the higher hopes of mind—
The trust which soars from earth—earth has no chains to bind
October.
The year is now declining; and the air—
When morning blushes on the orient hills—
Embued with icy chillness. Ocean's wave
Has lost the tepid glow, and slumbering fogs
On clouded days brood o'er its level plain;
Yet, when the day is at meridian height,
The sun athwart the fading landscape smiles
With most paternal kindness, softly sweet,
And delicately beautiful—a prince
Blessing the realms whoso glory comes from him.
The foliage of the forest, brown and sere;
Drops on the margin of the stubble field,
In which the partridge lingers insecure,
And raises oft, at sombre eventide,
With plaintive throat, her dull and tremulous cry!
The sickle of the husbandman hath ceased,
And left the lap of Nature shorn and bare;
The odorous clover flowers have disappeared;
The yellow pendulous grain is seen no more;
The perfume of the bean-field has decayed;
And roams the wandering bee o'er many a path,
For blossoms which have perished. Grassy blades,
Transparent, taper, and of sickly growth,
Shoot, soon to wither, in the sterile fields.
The garden fruits have mellowed with the year,
And, save the lingering apricot, remains
Nor trace nor token of the summer's wealth!
Yet, on the wild-brier stands the yellow hip;
And, from the branches of the mountain-ash,
When morning blushes on the orient hills—
Embued with icy chillness. Ocean's wave
Has lost the tepid glow, and slumbering fogs
On clouded days brood o'er its level plain;
Yet, when the day is at meridian height,
The sun athwart the fading landscape smiles
With most paternal kindness, softly sweet,
And delicately beautiful—a prince
Blessing the realms whoso glory comes from him.
The foliage of the forest, brown and sere;
Drops on the margin of the stubble field,
In which the partridge lingers insecure,
And raises oft, at sombre eventide,
With plaintive throat, her dull and tremulous cry!
The sickle of the husbandman hath ceased,
And left the lap of Nature shorn and bare;
The odorous clover flowers have disappeared;
The yellow pendulous grain is seen no more;
The perfume of the bean-field has decayed;
And roams the wandering bee o'er many a path,
For blossoms which have perished. Grassy blades,
Transparent, taper, and of sickly growth,
Shoot, soon to wither, in the sterile fields.
The garden fruits have mellowed with the year,
And, save the lingering apricot, remains
Nor trace nor token of the summer's wealth!
Yet, on the wild-brier stands the yellow hip;
And, from the branches of the mountain-ash,