A Remembrance of Autumn
Nothing stirs the sunny silence,
Save the drowsy humming of the bees
Round the rich ripe peaches on the wall,
And the south wind sighing in the trees,
And the dead leaves rustling as they fall:
While the swallows, one by one, are gathering
All impatient to be on the wing,
And to wander from us seeking
Their beloved spring!
Cloudless rise the azure heavens!
Only vaporous wreaths of snowy white
Nestle in the grey hill's rugged side;
And the golden woods are bathed in light,
Dying if they must, with kingly pride:
While the swallows, in the blue air wheeling,
Circle now an eager, fluttering band,
Ready to depart and leave us
For a brighter land!
But a voice is sounding sadly,
Telling of a glory that has been;
Of a day that faded all too fast:
See afar through the blue air serene,
Where the swallows wing their way at last,
And our hearts perchance as sadly wandering,
Vainly seeking for a long-lost day,
While we watch the far-off swallows,
Flee with them away!
~~
Adelaide Procter (1825-1864)
For a brighter land!
But a voice is sounding sadly,
Telling of a glory that has been;
Of a day that faded all too fast:
See afar through the blue air serene,
Where the swallows wing their way at last,
And our hearts perchance as sadly wandering,
Vainly seeking for a long-lost day,
While we watch the far-off swallows,
Flee with them away!
~~
Adelaide Procter (1825-1864)
from Legends and Lyrics: Second series, 1861
[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]
Oxana Maher, Walled Garden in Autumn, 2020. CC BY-SA 2.0, Wikimedia Commons.
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