Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Welcoming Autumn


It's Time To Light The Evening Fires
The hills are bright with maples yet;
But down the level land
The beech leaves rustle in the wind
As dry and brown as sand.
The clouds in bars of rusty red
Along the hill-tops grow,
As in the still sharp air the frost
Is like a dream of snow.
The berries of the briar-rose
Have lost their rounded pride,
The bittersweet chrysanthemums
Are drooping heavy-eyed.
The cricket grows more friendly now,
The dormouse sly and wise,
Hiding away in the disgrace
Of nature from men's eyes.
The pigeons in black wavering lines
Are swinging toward the sun,
And all the wide and withered fields
Proclaim the summer done.
His store of nuts and acorns now
The squirrel hastes to gain,
And sets his house in order for
The winter's dreary reign.
'Tis time to light the evening fire,
To read good books and sing
The low and lovely songs that breathe
Of the eternal spring
Alice Cary

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