Friday, October 14, 2022

The Autumn

Poem for the week' -- "The Autumn":


Go, sit upon the lofty hill,

    And turn your eyes around,

Where waving woods and waters wild

    Do hymn an autumn sound.

The summer sun is faint on them —

    The summer flowers depart —

Sit still — as all transform'd to stone,

    Except your musing heart.


How there you sat in summer-time,

    May yet be in your mind;

And how you heard the green woods sing

    Beneath the freshening wind.

Though the same wind now blows around,

    You would its blast recall;

For every breath that stirs the trees,

    Doth cause a leaf to fall.


Oh! like that wind, is all the mirth

    That flesh and dust impart:

We cannot bear its visitings,

    When change is on the heart.

Gay words and jests may make us smile,

    When Sorrow is asleep;

But other things must make us smile,

    When Sorrow bids us weep!


The dearest hands that clasp our hands, —

    Their presence may be o'er;

The dearest voice that meets our ear,

    That tone may come no more!

Youth fades; and then, the joys of youth,

    Which once refresh'd our mind,

Shall come — as, on those sighing woods,

    The chilling autumn wind.


Hear not the wind — view not the woods;

    Look out o'er vale and hill-

In spring, the sky encircled them —

    The sky is round them still.

Come autumn's scathe — come winter's cold —

    Come change — and human fate!

Whatever prospect Heaven doth bound,

    Can ne'er be desolate.


-- Elizabeth Barrett Browning