PALE sheaves of oats, pocked by untimely rain, Under October skies, Teased and forlorn, Ungathered lie where still the tardy wain Comes not to seal The seasons of the corn, From prime to June, with running barns of grain. Now time with me is at the middle year, The register of youth Is now to sing . . . My thoughts are ripe, my moods are in full ear; That they should fail Of harvesting, Uncarried on cold fields, is all my fear. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE KING'S DAUGHTER by ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE BILLY, HE'S IN TROUBLE by JAMES BARTON ADAMS SAINT MAY: A CITY LYRIC by JOSEPH ASHBY-STERRY THE STEAM-ENGINE: CANTO 6. ON THE CORK PACKET, 1837 by T. BAKER SONNET: TO A CRITIC by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON |