AUSTERE and clad in sombre robes of grey, With hands upfolded and with silent wings, In unimpassioned mystery the day Passes; a lonely thrush its requiem sings. The dust of night is tangled in the boughs Of leafless lime and lilac, and the pine Grows blacker, and the star upon the brows Of sleep is set in heaven for a sign. Earth's little weary peoples fall on peace And dream of breaking buds and blossoming, Of primrose airs, of days of large increase, And all the coloured retinue of spring. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DOWN BY THE CARIB SEA: 2. LOS CIGARILLOS by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON THE LAST JUDGMENT by JOHN CROWE RANSOM THE RHODORA: ON BEING ASKED, WHENCE IS THE FLOWER? by RALPH WALDO EMERSON A SHROPSHIRE LAD: 4. REVEILLE by ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN OLD BLACK MEN by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON CHAUCER; SONNET by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW EPIGRAM ENGRAVED ON THE COLLAR OF A DOG by ALEXANDER POPE |