I WONDER if oak and maple, Willow and elm and all, Are stirred at heart by the coming Of the day their leaves must fall. Do they think of the yellow whirlwind, Or know of the crimson spray, That shall be when chill November Bears all their leaves away? Perhapsbeside the water The willow bends, serene As when her young leaves glistened In a mist of golden green; But the brave old oak is flushing To a wine-red, dark and deep, And maple and elm are blushing The blush of a child asleep. "If die we must," the leaflets Seem one by one to say; "We will wear the colors of gladness Until we pass away. No eyes shall see us falter; And, before we lay it down, We 'll wear, in the sight of all the earth, The year's most kingly crown." So, trees of the stately forest, And trees by the trodden way, You are kindling into glory This soft autumnal day. And we who gaze remember That more than all they lost, To hearts and trees together, @3May@1 come through the ripening frost. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CHURCH-PORCH by GEORGE HERBERT AN ORCHARD AT AVIGNON by AGNES MARY F. ROBINSON SONNETS OF MANHOOD: 26. BEYOND by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) PSALM 104, SELECTION by RICHARD BLACKMORE SEA LYRIC by WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE TO THE MOST ILLUSTRIOUS AND MIGHTY FREDERICK THE FIFTH, OF THE RHINE by THOMAS CAMPION |