The softest shadows mantle o'er his form, And the curved sickle in his grasp appears, Glooming and brightening; while a wreath of ears Circles his sallow brow, which th' angry storm Gusts down at intervals; about him stray The volant sweets o' the trailing mignionette, And odours vague, that haunt the year's decay; The crush of leaves is heard beneath his feet, Mixt, as he onward goes, with softer sound, As tho' his heel were sinking into snows: Full soon a sadder landscape opens round, With, here and there, a latter-flowering rose, Child of the Summer hours, though blooming here Far down the vista of the fading year. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SHELLEY'S SKYLARK by THOMAS HARDY THE BUGLER'S FIRST COMMUNION by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS RESIGNATION by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW THE BIGLOW PAPERS. 2D SERIES: 2. JONATHAN TO JOHN by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL SONNET: 31 by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY ST. MARTIN'S WALL by ANTON ALEXANDER VON AUERSPERG |