The air without has taken fever; Fast I feel the beating of its pulse. The leaves are twisted on the maple, In the corn the autumn's premature; The weary butterfly hangs waiting For a breath to waft him thither at The touch, but falls, like truth unheeded, Into dust-blown grass and hollyhocks. The air without is blinding dusty; Cool I feel the breezes blow; I see The sunlight, crowded on the porch, grow Smaller till absorbed in shadow; and The far blue hills are changed to gray, and Twilight lingers in the woods between; And now I hear the shower dancing In the cornfield and the thirsty grass. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...I LOOKED FOR LIFE AND DID A SHADOW SEE by JAMES GALVIN HOW MY HEART SINKS by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON QUEST by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON TO CARMEN SYLVA (QUEEN OF ROUMANIA) by EMMA LAZARUS THE MARRIAGE (1) by TIMOTHY LIU |