Page:A Sheaf Gleaned in French Fields.djvu/55

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A SHEAF GLEANED

THE FALL OF THE LEAVES.


CHARLES MILLEVOYE.


The autumn had bestrewed the vale
With withered leaves,—the woods were left
Bare, and of mystery bereft,
And voiceless was the nightingale;
Sad, almost dying in his dawn,
A sick youth wandered slow, in tears,
Once more in places far withdrawn
That he had loved in earlier years.
'Woods that I love, adieu!—Your gloom,
Your mourning, suits me, for I read
In every leaf that falls, my doom!
The hour approaches, and with speed.
Epidaurus' fatal oracle!
With every gust you seem to tell,—
"Our leaves are yellow, see they die!
They vanish, take a last long look,
Thy night of death, too, draweth nigh;
More pale than autumn, like the brook
Thou glidest onward to the sea
Wild-heaving of Eternity.
Before the green grass on the mead,
Before the vine-branch on the hill,
Thy youth shall wither." And indeed
I die. A breath, funereal, chill,