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POEMS
395

To Mr. James T. White

Who loves not June
Is out of tune
With love and God;
The rose his rival reigns,
The stars reject his pains,
His home the clod!
 
And yet I trow,
When sweet rondeau
Doth play a part,
The curtain drops on June;
Veiled is the modest moon —
Hushed is the heart.



Autumn

Written in childhood, in a maple grove

Quickly earth's jewels disappear;
 The turf, whereon I tread,
Ere autumn blanch another year,
 May rest above my head.
 
Touched by the finger of decay
 Is every earthly love;
For joy, to shun my weary way,
 Is registered above.
 
The languid brooklets yield their sighs,
 A requiem o'er the tomb
Of sunny days and cloudless skies,
 Enhancing autumn's gloom.