Page:The collected poems, lyrical and narrative, of A. Mary F. Robinson.djvu/150

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

Michaelmas

We had not thought the sky could burn so blue!
For Summer hath her storms, and Spring her veils:
But now a crystal fire seems burning through
Yon vault of wide turquoise no vapour pales.

The summer green is changed and manifold:
The cherries and the maples flame in rose,
The beechwood studs the hill with rusty gold,
And yellow bend the trembling poplar-rows.

And all the roses that we mourned for dead
Burst out in flower and bloom from every stalk;
The purple asters burn amid the red.
And starry dahlias frame the terrace-walk.

Bright apples bow the trees beyond the field.
The meadow-saffron springs among the grass;
For every branch now bears its ripened yield.
For every floweret feels the summer pass;

For Venus dances in a frosty sky
At twilight o'er the tawny mountain tops ;
For all things rage and revel ere they die,
And know the hour is near when summer stops.

128