4507028Poems — Summer GoneDinah Maria Craik

SUMMER GONE.
SMALL wren, mute pecking at the last red plum
  Or twittering idly at the yellowing boughs
  Fruit-emptied, over thy forsaken house,—
Birdie, that seems to come
Telling, we too have spent our little store,
Our summer 's o'er:

Poor robin, driven in by rain-storms wild
  To lie submissive under household hands
  With beating heart that no love understands,
And scarèd eye, like a child
Who only knows that he is all alone
And summer 's gone;

Pale leaves, sent flying wide, a frightened flock
  On which the wolfish wind bursts out, and tears
  Those tender forms that lived in summer airs
Till, taken at this shock,
They, like weak hearts when sudden grief sweeps by,
Whirl, drop, and die:—

All these things, earthy, of the earth—do tell
  This earth's perpetual story; we belong
  Unto another country, and our song
Shall be no mortal knell;
Though all the year's tale, as our years run fast,
Mourns, "summer 's past."

O love immortal, perpetual youth,
  Whether in budding nooks it sits and sings
  As hundred poets in a hundred springs,
Or, slaking passion's drouth,
In wine-press of affliction, ever goes
Heavenward, through woes:

O youth immortal—O undying love!
  With these by winter fireside we 'll sit down
  Wearing our snows of honor like a crown;
And sing as in a grove,
Where the full nests ring out with happy cheer,
"Summer is here."

Roll round, strange years; swift seasons, come and go;
  Ye leave upon us but an outward sign;
  Ye cannot touch the inward and divine,
While God alone does know;
There sealed till summers, winters, all shall cease
In His deep peace.

Therefore uprouse ye winds and howl your will;
  Beat, beat, ye sobbing rains on pane and door;
  Enter, slow-footed age, and thou, obscure,
Grand Angel—not of ill;
Healer of every wound, where'er thou come,
Glad, we 'll go home.