Poems, Dialogues in Verse and Epigrams By Walter Savage Landor: Edited with notes by Charles G. Crump |
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Poems, Dialogues in Verse and Epigrams | ||
CIX.
[In spring and summer winds may blow]
In spring and summer winds may blow,
And rains fall after, hard and fast;
The tender leaves, if beaten low,
Shine but the more for shower and blast.
And rains fall after, hard and fast;
The tender leaves, if beaten low,
Shine but the more for shower and blast.
But when their fated hour arrives,
When reapers long have left the field,
When maidens rifle turn'd-up hives,
And their last juice fresh apples yield,
When reapers long have left the field,
When maidens rifle turn'd-up hives,
And their last juice fresh apples yield,
A leaf perhaps may still remain
Upon some solitary tree,
Spite of the wind and of the rain . .
A thing you heed not if you see . .
Upon some solitary tree,
Spite of the wind and of the rain . .
A thing you heed not if you see . .
At last it falls. Who cares? not one:
And yet no power on earth can ever
Replace the fallen leaf upon
Its spray, so easy to dissever.
And yet no power on earth can ever
Replace the fallen leaf upon
Its spray, so easy to dissever.
If such be love I dare not say,
Friendship is such, too well I know;
I have enjoy'd my summer day;
'Tis past; my leaf now lies below.
Friendship is such, too well I know;
I have enjoy'd my summer day;
'Tis past; my leaf now lies below.
Poems, Dialogues in Verse and Epigrams | ||