Sonnets at the English Lakes by Hardwicke D. Rawnsley ... Second Edition |
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LXXI. | LXXI. EARLY DEATH.
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Sonnets at the English Lakes | ||
71
LXXI. EARLY DEATH.
There came upon the fields a hoary frost;Not such the shepherd calls an Autumn dew,
But such as gentlest lady's eye may view,
Late rising, when the morn her prime has lost.
With emerald paths the whitened meads were crost,
Where warm-breathed kine their feeding did renew,
And voiceless here and there a bird out-flew
From silvered leaves, that tinkled and were lost.
High o'er the fells uprose the unconquered sun,
Back to the North the night-invaders drove,
And, ere the noon, what Winter had begun
Was Summer's ending in the field and grove.
But, sad in ashes, tender flowers must mourn
That not for them can summer-tide return.
Sonnets at the English Lakes | ||