Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Autumn In Cornwall by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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Autumn In Cornwall

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    The year lies fallen and faded
    On cliffs by clouds invaded,
    With tongues of storms upbraided,
    With wrath of waves bedinned;
    And inland, wild with warning,
    As in deaf ears or scorning,
    The clarion even and morning
    Rings of the south-west wind.
   
    The wild bents wane and wither
    In blasts whose breath bows hither
    Their grey-grown heads and thither,
    Unblest of rain or sun;
    The pale fierce heavens are crowded
    With shapes like dreams beclouded,
    As though the old year enshrouded
    Lay, long ere life were done.
   
    Full-charged with oldworld wonders,
    From dusk Tintagel thunders
    A note that smites and sunders
    The hard frore fields of air;
    A trumpet stormier-sounded
    Than once from lists rebounded
    When strong men sense-confounded
    Fell thick in tourney there.
   
    From scarce a duskier dwelling
    Such notes of wail rose welling
    Through the outer darkness, telling
    In the awful singer's ears
    What souls the darkness covers,
    What love-lost souls of lovers,
    Whose cry still hangs and hovers
    In each man's born that hears.
   
    For there by Hector's brother
    And yet some thousand other
    He that had grief to mother
    Passed pale from Dante's sight;
    With one fast linked as fearless,
    Perchance, there only tearless;
    Iseult and Tristram, peerless
    And perfect queen and knight.
   
    A shrill-winged sound comes flying
    North, as of wild souls crying
    The cry of things undying,
    That know what life must be;
    Or as the old year's heart, stricken
    Too sore for hope to quicken
    By thoughts like thorns that thicken,
    Broke, breaking with the sea.



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