Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Summer in Auvergne by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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Summer in Auvergne

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    The sundawn fills the land
    Full as a feaster's hand
    Fills full with bloom of bland
    Bright wine his cup;
    Flows full to flood that fills
    From the arch of air it thrills
    Those rust-red iron hills
    With morning up.

    Dawn, as a panther springs,
    With fierce and fire-fledged wings
    Leaps on the land that rings
    From her bright feet
    Through all its lava-black
    Cones that cast answer back
    And cliffs of footless track
    Where thunders meet.

    The light speaks wide and loud
    From deeps blown clean of cloud
    As though day's heart were proud
    And heaven's were glad;
    The towers brown-striped and grey
    Take fire from heaven of day
    As though the prayers they pray
    Their answers had.

    Higher in these high first hours
    Wax all the keen church towers,
    And higher all hearts of ours
    Than the old hills' crown,
    Higher than the pillared height
    Of that strange cliff-side bright
    With basalt towers whose might
    Strong time bows down.

    And the old fierce ruin there
    Of the old wild princes' lair
    Whose blood in mine hath share
    Gapes gaunt and great
    Toward heaven that long ago
    Watched all the wan land's woe
    Whereon the wind would blow
    Of their bleak hate.

    Dead are those deeds; but yet
    Their memory seems to fret
    Lands that might else forget
    That old world's brand;
    Dead all their sins and days;
    Yet in this red clime's rays
    Some fiery memory stays
    That sears their land.



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