Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Close Of Summer by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Close Of Summer

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    The wild-plum tree, whose leaves grow thin,
    Has strewn the way with half its fruit:
    The grasshopper's and cricket's din
    Grows hushed and mute;
    The veery seems a far-off flute
    Where Summer listens, hand on chin,
    And taps an idle foot.

    A silvery haze veils half the hills,
    That crown themselves with clouds like cream;
    The crow its clamor almost stills,
    The hawk its scream;
    The aster stars begin to gleam;
    And 'mid them, by the sleepy rills,
    The Summer dreams her dream.

    The butterfly upon its weed
    Droops as if weary of its wings;
    The bee, 'mid blooms that turn to seed,
    Half-hearted clings,
    Sick of the only song it sings,
    While Summer tunes a drowsy reed
    And dreams of far-off things.

    Passion, of which unrest is part,
    That filled with ardor all her hours,
    Burns low within her quiet heart
    As now in ours:
    The time fulfilled of fruits and flowers,
    From out Life's dying fires now start
    Love's less uneasy powers.

    All is at peace; the perfect days
    Move onward to a perfect close;
    A little while the Year delays,
    And takes repose,
    Ere to her end she sighing goes,
    And, clothed in tattered golds and grays,
    Weeps all her shadowy woes. . . .

    So is it with the heart awhile,
    The heart and soul that dreams engage,
    While on fruition Toil doth smile
    And take his wage
    Of Love, who cons Life's middle page;
    Regardless of the distant stile
    Where Death awaits and Age.



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