| |
How do I love you, beech-trees, in the autumn, Your stone-grey columns a cathedral nave Processional above the earth's brown glory!
I was a child, and I loved the knurly tangle Of roots that coiled above a scarp like serpents, Where I might hide my treasure with the squirrels.
I was a child, and splashed my way in laughter Through drifts of leaves, where underfoot the beech-nuts Split with crisp crackle to my great rejoicing.
Red are the beechen slopes below Shock Tavern, Red is the bracken on the sandy Furze-field, Red are the stags and hinds by Bo-Pit Meadows,
The rutting stags that nightly through the beechwoods Bell out their challenge, carrying their antlers Proudly beneath the antlered autumn branches.
I was a child, and heard the red deer's challenge Prowling and belling underneath my window, Never a cry so haughty or so mournful.
Vita Sackville-West
Read poems about / on: autumn, red, child, laughter, children, tree
|
|
User Rating: |
|
--
/10 (0 votes) |
|
|
|