October Poem by Ina D. Coolbrith

October



The summer-rose is dead;
The sad leaves, witherd,
Strew ankle-deep the pathways to our tread.
Dry grasses mat the plain,
And drifts of blossoms slain;
And day and night the wind is like a pain.

No nightingale to sing
In green boughs, listening,
Through balmy twilight hushes of the spring.
No thrush, no oriole
In music to out-roll
The little golden raptures of his soul.

O royal summer-reign!
When will you come again,
Bringing the happy birds across the main?
O blossoms! when renew
Your pretty garbs, and woo
Your waiting, wild-bee lovers back to you?

For lo, my heart is numb;
For lo, my heart is dumb—
Is silent till the birds and blossoms come!
A flower, that lieth cold
Under the wintry mold,
Waiting the warm spring-breathing to unfold.

O swallow! All too slow
Over the waves you go,
Dipping your light wings in their sparkling flow.
Over the Golden sea,
O swallow! flying free,
Fly swiftly with the summer back to me.

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Ina D. Coolbrith

Ina D. Coolbrith

Nauvoo, Illinois (Josephine D. Smith)
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