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Littell's Living Age/Volume 126/Issue 1630/Dying Summer

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DYING SUMMER.

On tawny hills in faded splendour drest.
Of rusty purple and of tarnished gold.
Now like some Eastern monarch sad and old,
The discrowned summer lieth down to rest!
A mournful mist hangs o'er the mellow plain.
O'er watery meads that slide down pine-clad heights.
And wine-red woods where song no more delights;
But only wounded birds cry out in pain.
A pallid glory lingers in the sky.
Faint scents of wilding flowers float in the air.
All nature's voices murmur in despair —
"Was summer crowned so late — so soon to die?"
But with a royal smile, she whispers, "Cease,
If life is joy and triumph, death is peace!"

M. Betham-Edwards.
Sunday Magazine