September.The summer walks a queen no more; Her sceptre drops from out her hand; Her strength is spent, her passion o'er. On lake and stream, on field and town, The placid sun smiles calmly down. The teeming earth its fruit has borne; The grain fields lie all shorn and bare; And where the serried ranks of corn Wave proudly in the summer air, And bravely tossed their yellow locks, Now thickly stands the bristling shocks. On sunny slope, on crannied wall The grapes hang purpling in the sun; Down to the turf the brown nuts fall, And golden apples, one by one. Our bins run o'er with ample store ___ Thus autumn reaps what summer bore. The mill turns by the waterfall; The loaded wagons go and come; All day I hear the teamster's call, All day I hear the thresher's hum; And many a shout and many a laugh Comes breaking through the clouds of chaff. Gay, careless sounds of homely toil! With mirth and labor closely bent The weary tiller of the soil Wins seldom wealth, but oft content. 'Tis better still if he but knows What sweet, wild beauty round him glows. The brook glides toward the sleeping lake___, Now babbling over shining stones; Now under clumps of bush and brake, Hushing its brawl to murmuring tones; And now it takes its winding path Through meadows green with aftermath. The frosty twilight early falls, But household fires burn warm and red. The cold may creep without the walls, And growing things lie stark and dead___ No matter, so the hearth be bright When household faces meet to-night. __Ellen P. Allerton. |
Walls of Corn and Other Poems
Ellen P. Allerton
(Hiawatha, KS: Harrington Printing Company. 1894)
Pages 234-235