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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
HARVEST, by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: So there's my year, the twelvemonth duly told Last Line: And earth accuses none that goes among her stooks. Alternate Author Name(s): Blunden, Edmund | |||
So there's my year, the twelvemonth duly told Since last I climbed this brow and gloated round Upon the lands heaped with their wheaten gold, And now again they spread with wealth imbrowned -- And thriftless I meanwhile, What honeycombs have I to take, what sheaves to pile? I see some shrivelled fruits upon my tree, And gladly would self-kindness feign them sweet; The bloom smelled heavenly, can these stragglers be The fruit of that bright birth? and this wry wheat, Can this be from those spires Which I, or fancy, saw leap to the spring sun's fires? I peer, I count, but anxious is not rich, My harvest is not come, the weeds run high; Even poison-berries ramping from the ditch Have stormed the undefended ridges by; What Michaelmas is mine! The fields I thought to serve, for sturdier tillage pine. But, hush -- Earth's valleys sweet in leisure lie; And I among them wandering up and down Will taste their berries, like the bird or fly, And of their gleanings make both feast and crown. The Sun's eye laughing looks. And Earth accuses none that goes among her stooks. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FOREFATHERS by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN REPORT ON EXPERIENCE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN SOLUTIONS by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN THE GIANT PUFFBALL by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN THE MIDNIGHT SKATERS by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN VLAMERTINGHE: PASSING THE CHATEAU, JULY 1917 by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN 11TH R.S.R. by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN 1916 SEEN FROM 1921 by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN A 'FIRST IMPRESSION': TOKYO by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN A BRIDGE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN |
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