WARM the summer wind is blowing; From the west the sun is glowing Over lake and heath and fen; Merrily the stream is flowing; On the hills the kine are lowing; Dark and long the shadow's growing, Purpling o'er the Devil's Glen; Far away, in light and gloom, Glendalough's gaunt mountains loom. The trysting-hour has passed away; The sweet sad smile o' the dying day Changes from rosy-red to grey. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NIGHT PIECE (2) by EDITH SITWELL TIME, REAL AND IMAGINARY; AN ALLEGORY by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE THE MOWER'S SONG by ANDREW MARVELL SONNET: 8. WHEN THE ASSAULT WAS INTENDED TO THE CITY by JOHN MILTON DROWNED IN HARBOUR by ANTIPATER OF THESSALONICA STANZAS, OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF A RELATIVE ABROAD by BERNARD BARTON |