The dead leaves, one-time fair, Whirl weirdly in the Square, And in them, fancy I, Drift banned souls, that have missed Chance of the heavenly tryst Of the fair year fled by. You have loved glare of the gas, And dancing girls, and as A new-found paradise Have pasteboard trees and groves, And footlight-litten loves, Dazed your admiring eyes. And you have made night day, And, as your feet tripped gay In dizzy dance, laughed free; While kith and kin, 'neath dim Bridge lamplight, slumbered grim, Or drifted out to sea. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SLEEPY HOLLOW by WILLIAM ELLERY CHANNING (1817-1901) BEETHOVEN'S THIRD SYMPHONY by RICHARD HOVEY PALINGENESIS by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW A FARM PICTURE by WALT WHITMAN TO A REPUBLICAN FRIEND, 1848, CONTINUED by MATTHEW ARNOLD TO BARON DE STONNE WITH AIKIN'S ESSAYS ON SONG-WRITING by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD |