BENEATH the mild sun vanish the vapor's last wet traces, And for the autumn sowing the mellow soil lies steeping: The stubble fires have faded, and ended is the reaping: The piercing plow has leveled the rough resisting places. The solitary sower along the brown field paces, -- Two steps and then a handful, a rhythmic motion keeping; The eager sparrows follow, now pecking and now peeping. He sows; but all the increase accomplished by God's grace is. And whether frost be fatal or drought be devastating, The blades rise green and slender for springtime winds to flutter, As time of golden harvest the coming fall awaiting, None see the silent yearnings the sower's lips half utter. The care he suffers, distressing thoughts creating With steady hand he paces afield without a mutter. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DOWNFALL OF POLAND [FALL OF WARSAW, 1794] by THOMAS CAMPBELL THE HILL WIFE: THE OFT-REPEATED DREAM by ROBERT FROST THE HIGHWAYMAN by ALFRED NOYES WORK by ALEKSANDR SERGEYEVICH PUSHKIN A GULL GOES UP by LEONIE ADAMS A THREAD OF HAIR by CHRISTOPHER BANNISTER A WATERPIECE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN FIAMMETTA: SONNET. TO DANTE IN PARADISE by GIOVANNI BOCCACCIO |