WARM yellowy-green In the blue serene, How they skip and sway On this autumn day! They cannot know What has happened below, - That their boughs down there Are already quite bare, That their own will be When a week has passed, - For they jig as in glee To this very last. But no; there lies At times in their tune A note that cries What at first I fear I did not hear: 'O we remember At each wind's hollo - Though life holds yet - We go hence soon, For 'tis November; - But that you follow You may forget!' | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LORD, HEAR MY PRAYER; A PARAPHRASE OF THE 102ND PSALM by JOHN CLARE ON RECEIVING [THE FIRST] NEWS OF THE WAR by ISAAC ROSENBERG TO THE SAME PURPOSE by THOMAS TRAHERNE NO SORROW PECULIAR TO THE SUFFERER by VINCENT BOURNE AN OLD DREAM by WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE RHOECUS by ABBIE FARWELL BROWN ON THE CAUSE, CONSQUENCE AND CURE OF SPIRITUAL PRIDE by JOHN BYROM |