In August.

Summer declines and roses have grown rare,1
                        
                        But cottage crofts are gay with hollyhocks,2
                        
                        And in old garden-walks you breathe an air3
                        
                        Fragrant of pinks and August-smelling stocks.4
                        
                        The soul of the delicious mignonette5
                        
                        Floats on the wind and tempts the vagrant bees6
                        
                        From the pale purple spikes of lavender,7
                        
                        Waking a fond regret8
                        
                        For dead July, whose children the sweet-peas9
                        
                        Are sipped by butterflies with wings astir.10
                        Evenings are chill, though in the glowing noon11
                        
                        Swelled peaches bask along a sunny wall,12
                        
                        And mellowing apricots turn gold—too soon13
                        
                        For him who loves not to be near the fall14
                        
                        Of the yet deathless leaves. Pale jessamine15
                        
                        Speaks, with her lucid stars, of shortening days16
                        
                        To spreading fuchsias clad in crimson bells,17
                        
                        Lurking beneath the twine18
                        
                        Of odorous clematis, whose bowery maze19
                        
                        Of gadding flowers the same sad story tells.20
                        Now from the sky fall sudden gleams of light21
                        
                        Athwart the plain. Black poplars in the breeze22
                        
                        Whiten—the willows flashing silvery white23
                        
                        At every gust against dark rain-clouds : these24
                        
                        Glooming beneath their crowns of massy snow,25
                        
                        And soaring onward with the wind that rocks26
                        
                        The sprouted elms, and shadowing as they pass27
                        
                        Broad corn-fields ripening slow28
                        
                        In upland farms, where still the undrawn cocks29
                        
                        Stand brown amid the verdurous aftergrass.30
                        
Now scream the curlews on the wild west coast,31
                        
                        And sea-birds sport in the sunned ocean—blue32
                        
                        As the intense of heaven. The crested host33
                        
                        Of mighty billows endlessly pursue34
                        
                        Each other in their glorious lion-play,35
                        
                        Surging against the cliffs with thunderous roar,36
                        
                        Till the black rocks seethe in thick-creaming foam,37
                        
                        And bursts of rainbowed spray38
                        
                        Fly o’er the craggy barriers far inshore,39
                        
                        Drenching the thrift in its storm-buffeted home.40
                        Now is the season when soft melancholy41
                        
                        Broods o’er the fields at solemn evenfall,42
                        
                        The golden-clouded sunset dying slowly43
                        
                        From the clear west, ere yet the starry pall44
                        
                        Of night is silvered by the harvest moon :45
                        
                        When the year’s blood runs rich as luscious wine46
                        
                        With honied ripeness :  when the robin’s song47
                        
                        Fills the grey afternoon48
                        
                        With warbled hope ;  and memories divine49
                        
                        Crowd to the heart of days forgotten long.50