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1854–1925

JUNE IN THE SKY

Edith Matilda Thomas

Slow through the light and silent air, Up climbs the smoke on its spiral stair — The visible flight of some mortal's prayer; The trees are in bloom with the flowers of frost,

But never a feathery leaf is lost; The spring, descending, is caught and bound Ere its silver feet can touch the ground; So still is the air that lies, this morn,

Over the snow-cold fields forlorn, ‘ Tis as though Italy's heaven smiled In the face of some bleak Norwegian wild; And the heart in me sings — I know not why —

‘ Tis winter on earth, but June in the sky! June in the sky! Ah, now I can see The souls of roses about to be, In gardens of heaven beckoning me,

Roses red-lipped, and roses pale, Fanned by the tremulous ether gale! Some of them climbing a window-ledge, Some of them peering from wayside hedge,

As yonder, adrift on the aery stream, Love drives his plumed and filleted team; The Angel of Summer aloft I see, And the souls of roses about to be!

And the heart in me sings — the heart knows why — ‘ Tis winter on earth, but June in the sky.

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JUNE IN THE SKY · Edith Matilda Thomas · Poetry Cove