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1876–1944

IN AUTUMN

Helen Hay Whitney

The gold-red leaves have burned To their last great glow, and died And underfoot By the strong oak's root

They are seized by the angry wind and spurned And into a common grave have turned For Summer — warm and wide. A year must a sapling wage

Its life with the sun and rain, Then its tender youth Without reck or ruth Is frozen and beaten to harsh old age

By a stroke of Nature mother's rage And the sturdy fight seems vain. It wails to the oak o'erhead As the coffin-cold wraps round

“The end of life Is toil and strife And the secret of being, I have found Is a seed in the wind and a log on the ground.

I hope I will soon be dead.” “Peace little struggler — sleep” — And the great oak croons a song, “Death is but night

And a cradle white For one dark space may the shadows creep, Then Spring will rise from her dungeon keep And life wake, wise and strong.”

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IN AUTUMN · Helen Hay Whitney · Poetry Cove