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1835–1905

GOOD-BY.

Sarah Chauncey Woolsey

THE interlacing verdurous screen Of the stanch woodbine still is green, And thickly set with milk-white blooms Gold-anthered, breathing out perfumes;

The clematis on trellis bars Still flaunts with white and purple stars; No missing leaf has thinner made The obelisks of maple shade;

Fresh beech boughs flutter in the breeze Which, warm as summer, stirs the trees; The sun is clear, the skies are blue: But still a sadness filters through

The beauty and the bloom; and we, Touched by some mournful prophecy, Whisper each day: “Delay, delay! Make not such haste to fly away!”

And they, with silent lips, reply: “Summer is gone; we may not stay. Summer is gone. Good-by! good-by!” Roses may be as fragrant fair

As in the sweet June days they were; No hint of frost may daunt as yet The clustering brown mignonette, Nor chilly wind forbid to ope

The odorous, fragile heliotrope; The sun may be as warm as May, The night forbear to chase the day, And hushed in false security

All the sweet realm of Nature be: But the South-loving birds have fled, By their mysterious instinct led; The butterflies their nests have spun,

And donned their silken shrouds each one; The bees have hived them fast, while we Whisper each day: “Delay, delay! Make not such haste to fly away!”

And all, with pitying looks, reply: “Summer is fled; we may not stay. Summer is gone. Good-by! good-by!”

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GOOD-BY. · Sarah Chauncey Woolsey · Poetry Cove