It is the Indian summer. The rising sun blazes through the misty
air like a conflagration. A yellowish, smoky haze fills the
atmosphere, and a filmy mist lies like a silver lining on the
sky. The wind is soft and low. It wafts to us the odor of
forest leaves, that hang wilted on the dripping branches, or drop
into the stream. Their gorgeous tints are gone, as if the
autumnal rains had washed them out. Orange, yellow and scarlet,
all are changed to one melancholy russet hue. The birds, too,
have taken wing, and have left their roofless dwellings. Not the
whistle of a robin, not the twitter of an eavesdropping swallow,
not the carol of one sweet, familiar voice. All gone. Only the
dismal cawing of a crow, as he sits and curses that the harvest
is over; or the chit-chat of an idle squirrel, the noisy denizen
of a hollow tree, the mendicant friar of a large parish, the
absolute monarch of a dozen acorns.
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Last Revised: 2008 April 9
Copyright © 1999-2008 John C. Shepard. All Rights Reserved.
The GIGA name and logo are trademarks registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office by John C. Shepard.
|
|
Click > HERE < to report errors
|
|