Hunt and Lee, comps. The Book of the Sonnet. 1867.
I. To EstelleMrs. Elizabeth F. Swift
C
And let us study Nature’s changeful face.
Look how the sun’s last rays harmonious blend,
Folding the woodlands in a warm embrace;
Each glowing leaf, stirred by the evening breeze,
Gleams with prismatic hues; crimson and gold,
Purple and azure seem the waving trees;
The mists their silvery vapors have unrolled,
And hover o’er the river’s troubled breast,—
River, that ’midst such deep and calm repose
Forever murmurs with a sad unrest,
Like human hearts o’erburdened with life’s woes.
But see—bright messenger of Heaven, queen of the summer skies,
Filling the earth with loveliness—the Harvest-Moon arise.