Poem A Day

Classic poem

Summer begins to have the look

by Emily Dickinson

Summer begins to have the look

Peruser of enchanting Book

Reluctantly but sure perceives

A gain upon the backward leaves --

Autumn begins to be inferred

By millinery of the cloud

Or deeper color in the shawl

That wraps the everlasting hill.

The eye begins its avarice

A meditation chastens speech

Some Dyer of a distant tree

Resumes his gaudy industry.

Conclusion is the course of All

At most to be perennial

And then elude stability

Recalls to immortality.

naturedeathwarsea
Public domain/Source

About this poem

First line
Summer begins to have the look
Poet
Emily Dickinson
Themes
nature, death, war, sea

Poem A Day

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