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Autumn.

Topics: classic

Autumn, thy rushing blast         Sweeps in wild eddies by,     Whirling the sear leaves past,         Beneath my feet, to die.     Nature her requiem sings         In many a plaintive tone,     As to the wind she flings         Sad music, all her own.     The murmur of the rill         Is hoarse and sullen now,     And the voice of joy is still         In grove and leafy bough.     There's not a single wreath,         Of all Spring's thousand flowers,     To strew her bier in death,         Or deck her faded bowers.     I hear a spirit sigh         Where the meeting pines resound,     Which tells me all must die,         As the leaf dies on the ground.     The brightest hopes we cherish,         Which own a mortal trust,     But bloom awhile to perish         And moulder in the dust.     Sweep on, thou rushing wind,         Thou art music to mine ear,     Awakening in my mind         A voice I love to hear.     The branches o'er my head         Send forth a tender moan;     Like the wail above the dead         Is that sad and solemn tone.     Though all things perish here,         The spirit cannot die,     It owns a brighter sphere,         A home in yon fair sky.     The soul will flee away,         And when the silent clod     Enfolds my mouldering clay,         Shall live again with God;     Where Autumn's chilly blast         Shall never strip the bowers,     Or icy Winter cast         A blight upon the flowers;     But Spring, in all her bloom,         For ever flourish there,     And the children of the tomb         Forget this world of care.--     The children who have passed         Death's tideless ocean o'er,     And Hope's blest anchor cast         On that bright eternal shore;     Who sought, through Him who bled         Their erring race to save,     A Sun, whose beams shall shed         A light upon the grave!

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"Autumn, thy rushing blast..."

"Autumn." is a quintessential example of Susanna Moodie's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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