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Sonnet XXXVI. Summer.

Topics: classic

Now on hills, rocks, and streams, and vales, and plains,         Full looks the shining Day. - Our gardens wear         The gorgeous robes of the consummate Year.         With laugh, and shout, and song, stout Maids and Swains      Heap high the fragrant hay, as thro' rough lanes         Rings the yet empty waggon. - See in air         The pendent cherries, red with tempting stains,         Gleam thro' their boughs. - Summer, thy bright career      Must slacken soon in Autumn's milder sway;         Then thy now heapt and jocund meads shall stand         Smooth, - vacant, - silent, - thro' th' exulting Land      As wave thy Rival's golden fields, and gay         Her Reapers throng. She smiles, and binds the sheaves;         Then bends her parting step o'er fall'n and rustling leaves.      June 27th, 1782.

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"Now on hills, rocks, and streams, and vales, and plains,..."

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