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Indian Summer

Topics: classic

The dawn is a warp of fever,     The eve is a woof of fire;     And the month is a singing weaver     Weaving a red desire.     With stars Dawn dices with Even     For the rosy gold they heap     On the blue of the day's deep heaven,     On the black of the night's far deep.     It's 'Reins to the blood!' and 'Marry!'     The season's a prince who burns     With the teasing lusts that harry     His heart for a wench who spurns.     It's 'Crown us a beaker with sherry,     To drink to the doxy's heels;     A tankard of wine o' the berry,     To lips like a cloven peel's.     ' 'S death! if a king be saddened,     Right so let a fool laugh lies:     But wine! when a king is gladdened,     And a woman's waist and her eyes.'     He hath shattered the loom of the weaver,     And left but a leaf that flits,     He hath seized heaven's gold, and a fever     Of mist and of frost is its.     He hath tippled the buxom beauty,     And gotten her hug and her kiss     The wide world's royal booty     To pile at her feet for this.

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"The dawn is a warp of fever,..."

"Indian Summer" is a quintessential example of Madison Julius Cawein'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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