October
Where the pluméd ranks of the Indian magic –
Whose banners waved through the summer days –
Now pitched their tents on a thousand fields
In a thousand scattered camps,
Bright with the gold that the sun-fire yields,
And brown by the starry lamps —
Come forth in the warm autumnal air
That weaves a film o’er the great blue eye
Of the world, like a mist of revery
Ont he upturned eye of prayer!
The piping snail in the stubble-ground,
With her whirring brood unseen around,
Calls cheerily for her lost “Bob White!”
While a million lives unseen
Till all the breadth of the day & night
With a million voices keen;
And only silence can be more still
Than their shrill, continuous moonstone,
As of slender hours by fairer blown
In their dance on the moony hill.
- Title
- October
- Alternative Title
- Where the plumed ranks of the Indian maize
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Large Scrapbook 172, BG
- Poems by George and Ruth Burleigh, edited by Mary Louise Brown, 1941, held by Little Compton Historical Society, Box A47.24
- Date
- Date tbd
- Subject
- Seasons
- Nature
- Media
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October
Part of October
