Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Battle Autumn Of 1862. by Kate Seymour Maclean
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The Battle Autumn Of 1862.

    By Kate Seymour Maclean



    Under the orchard boughs,
        That drop red leaves like coals into the grass.
            The golden arrows of the sunset fall;
            And on the vine-hung wall
    Great purple clusters in delicious drowse,
    Beakers of chrysolite and amethyst,
    Yet by the sun unkissed,
        Lean down to all the wooing lips that pass,
    Brimful of red, red wine
    Sweet as brown peasants glean along the castled Rhine

    All sights and sounds are of the Autumn weather;
        The urchin rock'ng in the trees
            Shakes silver laughter with the apples down,--
        And wading to the knees
            Among the stubble and the husks so brown,
    The oxen keeping every patient step together,
    Bring in the creaking wain,
    High-piled with yellow maize and sheaves of rustling grain.

    While in the mill, with ceaseless whirr and drone,
    With moss and lichens to the roof o'ergrown
    An undertone to every other sound,
    The blind old horse goes round

    Gathered along the farm-house eaves
        In noisy congress, see the swallows sit,
    Or whirling in mid air like autumn leaves,
        In airy wheels they flit.
    Bright rovers of all summer skies,
    I follow them with wistful eyes
    To-morrow's sunset they will be
    A thousand leagues by land and sea
            Beyond this wintry hemisphere
    Heaven gathers round their joyous wings
    The sunlight of perpetual springs,
    Soft airs and fragrant blossomings
            Through all the glad round year.

    I hear as though I did not hear,
        Along the upland fields remote,
    The plough-boy's whistle, silver clear:
        For hark' the herds-man's graver note,
    Who hums beneath the orchard boughs,
        The ballad of that grand old man,
        Who marshalled freedom's battle van,
    And fell,--no laurel round his brows.

    To-day the hero-martyr's grave
        Is shaken by the armed tread
        Of patriotic soldiers o'er his head
    Not by the footsteps of one slave!

    So grows the work that he began,
        Wrought out in slow and toilsome ways,
        Yet ever building through the days,
    A grander heritage for man.

    Oh! harvest years, foretold so long!
    Through seas of blood, through years of wrong,
    A people patient brave and strong,
        In camp and field, and battle clang,
    'Mid cannon's roar and trumpet's peal,
    And shock of war, and clash of steel,
        For you each steadfast blade out-sprang!
    In you each loyal heart kept faith
    As strong as life, as stern as death;
    Though human lives like summer grain
    Were sown on every battle-plain;
        Blood of our bravest and our best,
        The red, red wine of life was pressed,
    And lost like summer rain.
    In dust and smoke of carnage whirled,
        Before those dying eyes still swam
        Those coming years so grand and calm,
    The golden Autumns of the world!

    Through frost and snow and wintry rains,
        Speed, silent hours!--the Nation waits,
    While at her feet the slave in chains,
        Kneels, listening for the coming fates;
    And round him droops in soil and dust,
        The bright flag of her stripes and stars:
    Speed, Autumn hours!--we wait in trust
    No tale of traitor lips can dim,
        Till Liberty's white hand unbars
    The broad gates of the glad New Year,
    Unfurls our banner free and clear,
        And ushers Peace and Freedom in!




Extra Info:
[Footnote: President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation took effect on the first day of the New Year, 1863.]


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