Custom Search
  
SEPTEMBER
Helen Hunt Jackson (1830-1885)
  
  	9-16-19
	
		
			
				
	 
	
  
 
- 
			
- 
					
- 
							
HE golden-rod is yellow; - The corn is turning brown;
 - The trees in apple orchards
 - With fruit are bending down.
 - The gentian's bluest fringes
 - Are curling in the sun;
 - In dusty pods the milkweed
 - Its hidden silk has spun.
 - The sedges flaunt their harvest,
 - In every meadow nook;
 - And asters by the brook-side
 - Make asters in the brook.
 - From dewy lanes at morning
 - The grapes' sweet odors rise;
 - At noon the roads all flutter
 - With yellow butterflies.
 - By all these lovely tokens
 - September days are here,
 - With summer's best of weather,
 - And autumn's best of cheer.
 - But none of all this beauty
 - Which floods the earth and air
 - Is unto me the secret
 - Which makes September fair.
 - 'T is a thing which I remember;
 - To name it thrills me yet:
 - One day of one September
 - I never can forget.
 
 - 
							
 
 - 
					
 
| "September" is reprinted from Poems. Helen Jackson. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1892. | 
Read more at http://www.poetry-archive.com/j/september.html#FuoOBpLhiJuyIWlD.99