Page:Poems, now first collected, Stedman, 1897.djvu/122

THE DEATH OF BRYANT Next, Autumn, like a monarch sad of heart,

Came, tended by his melancholy days.

Purple he wore, and bore a golden rod,

His sceptre; and let fall upon the sod

A lone fringed-gentian ere he would depart.

Scarce had his train gone darkling down the ways

When Winter thither trod,—

Winter, with beard and raiment blown before,

That was so seeming like our poet old and hoar.

What forms are these amid the pageant fair,

Harping with hands that falter? What sad throng?

They wait in vain, a mournful brotherhood,

And listen where their laurelled elder stood

For some last music fallen through the air.

"What cold, thin atmosphere now hears thy song?"

They ask, and long have wooed

The woods and waves that knew him, but can learn

Naught save the hollow, haunting cry, "Return! return!"

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