Poems (Lambert)/Autumn Thoughts

AUTUMN THOUGHTS.
I, FROM my chamber-window, markThe dying of the year;The trees in red and green and gold,Show Autumn's progress sere;And soon, alas! these richest tintsWill change to sober brown;The trees of their bright garb bereft,Wear winter's sternest frown.
The warbling songster seeks in vainSome place to shield his wings,And shivering on the bare cold oak,In piteous notes he sings.The flowerets hide their frail bright headsTill winter shall be o'er,Then at the first faint call of Spring,They show themselves once more.
The autumn rain is falling slow,With chilling, solemn spell,As if no brightness ever moreOn this bleak earth shall dwell.The dying of the day or yearWith awe impress the mind;For though we know God's ways are right,His mercies ever kind,—
We mortals seldom stop to think,When brooding o'er the night,How quickly day will dawn again,And Spring again bloom bright;And at the end of life's short pathThe aged should remember,Eternal Spring-time dawneth brightSoon after bleak December.