Songs of the Seasons.

Meta E. B. Thorne.

[For Four Students.]

SPRING.

The king of the day is exerting his power,

And night and cold at his bidding depart;

All nature in this resurrection hour

Will welcome my advent with joyous heart.

Then hasten, my children! Ho, March winds wild,

O’er mountain and valley, blow, madly blow!

Proclaim the glad coming of springtime mild,

And speed the departure of frost and snow!

Ye clouds of April, drop down your showers,

And fill to the brim the rivers and rills

With liquid laughter; May’s delicate flowers

Await your dripping ’mong valleys and hills.

SUMMER.

Spring scattered the seed with a lavish hand,

Her whispering breezes and magic showers

Awoke into life; see the serried ranks stand

Of fervid July’s lush grasses and flowers.

Then August comes with her sultry noons

Whose hot breath gildeth the ripening grain,

And the glorious light of her harvest moons;

Now the reaper sings as he sweeps the plain:

“My gleaming scythe I swing to and fro;

Before it is falling the golden wheat—

A precious store for the time of the snow;

All praise to the Giver of mercies so sweet!”

AUTUMN.

The plentiful harvest is garnered in;

But I bring September’s bounteous store

Of glowing fruitage, all hearts to win;

Now the summer’s brilliant reign is o’er.

Now, royal October the scepter wields,

In whose wealth of rosy and mellow light

Seem glorified even the bare brown fields,

With their delicate veil of haze bedight.

And e’en when November, dark and chill,

In her cloud-robe somber broods o’er the earth,

When the birds are hushed ’mid woodland and hill,

And the flowers are asleep till the spring’s glad birth,

There are blossoms still for the trustful heart,

Sweet hopes for what life may yet unfold,

And memories precious that will not depart

When fades from the hill-tops the autumn’s gold.

WINTER.

I bring to the waiting fields the snow,

December’s mantle so soft and pure,

That covers the sleeping seeds below,

To remain, till the spring’s return, secure.

Ye think my touch unkind and rude

When the bracing frost and cold I bring,

Ye chant in a pining, reproachful mood

The praises of summer and dewy spring;

Yet oft at my touch the baleful seeds

Of pestilence powerless fall in death;

New vigor to youth and prime proceeds

From my clear, keen, purifying breath.

But richer delights to you I bring;

For mine is the anniversary time,

When “Good-will to men!” the angels sing,

“Good-will!” the echoing joy-bells chime.