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1.
Season of
mists and
mellow
fruitful
ness,
Close bosom-
friend of
the ma
turing
sun;
Con
spiring with
him how to
load and
bless
With
fruit the
vines that
round the
thatch-eves
run;
To
bend with
apples the
mossd cottage-
trees,
And
fill all
fruit with
ripeness
to the
core;
To
swell the
gourd, and
plump the
hazel
shells
With a
sweet kernel; to
set budding
more,
And
still more,
later
flowers
for the
bees,
Un
til they
think warm
days will
never
cease,
For
Summer
has oer-
brimmd their
clammy
cells.
2.
Who
hath not
seen thee
oft a
mid thy
store?
Some
times who
ever
seeks a
broad may
find
Thee
sitting
careless
on a
granary
floor,
Thy
hair soft-
lifted
by the
winnowing wind;
Or
on a
half-reapd
furrow sound a
sleep,
Drowsd with the
fume of
poppies,
while thy
hook
Spares the next
swath and
all its
twinéd
flowers:
And
sometimes
like a
gleaner thou dost
keep
Steady thy
laden
head a
cross a
brook;
Or
by a
cyder-
press, with
patient
look,
Thou
watchest
the last
oozings
hours by
hours.
3.
Where are the
songs of
Spring?
Ay, where
are they?
Think not
of them,
thou hast thy
music
too,
While
barréd
clouds bloom the soft-
dying
day,
And
touch the
stubble
plains with
rosy
hue;
Then in a
wailful
choir the
small gnats
mourn
A
mong the
river
sallows,
borne a
loft
Or
sinking
as the
light wind
lives or
dies;
And
full-grown
lambs loud
bleat from
hilly
bourn;
Hedge-crickets
sing; and
now with
treble
soft
The
red-breast
whistles
from a
garden-croft;
And
gathering
swallows
twitter
in the
skies.