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November Autumn Poem
This is the beautiful late summer, The flowers have lost their scent.
The flowers no longer have fresh colours, their bright colours are extinct.
Many of the buttons that are close to opening close to withering.
Autumn has put on its austere veil, it is no longer a happy place.
Near the tall and proud dahlias, Who erect their Discover More bouquets,
We see only dark thoughts, And nuanced chrysanthemums.
In the clear, undressed groves The songbirds have kept silent.
On the ground the chestnut rolls, And on the walls the vine bleeds.
The lawns are cold and wet, the foliage already rusty;
the wind on the ground scatters them, the wind or the next shower.
The air is humid and penetrating, the garden is only a dying one.
The sun, through the mist, Seems like a red censer smoking;
and nature is in this solemn place like a farewell.
Let us leave, my son, this quiet place; let us return to the great city.
Over there, sheltered from the crowds, let' s go wait for spring.
But I hear a graze of wings and plaintive ritorns...
Does this sweet bird regret, as we do, the last April?
Amélie Dewailly (Mrs. Gustave-Emile Mesureur) Our Children Poetry - 1885
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