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A continuing selection of classic and contemporary poems.

November

Nannie R. Glass

But let all those that put their
trust in thee rejoice.—Psalm 5:11.


November is so drear and chill
Whilst making leafless branch and tree,
Whilst sweeping over vale and hill
With all her doleful minstrelsy.
November wails the summer’s death
In such a melancholy voice,
She has a withering, blighting breath;
She does not bid the heart rejoice.

Yet why repine, thou stricken one?
Grief is the common fate of all.
This the refrain beneath the sun:
Mortals must die, and leaves must fall.
They’ll live again, the leaves and flowers,
When spring returns to bless the earth;
They’ll waken ’neath her sunny hours
Through nature’s touch to beauteous birth.

Hope in decay and do not moan
That God has taken one we love:
Why should our hearts be turned to stone
When he is safe in heaven above?
Redeemed through Christ, who was his trust,
With him in realms of joy on high;
For though down here “’tis dust to dust,”
The Christian lives beyond the sky.

Then in the autumn’s woe rejoice,—
Rejoice in calm, rejoice in storm;
In either hear God’s tender voice,
For both his holy will perform.
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From The Mountain Spring And Other Poems | Sherman, French & Company, 1913
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