For he has seen a road by healing waters</br>Hushed into wintry slate against the sand,</br>And spoken there with the wind's elfin daughters,</br>And mingled in their dusty saraband.</br></br>He has known winds that blow from blossomy closes,</br>Rich with the fruity smell of summertide,</br>And kissed warm faery lips... Now he reposes,</br>While we are not quite certain he has died.

This is an autumn when they come no more.</br>Beech leaves yellow and fall, the beech-mast rots</br>Uneaten. Infertile now the beech</br>Hollows its heart, begetting naught.</br>There is frost on the grandson's eyes,</br>And only rumor upon the skies...

Father remembered the wild pigeons crowding</br>Beech groves, mast-rich. The flutter in boughs, the cloud</br>Darkening all, a hurricane circling and surging.</br>Eye lost count, ear could not measure sound.</br>Mind hurled measureless with them, feathered the sky.

The sky drips its spectral </br>And Gods, like men, to soot revert.</br>Gone is the mild, the serene air.</br>The golden years are come too late.</br>Pursue not wisdom or virtue here,</br>But what blind motion, what dim last</br>Regret of men who slew their past</br>Raised up this bribe against their fate.

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Something stirs that once had life. It drops</br>Into the stream, a last act of faith.</br>Seedballs of sycamore, incautious leaves of willow,</br>These have outstayed their autumn, teasing death</br>Only so far, not yet beyond all patience.</br>Now they let go.

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Farewell,</br>Army of Tennessee! Rough glory, rooted here,</br>Feeds the lone vow, the lingering touch</br>Of a late comrade sworn to remember you!</br>Lights glow from river and town. The darkness stabs.</br>And winter sweeps the undefended earth.