The Summer trees are tempest-torn

The summer trees are tempest-torn,
The hills are wrapped in a mantle wide
Of folding rain by the mad wind borne
— — Across the country side.

His scourge of fury is lashing down
The delicate-ranked golden corn,
That never more shall rear its crown
— — And curtsey to the morn.

There shews no care in heaven to save
Man's pitiful patience, or provide
A season for the season's slave,
— — Whose trust hath toiled and died.

So my proud spirit in me is sad,
A wreck of fairer fields to mourn,
The ruin of golden hopes she had,
— — My delicate-ranked corn.
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