Poem: ‘Summer-like for an instant’

The Adelphi, MAY 1933

Summer-like for an instant the autumn sun bursts out,

And the light through the turning elms is green and clear;

It slants down the path and the ragged marigolds glow

Fiery again, last flames of the dying year.

A blue-tit darts with a flash of wings, to feed

Where the coconut hangs on the pear tree over the well;

He digs at the meat like a tiny pickaxe tapping

With his needle-sharp beak as he clings to the swinging shell.

Then he runs up the trunk, sure-footed and sleek like a mouse,

And perches to sun himself; all his body and brain

Exult in the sudden sunlight, gladly believing

That the cold is over and summer is here again.

But I see the umber clouds that drive for the sun,

And a sorrow no argument ever can make away

Goes through my heart as I think of the nearing winter,

And the transient light that gleams like the ghost of May;

And the bird unaware, blessing the summer eternal,

Joyfully labouring, proud in his strength, gay-plumed,

Unaware of the hawk and the snow and the frost-bound nights,

And of his death foredoomed.