Fall Time

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The gather'd clouds, a-hangèn low,
  Do meäke the woody ridge look dim;
  An' raïn-vill'd streams do brisker flow,
  Arisèn higher to their brim.
  In the tree, vrom lim' to lim',
  Leaves do drop
  Vrom the top, all slowly down,
  Yollow, to the gloomy groun'.

  The rick's a-tipp'd an' weather-brown'd,
  An' thatch'd wi' zedge a-dried an' dead;
  An' orcha'd apples, red half round,
  Have all a-happer'd down, a-shed
  Underneath the trees' wide head.
  Ladders long,
  Rong by rong, to clim' the tall
  Trees, be hung upon the wall.

  The crumpled leaves be now a-shed
  In mornèn winds a-blowèn keen;
  When they wer green the moss wer dead,
  Now they be dead the moss is green.
  Low the evenèn zun do sheen
  By the boughs,
  Where the cows do swing their taïls
  Over the merry milkers' païls.

© William Barnes