JUNE

JUNEJUNE

JUNE

JUNE

Oh June! thou comest once againWith bales of hay and sheaves of grain,That make the farmer’s heart rejoice,And anxious herds lift up their voice.I hear thy promise, sunny maid,Sound in the reapers’ ringing blade,And in the laden harvest wain,That rumbles through the stubble plain.Ye tell a tale of bearded stacks,Of busy mills and floury sacks;Of cars oppressed with cumbrous loads,Hard curving down their iron roads;Of barges grounding on their wayDown winding streams to reach the bay;Of vessels spreading to the breezeTheir snowy sails in stormy seas,While bearing to some foreign strandThe products of this golden land.Ye come again with cereal brows,And crescent blade, to fill the mows;And never fall thy feet too soon,Oh, ever welcome, sunny June.Once more I see your banner spreadAcross the evening sky,I see your trace in shallow brooksThat feebly ripple by.I see your face in mirror-lakes,In fields and forests old,And in the gardens all arrayedIn crimson, blue and gold.I hear your voice in twittering birds,That round the gables wheel,And in the humming monologuesWhich from the meadows steal.Oh, month of Love and plighted faith,And airy castles high!I hear you in the lover’s songAnd in the maiden’s sigh.And in the breeze that gently wakesThe leaves upon the bough,I feel your soothing mother-touchCaressing cheek and brow.Oh, sweet as sunrise to the lark,As noonday to the bee,Or evening to the nightingale,Is June’s return to me.

Oh June! thou comest once againWith bales of hay and sheaves of grain,That make the farmer’s heart rejoice,And anxious herds lift up their voice.I hear thy promise, sunny maid,Sound in the reapers’ ringing blade,And in the laden harvest wain,That rumbles through the stubble plain.Ye tell a tale of bearded stacks,Of busy mills and floury sacks;Of cars oppressed with cumbrous loads,Hard curving down their iron roads;Of barges grounding on their wayDown winding streams to reach the bay;Of vessels spreading to the breezeTheir snowy sails in stormy seas,While bearing to some foreign strandThe products of this golden land.Ye come again with cereal brows,And crescent blade, to fill the mows;And never fall thy feet too soon,Oh, ever welcome, sunny June.Once more I see your banner spreadAcross the evening sky,I see your trace in shallow brooksThat feebly ripple by.I see your face in mirror-lakes,In fields and forests old,And in the gardens all arrayedIn crimson, blue and gold.I hear your voice in twittering birds,That round the gables wheel,And in the humming monologuesWhich from the meadows steal.Oh, month of Love and plighted faith,And airy castles high!I hear you in the lover’s songAnd in the maiden’s sigh.And in the breeze that gently wakesThe leaves upon the bough,I feel your soothing mother-touchCaressing cheek and brow.Oh, sweet as sunrise to the lark,As noonday to the bee,Or evening to the nightingale,Is June’s return to me.

Oh June! thou comest once againWith bales of hay and sheaves of grain,That make the farmer’s heart rejoice,And anxious herds lift up their voice.I hear thy promise, sunny maid,Sound in the reapers’ ringing blade,And in the laden harvest wain,That rumbles through the stubble plain.

Oh June! thou comest once again

With bales of hay and sheaves of grain,

That make the farmer’s heart rejoice,

And anxious herds lift up their voice.

I hear thy promise, sunny maid,

Sound in the reapers’ ringing blade,

And in the laden harvest wain,

That rumbles through the stubble plain.

Ye tell a tale of bearded stacks,Of busy mills and floury sacks;Of cars oppressed with cumbrous loads,Hard curving down their iron roads;Of barges grounding on their wayDown winding streams to reach the bay;Of vessels spreading to the breezeTheir snowy sails in stormy seas,While bearing to some foreign strandThe products of this golden land.

Ye tell a tale of bearded stacks,

Of busy mills and floury sacks;

Of cars oppressed with cumbrous loads,

Hard curving down their iron roads;

Of barges grounding on their way

Down winding streams to reach the bay;

Of vessels spreading to the breeze

Their snowy sails in stormy seas,

While bearing to some foreign strand

The products of this golden land.

Ye come again with cereal brows,And crescent blade, to fill the mows;And never fall thy feet too soon,Oh, ever welcome, sunny June.

Ye come again with cereal brows,

And crescent blade, to fill the mows;

And never fall thy feet too soon,

Oh, ever welcome, sunny June.

Once more I see your banner spreadAcross the evening sky,I see your trace in shallow brooksThat feebly ripple by.I see your face in mirror-lakes,In fields and forests old,And in the gardens all arrayedIn crimson, blue and gold.

Once more I see your banner spread

Across the evening sky,

I see your trace in shallow brooks

That feebly ripple by.

I see your face in mirror-lakes,

In fields and forests old,

And in the gardens all arrayed

In crimson, blue and gold.

I hear your voice in twittering birds,That round the gables wheel,And in the humming monologuesWhich from the meadows steal.Oh, month of Love and plighted faith,And airy castles high!I hear you in the lover’s songAnd in the maiden’s sigh.

I hear your voice in twittering birds,

That round the gables wheel,

And in the humming monologues

Which from the meadows steal.

Oh, month of Love and plighted faith,

And airy castles high!

I hear you in the lover’s song

And in the maiden’s sigh.

And in the breeze that gently wakesThe leaves upon the bough,I feel your soothing mother-touchCaressing cheek and brow.Oh, sweet as sunrise to the lark,As noonday to the bee,Or evening to the nightingale,Is June’s return to me.

And in the breeze that gently wakes

The leaves upon the bough,

I feel your soothing mother-touch

Caressing cheek and brow.

Oh, sweet as sunrise to the lark,

As noonday to the bee,

Or evening to the nightingale,

Is June’s return to me.


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