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AUTUMN IN THE SOUTH

"The gnomes and little grey men of summer are gliding the leaves down to the glistening pavement to make a carpet for autumn. And sprays of berries and crimson-robed leaves twist and cling with dying tendrils to the old brick-red wall. The smoke rises in -white spirals to the vaulted dome of blue and the rustling of tall silver poplars makes music with the wind— a tune of rustle-and-bustle and scatter-far-and-wide. Autumn leaves for autumn folk cover the countryside. The Avon is shadowed by brown arms of the trees and graceful willows decked in green and gold. The ripples of the water are timed by the birds which skim across the eddying surface and call in honeyed song across the water." KarorL "DAISY DAWN" (14).

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19350413.2.188.10

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXIX, Issue 88, 13 April 1935, Page 24

Word Count
129

AUTUMN IN THE SOUTH Evening Post, Volume CXIX, Issue 88, 13 April 1935, Page 24

AUTUMN IN THE SOUTH Evening Post, Volume CXIX, Issue 88, 13 April 1935, Page 24

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