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Summer Quotes - Page 4

The Indian Summer, the dead Summer's soul.

"Presence", line 62 in "Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations" by Jehiel Keeler Hoyt, (pp. 764-765), 1922.

Chiefs who no more in bloody fights engage, But wise through time, and narrative with age, In summer-days like grasshoppers rejoice - A bloodless race, that send a feeble voice.

Alexander Pope (1830). “The Poetical Works of Alexander Pope (including His Translation of Homer). To which is Prefixed the Life of the Author, by Dr. Johnson”, p.233

Summer for prose and lemons, for nakedness and languor.

Derek Walcott (1969). “In a green night: poems, 1948-1960”, Jonathan Cape

Love is to the heart what the summer is to the farmer's year. It brings to harvest all the loveliest flowers of the soul.

Billy Graham (2011). “The Holy Spirit: Activating God's Power in Your Life”, p.149, Thomas Nelson Inc

Hot July brings cooling showers, Apricots and gillyflowers.

Sara Coleridge Coleridge (2007). “Collected Poems”, Carcanet Press

Listen! the wind is rising, and the air is wild with leaves, we have had our summer evenings, now for October eves!

Humbert Wolfe (1936). “P.L.M.: Peoples, Landfalls, Mountains”, London : Cassell

There is always in February some one day, at least, when one smells the yet distant, but surely coming, summer.

Gertrude Jekyll (2011). “Wood and Garden: Notes and Thoughts, Practical and Critical, of a Working Amateur”, p.19, Cambridge University Press