Lucy Maud Montgomery

By an Autumn Fire

By an Autumn Fire - meaning Summary

Comfort Against Autumn Longing

Montgomery’s poem contrasts autumnal longing and the melancholy of wind and rain with a warm, communal hearth that wards off loss. Natural voices—moaning waves and haunted spaces—evoke things once vibrant in summer. In response, human joy, laughter, and tested friendships create a deliberate splendor around the fire. The poem frames mature contentment as harvest: gathered memories, fulfilled love, and achieved ambitions that defend against seasonal sorrow.

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Now at our casement the wind is shrilling, Poignant and keen And all the great boughs of the pines between It is harping a lone and hungering strain To the eldritch weeping of the rain; And then to the wild, wet valley flying It is seeking, sighing, Something lost in the summer olden. When night was silver and day was golden; But out on the shore the waves are moaning With ancient and never fulfilled desire, And the spirits of all the empty spaces, Of all the dark and haunted places, With the rain and the wind on their death-white faces, Come to the lure of our leaping fire. But we bar them out with this rose-red splendor From our blithe domain, And drown the whimper of wind and rain With undaunted laughter, echoing long, Cheery old tale and gay old song; Ours is the joyance of ripe fruition, Attained ambition. Ours is the treasure of tested loving, Friendship that needs no further proving; No more of springtime hopes, sweet and uncertain, Here we have largess of summer in fee­ Pile high the logs till the flame be leaping, At bay the chill of the autumn keeping, While pilgrim-wise, we may go a-reaping In the fairest meadow of memory!

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