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Quotes About Poplars

Far in a western brooklandThat bred me long agoThe poplars stand and trembleBy pools I used to know.
~ A. E. Housman
Silence and twilight fell over the garden. Far away the sea was lapping gently and monotonously on the bar. The wind of evening in the poplars sounded like some sad, weird old rune-some broken dream of old memories. A slender, shapely young aspen rose up before them against the fine maize and emerald and paling rose of the western sky, which brought out every leaf and twig in dark, tremulous, elfin loveliness.
~ L.M. Montgomery
she drank in the beauty of the summer dusk, sweet-scented with flower breaths from the garden below and sibilant and rustling from the stir of poplars. The eastern sky above the firs was flushed faintly pink from the reflection of the west, and Anne was wondering dreamily if the spirit of color looked like that
~ L.M. Montgomery
I saw the Old Moon with the New Moon in her arms, hovering above a row of poplars. The
~ Roger Zelazny
I am walking up and down the line of sentries, under the dark boughs of the poplars. In the flooded ditch outside the rats are paddling about, making as much noise as otters. As the yellow dawn comes up behind us, the Andalusian sentry, muffled in his cloak, begins singing. Across no-man's-land, a hundred or two hundred yards away, you can hear the Fascist sentry also singing.
~ George Orwell
The poplars were a symbol. It was only the light from behind the poplars that made their silhouettes visible.
~ Can Xue
She sipped Scotch considerably older than she was, the taste of time in its passing, in harmony with the outer world, where poplars were already half bare and long grasses drooped burnt from the first frost. The call of an evening bird, and the sun low. Bands of lavender and slate clouds moving against a metallic sky, denoting the passage of autumn. Fallen leaves blown onto the porch. The planet racking around again toward winter.
~ Charles Frazier
We knew it would rain, for the poplars showed The white of their leaves, the amber grain Shrunk in the wind -- and the lightning now Is tangled in tremulous skeins of rain.
~ Thomas Bailey Aldrich
On the mountain the limestone shelves and climbs in ragged escarpments among the clutching roots of hickories, oaks and tulip poplars which even here brace themselves against the precarious declination allotted them by the chance drop of a seed.
~ Cormac McCarthy
Sun benches at the curb bespeak another season, truncated poplars that having served for shade served also later for the fire.
~ William Carlos Williams
Moonlight and high wind. Dark poplars toss, insinuate the sea.
~ Li-Young Lee