It is Indian Summer by William Wilfred Campbell.
Along the line of smoky hills
The crimson forest stands,
And all the day the blue-jay calls
Throughout the autumn lands.
Now by the brook the maple leans
With all his glory spread,
And all the sumachs on the hills
Have turned their green to red.
Now by great marshes wrapt in mist,
Or past some river's mouth,
Throughout the long, still autumn day
Wild birds are flying south.
The words βand all the sumac on the hill have turned from green to redβ are from the poem βThe Harvest of the New-Mown Hayβ by Edwin Markham. This line is a beautiful description of autumn's arrival and the changing colors of nature.
Indian Summer by William Wilfred Campbell (1858?-1918)
I am not finding these exact lines. The closest I can come to it is a 1920 poem by Ruth Gunther Winant called "Summer's Growing Old," which contains the lines "On the slope of yonder hill, Sumac's deeper red."
What poem or verse contains the words and all the sumac on the hill have turned from green to red?
No verse contains this.
None.
Romans 10:9
In the King James version, No verse which contains the word - swelling - also contains the word - stomach.
The word - tattoo - is not in the King James version.
genesis19:26
There is only one verse in the KJV bible that contains both water and amen in the same verse (Numbers 5:22).
"Jumbled" describes something that is turned in different assorted directions, providing variety or confusion in its arrangement.
This was Jesus's first miracle and it is found in John 2:1-11
An example of echo verse is the poem "The Echoing Green" by William Blake. In this poem, the word "echo" is repeated throughout, mimicking the concept of an echo reverberating in a green, pastoral setting.
There is no chapter 80 verse 20 found anywhere in the bible. There is a Psalm 80:19 but no other book in the bible contains 80 chapters.
In the King James version no one verse contains each of j, k, q, x and z. Some verses have all-but-one, but none have every letter.