Summer

Summer

Summer (/ˈsʌmər/ SU-mər) is the warmest of the four temperate seasons, between spring and autumn. At the summer solstice, the days are longest and the nights are shortest, with day-length decreasing as the season progresses after the solstice. The date of the beginning of summer varies according to climate, culture, and tradition, but when it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere it is winter in the Southern Hemisphere, and vice versa.

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Famous quotes containing the word summer:

    To see the Summer Sky
    Is Poetry, though never in a Book it lie—
    True Poems flee—
    Emily Dickinson (1830–1886)

    That night was the turning-point in the season. We had gone to bed in summer, and we awoke in autumn; for summer passes into autumn in some imaginable point of time, like the turning of a leaf.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    The summer that I was ten—
    Can it be there was only one
    summer that I was ten? It must

    have been a long one then—
    May Swenson (1919–1995)