Читать книгу Blooms of the Berry - Cawein Madison Julius - Страница 22

I. – BY WOLD AND WOOD
THE WHITE EVENING

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From gray, bleak hills 'neath steely skies

Thro' beards of ice the forests roar;

Along the river's humming shore

The skimming skater bird-like flies.


On windy meads where wave white breaks,

Where fettered briers' glist'ning hands

Reach to the cold moon's ghastly lands,

Hoots the lorn owl, and crouching quakes.


With frowsy snow blanched is the world;

Stiff sweeps the wind thro' murmuring pines,

Then fiend-like deep-entangled whines

Thro' the dead oak, that vagrant twirled


Phantoms the cliff o'er the wild wold:

Ghost-vested willows rim the stream,

Low hang lank limbs where in a dream

The houseless hare leaps o'er the cold


On snow-tressed crags that twinkling flash,

Like champions mailed for clanking war,

Glares down large Phosphor's quiv'ring star,

Where teeth of foam the fierce seas gnash.


Slim o'er the tree-tops weighed with white

The country church's spire doth swell,

A scintillating icicle,

While fitfully the village light


In sallow stars stabs the gray dark;

Homeward the creaking wagons strain

Thro' knee-deep drifts; the steeple's vane

A flitting ghost whirls in its sark.


Down from the flaky North with clash,

Swathed in his beard of flashing sleet,

With steeds of winds that jangling beat

Life from the world, and roaring dash, —


Loud Winter! ruddy as a rose

Blown by the June's mild, musky lips;

The high moon dims her horn that dips,

And fold on fold roll down the snows.


Blooms of the Berry

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