Читать книгу The Aldine, Vol. 5, No. 1., January, 1872 - Various - Страница 5

A FROSTY DAY

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Grass afield wears silver thatch,

    Palings all are edged with rime,

Frost-flowers pattern round the latch,

    Cloud nor breeze dissolve the clime;


When the waves are solid floor,

    And the clods are iron-bound,

And the boughs are crystall'd hoar,

    And the red leaf nail'd aground.


When the fieldfare's flight is slow,

    And a rosy vapor rim,

Now the sun is small and low,

    Belts along the region dim.


When the ice-crack flies and flaws,

    Shore to shore, with thunder shock,

Deeper than the evening daws,

    Clearer than the village clock.


When the rusty blackbird strips,

    Bunch by bunch, the coral thorn,

And the pale day-crescent dips,

    New to heaven a slender horn.


—John Leicester Warren.

Those who come last seem to enter with advantage. They are born to the wealth of antiquity. The materials for judging are prepared, and the foundations of knowledge are laid to their hands. Besides, if the point was tried by antiquity, antiquity would lose it; for the present age is really the oldest, and has the largest experience to plead.—Jeremy Collier.

The Aldine, Vol. 5, No. 1., January, 1872

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