A LITTLE while ago and you might see The ebon trees against the saffron sky That shifts through flame to rose; but now a calm Of solemn blue above, a stilly time, With pines that peer and listen, while the snow Gleams ghostly and the brittle sound of ice Tinkles along the dumbness, strangely loud, Since all the air is tranced. Housed-in, the folk Close-gather at the ingle, and the hour Of fireside cheer and homely talk of kin Is welcomed, as the big, vague world beyond Moves nightward, merges into mystery. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FIVE TREES by LOUIS UNTERMEYER THE GARDEN OF LOVE, FR. SONGS OF EXPERIENCE by WILLIAM BLAKE TO JOHN KEATS, POET, AT SPRING TIME by COUNTEE CULLEN THE OWL AND THE PUSSY CAT by EDWARD LEAR A VISION UPON [THIS CONCEIT] OF THE FAERIE QUEENE (2) by WALTER RALEIGH THE SHEPHEARDES CALENDER: MAY by EDMUND SPENSER UNDERWOODS: BOOK 1: 21. REQUIEM by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON |