The owl takes a meal from a rodent hare, Then flaunts a hoo hoo through the frosty air; The scattered stars glint from the canopied sky And the pale moon glistens as the clouds drift by. The greenwood snaps in the homestead fire; The smoke curls down from the chimney's spire; An old dog roused from a slumbering croon, Sits on a hillside and barks at the moon. The clock struck ten on the mantel slope, The doctor bows and says, "No hope." Then a shadow falls on the snow white earth, And a light goes out in the cabin's berth, For an angel came from the far unknown, Now the willows weep on a mound alone. Strange to the young, these lines may seem From a winter's night ... an old man's dream. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LEONARDO'S 'MONNA LISA' by EDWARD DOWDEN THE FORERUNNERS by GEORGE HERBERT ODES: BOOK 1: ODE 12. TO SIR FRANCIS HENRY DRAKE, BARONET by MARK AKENSIDE I WOULD NOT LIFT THY VEIL by A. LOUISE ASHWORTH TOY DAY by HARRY RANDOLPH BLYTHE THE NEW ANTHEM by NORMAN BOLKER DAY THAT I HAVE LOVED by RUPERT BROOKE THE WANDERER: 5. IN HOLLAND: SMALL PEOPLE by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON |