Out of the frost-white wood comes winnowing through No wing; no homely call or cry is heard. Even the hope of life seems far deferred. The hard hills ache beneath their spectral hue. A dove-grey cloud, tender as tears or dew, From one lone hearth exhaling, hangs unstirred, Like the poised ghost of some unnamed great bird In the ineffable pallor of the blue. Such, I must think, even at the dawn of Time, Was thy white hush, O world, when thou lay'st cold, Unwaked to love, new from the Maker's word, And the spheres, watching, stilled their high accord, To marvel at perfection in thy mould, The grace of thine austerity sublime! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A CLEVER WOMAN by MARY ELIZABETH COLERIDGE MEDITATIONS OF A HINDU [OR, HINDOO] PRINCE [AND SKEPTIC] by ALFRED COMYNS LYALL HE WROTE THE HISTORY BOOK,' IT SAID by MARIANNE MOORE THE YOUNG MAY MOON by THOMAS MOORE STELLA'S BIRTHDAY, 1718 by JONATHAN SWIFT MERLIN AND THE GLEAM by ALFRED TENNYSON |