THE valley stream is frozen, The hills are cold and bare, And the wild white bees of winter Swarm in the darkened air. I look on the naked forest: Was it ever green in June? Did it burn with gold and crimson In the dim autumnal noon? I look on the barren meadow: Was it ever heaped with hay? Did it hide the grassy cottage Where the skylark's children lay? I look on the desolate garden: Is it true the rose was there? And the woodbine's musky blossoms, And the hyacinth's purple hair? I look on my heart, and marvel If Love were ever its own, -- If the spring of promise brightened, And the summer of passion shone? Is the stem of bliss but withered, And the root survives the blast? Are the seeds of the Future sleeping Under the leaves of the Past? Ah, yes! for a thousand Aprils The frozen germs shall grow, And the dews of a thousand summers, Wait in the womb of the snow! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: JOHN CABANIS by EDGAR LEE MASTERS NIGHTS WITHOUT SLEEP by SARA TEASDALE CHANSON D'AUTOMNE by PAUL VERLAINE NAPOLEON AND THE BRITISH [OR ENGLISH] SAILOR [BOY] by THOMAS CAMPBELL HOLY SONNET: ANNUNCIATION by JOHN DONNE THE TROPICS IN NEW YORK by CLAUDE MCKAY THE TROOP SHIP by ISAAC ROSENBERG |