FROM out the west, where darkling storm-clouds float, The 'waking wind pipes soft its rising note. From out the west, o'erhung with fringes grey, The wind preludes with sighs its roundelay, Then blowing, singing, piping, laughing loud, It scurries on before the grey storm-cloud; Across the hollow and along the hill It whips and whirls among the maples, till With bough upbent, and green of leaves blown wide, The silver shines upon their underside. A gusty freshening of humid air, With showers laden, and with fragrance rare; And now a little sprinkle, with a dash Of great cool drops that fall with sudden splash; Then over field and hollow, grass and grain, The loud, crisp whiteness of the nearing rain. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THEN AND NOW by CECIL DAY LEWIS FOREST FLOWERS by ROBERT FROST FUGUE FOR A DROWNED GIRL by JAMES GALVIN DIVIDE by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON TO A SCREEN-MAKER by MARIANNE MOORE THE DARK HOUSE by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON MIDSUMMER FROST (2) by ISAAC ROSENBERG MODERN PARAPHRASE OF SHAKESPEARE'S SONNET 29 by GEORGE SANTAYANA |