Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Songs Of The Winter Nights by George MacDonald
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Songs Of The Winter Nights

    By George MacDonald



        I.

        Back shining from the pane, the fire
        Seems outside in the snow:
        So love set free from love's desire
        Lights grief of long ago.

        The dark is thinned with snow-sheen fine,
        The earth bedecked with moon;
        Out on the worlds we surely shine
        More radiant than in June!

        In the white garden lies a heap
        As brown as deep-dug mould:
        A hundred partridges that keep
        Each other from the cold.

        My father gives them sheaves of corn,
        For shelter both and food:
        High hope in me was early born,
        My father was so good.


        II.

        The frost weaves ferns and sultry palms
        Across my clouded pane;
        Weaves melodies of ancient psalms
        All through my passive brain.

        Quiet ecstasy fills heart and head:
        My father is in the room;
        The very curtains of my bed
        Are from Love's sheltering loom!

        The lovely vision melts away;
        I am a child no more;
        Work rises from the floor of play;
        Duty is at the door.

        But if I face with courage stout
        The labour and the din,
        Thou, Lord, wilt let my mind go out
        My heart with thee stay in.


        III.

        Up to my ear my soul doth run--
        Her other door is dark;
        There she can see without the sun,
        And there she sits to mark.

        I hear the dull unheeding wind
        Mumble o'er heath and wold;
        My fancy leaves my brain behind,
        And floats into the cold.

        Like a forgotten face that lies
        One of the speechless crowd,
        The earth lies spent, with frozen eyes,
        White-folded in her shroud.

        O'er leafless woods and cornless farms,
        Dead rivers, fireless thorps,
        I brood, the heart still throbbing warm
        In Nature's wintered corpse.

        IV.

        To all the world mine eyes are blind:
        Their drop serene is--night,
        With stores of snow piled up the wind
        An awful airy height.

        And yet 'tis but a mote in the eye:
        The simple faithful stars
        Beyond are shining, careless high,
        Nor heed our storms and jars.

        And when o'er storm and jar I climb--
        Beyond life's atmosphere,
        I shall behold the lord of time
        And space--of world and year.

        Oh vain, far quest!--not thus my heart
        Shall ever find its goal!
        I turn me home--and there thou art,
        My Father, in my soul!



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