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William Wilfred Campbell (Уильям Уилфред Кэмпбелл) How One Winter Came in the Lake Region For weeks and weeks the autumn world stood still, Clothed in the shadow of a smoky haze; The fields were dead, the wind had lost its will, And all the lands were hushed by wood and hill, In those grey, withered days. Behind a mist the blear sun rose and set, At night the moon would nestle in a cloud; The fisherman, a ghost, did cast his net; The lake its shores forgot to chafe and fret, And hushed its caverns loud. Far in the smoky woods the birds were mute, Save that from blackened tree a jay would scream, Or far in swamps the lizard's lonesome lute Would pipe in thirst, or by some gnarlèd root The tree-toad trilled his dream. From day to day still hushed by season's mood, The streams stayed in their runnels shrunk and dry; Suns rose aghast by wave and shore and wood, And all the world, with ominous silence, stood In weird expectancy: When one strange night the sun like blood went down, Flooding the heavens in a ruddy hue; Red grew the lake, the sere fields parched and brown, Red grew the marshes where the creeks stole down, But never a wind-breath blew. That night I felt the winter in my veins, A joyous tremor of the icy glow; And woke to hear the north's wild vibrant strains, While far and wide, by withered woods and plains, Fast fell the driving snow. William Wilfred Campbell's other poems: Распечатать (Print) Количество обращений к стихотворению: 1375 |
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