Among the Millet and Other Poems by Archibald Lampman
page 34 of 140 (24%)
page 34 of 140 (24%)
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Grew deep with gold. To westward all was silver.
An hour had passed above me; I had reached; The loftiest level of the snow-piled fields, Clear eyed, but unobservant noting not, That all the plain beneath me and the hills Took on a change of colour, splendid, gradual, Leaving no spot the same; nor that the sun Now like a fiery torrent overflamed The great line of the west. Ere yet I turned With long stride homeward, being heated With the loose swinging motion, weary too, Nor uninclined to rest, a buried fence, Whose topmost log just shouldered from the snow, Made me a seat, and thence with heated cheeks, Grazed by the northwind's edge of stinging ice, I looked far out upon the snow-bound waste, The lifting hills and intersecting forests, The scarce marked courses of the buried streams, And as I looked I list memory of the frost, Transfixed with wonder, overborne with joy. I saw them in their silence and their beauty; Swept by the sunset's rapid hand of fire, Sudden, mysterious, every moment deepening To some new majesty of rose or flame. The whole broad west was like molten sea Of crimson. In the north the light-lined hills Were veiled far off as with a mist of rose Wondrous and soft. Along the darkening east The gold of all the forests slowly changed To purple. In the valley far before me, |
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