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A Snow Storm.

Topics: classic

I hear the wintry wind again,      I see the blinding snow,     Pil'd high, by eddying winds, in heaps,      No matter where I go.     The storm is raging hard, without;      But let us not complain,     For fiercely tho' it rages now,      A calm will come again.     And, though the wildly raging storm      Makes all things bleak and bare,     Beside the fire we brave it well,      And closer draw our chair.     In social fellowship, our hearts      With kindly thoughts grow warm;     Then is there not a pleasant side,      E'en to a raging storm?     And when the angry storm has calm'd,      As ev'ry storm must do,     Then, sure, the tempest's handiwork,      Has pleasant features, too.     An artist's eye would look around,      Upon these calmer days,     And view the pure white heaps of snow,      With pleas'd and puzzl'd gaze.     Like purest marble, deftly carv'd,      They stretch o'er vale and hill,     Fair monuments, not made by man,      But rear'd by nature's skill.     The sweeping curve, the graceful arch,      The line so firm and free;     A skilful sculptor well might say:      "Can this teach aught to me?"     The trees are rob'd in purest white,      And gleaming atoms shine     From out the snow, beneath the sun,      Like stones from Ophir's mine.     The merry shouts of busy men      Sound, as they dig the snow;     And, when the way is clear, the bells      With joyful jingle, go.     Then who shall say the tempest's work      Brings more of pain than joy;     Or that the evil things, to us      Are pain, without alloy?

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"I hear the wintry wind again,..."

Thomas Frederick Young's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "A Snow Storm."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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