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Pictures In The Fire

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The wind croons under the icicled eaves--         Croons and mutters a wordless song,     And the old elm chafes its skeleton leaves         Against the windows all night long.     Under the spectral garden wall,         The drifts creep steadily high and higher     And the lamp in the cottage lattice small         Twinkles and winks like an eye of fire.     But I see a vision of summer skies         Growing out of the embers red,     Under the lids of my half-shut eyes,         With my arms crossed idly under my head.     I see a stile, and a roadside lime,         With buttercups growing about its feet,     And a footpath winding a sinuous line         In and out of the billowy wheat.     For long ago in the summer noons,         Under the shade of that trysting tree,     My love brought wheat ears and clover blooms,         And vows that were sweeter than both, to me.     Reading the "Times" in his easy chair,         With his slippered feet on the fender bright,     Little, I wot, he dreams how fair         Are the pictures I see in the fire to night.     Still the wind pipes under the serried spears         Of frozen boughs a desolate rhyme,     But I hear the rustle of golden ears,         And in my heart it is summer time.

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"The wind croons under the icicled eaves--..."

"Pictures In The Fire" is a quintessential example of Kate Seymour Maclean's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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