Skip to content
Linespedia

Rain For The Farmer.

Topics: classic

If gently falls the small, soft, lazy rain,      To indoor industries he shrewdly steals;     And in the barn from some neglected grain      The choking chaff the clattering fanner reels;      Or in the shed the sapling ash he peels     For handles for the fork with humor blithe,      Or haply lards the tumbril's heavy wheels,     Or of the harness oils the leather lithe,     Or turns the tuneless stone and grinds the gleaming scythe.     But now the sky is black; and now the Storm      Prepares his legions for the coming fray,     While murmurs low prelude the dread alarm,      As prayed the hosts, - like robd monks who pray      Mid slumb'rous incense in a cloister gray, -     Till from yon cloud the fiery signal given      Enrages all their terrible array.     Jove's flaming car is o'er Olympus driven,     And thunders roll along the threshing floors of heaven.     Hark to the rolling of the sulphurous sea,      Upon its shores its billows beat amain;     In angry tumult, furious to be free,      It rends the cloud with one tremendous strain;      The chasm is closed! - once more! - again in vain!     Again! again! Each time, enraged to yield,      It hurls its threats in throes of Titan pain;     While crouch the cattle 'neath their oak-tree shield     And horses, frantic-eyed, in terror hoof the field.     The screaming birds, low-flying, seek their nests,      The swaying sport of panic and the gale,     The tall trees, trembling, bend their creaking crests;      The ramping engine shrieks upon the rail -      How helpless all things seem! how poor, how frail!     Until the welkin warfare's awful knell      Is voice of all below in piteous wail.     Alas! for him who toils in Erie's swell,     And for the timid soul which loveth life too well!     Still roars the thunder, still the skies are rent      With frenzied flame, - the swift electric chain,     Jerked clanging backward when its charge is spent.      Such overhead; but now upon the plain      There is a lull, a listening for the rain.     The air grows still; she feels 'twill not be long;      Like to a poet when o'er heart and brain     The stern, relentless tyranny of Wrong     In knolling tumult broods. - He knows 'twill break in song     And now at last it comes, crashing and cool      And sweet; well for the earth and what is sowed!     Well for the harvest! See, it fills the pool,      In little streams goes leaping down the road.      And now the winds are joyous, and they goad     Their fallen foe, until he half repeats      His former fury. - One might think it snowed.     And sweep from the roofs like dust from driven streets,     The spirits of the storm, wrapt in their winding-sheets.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"If gently falls the small, soft, lazy rain,..."

"Rain For The Farmer." is a quintessential example of W. M. MacKeracher's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"The roarin' game, the roarin' game,         From Scotland's bonnie land it came,         The land of loch and firth and ben,         And co"

"I cannot loiter on my way,             The ice is drifting through Belle Isle,         And far to seaward by Cape Ray             Broad lea"

"There's a race, or a part of a race, if you will,         Of renown prehistoric, and vigorous still,         Who back from their fastnesses"

"I am arrayed in light and shade,             A free-born spirit of air;         A fanciful theme like a twilight dream,             Or a ma"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"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"

Continue Reading

"The roarin' game, the roarin' game,         From S..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.