Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Winter in Northumberland by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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Winter in Northumberland

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    Outside the garden
    The wet skies harden;
    The gates are barred on
    The summer side:
    "Shut out the flower-time,
    Sunbeam and shower-time;
    Make way for our time,"
    Wild winds have cried.
    Green once and cheery,
    The woods, worn weary,
    Sigh as the dreary
    Weak sun goes home:
    A great wind grapples
    The wave, and dapples
    The dead green floor of the sea with foam.

    Through fell and moorland,
    And salt-sea foreland,
    Our noisy norland
    Resounds and rings;
    Waste waves thereunder
    Are blown in sunder,
    And winds make thunder
    With cloudwide wings;
    Sea-drift makes dimmer
    The beacon's glimmer;
    Nor sail nor swimmer
    Can try the tides;
    And snowdrifts thicken
    Where, when leaves quicken,
    Under the heather the sundew hides.

    Green land and red land,
    Moorside and headland,
    Are white as dead land,
    Are all as one;
    Nor honied heather,
    Nor bells to gather,
    Fair with fair weather
    And faithful sun:
    Fierce frost has eaten
    All flowers that sweeten
    The fells rain-beaten;
    And winds their foes
    Have made the snow's bed
    Down in the rose-bed;
    Deep in the snow's bed bury the rose.

    Bury her deeper
    Than any sleeper;
    Sweet dreams will keep her
    All day, all night;
    Though sleep benumb her
    And time o'ercome her,
    She dreams of summer,
    And takes delight,
    Dreaming and sleeping
    In love's good keeping,
    While rain is weeping
    And no leaves cling;
    Winds will come bringing her
    Comfort, and singing her
    Stories and songs and good news of the spring.

    Draw the white curtain
    Close, and be certain
    She takes no hurt in
    Her soft low bed;
    She feels no colder,
    And grows not older,
    Though snows enfold her
    From foot to head;
    She turns not chilly
    Like weed and lily
    In marsh or hilly
    High watershed,
    Or green soft island
    In lakes of highland;
    She sleeps awhile, and she is not dead.

    For all the hours,
    Come sun, come showers,
    Are friends of flowers,
    And fairies all;
    When frost entrapped her,
    They came and lapped her
    In leaves, and wrapped her
    With shroud and pall;
    In red leaves wound her,
    With dead leaves bound her
    Dead brows, and round her
    A death-knell rang;
    Rang the death-bell for her,
    Sang, "is it well for her,
    Well, is it well with you, rose?" they sang.

    O what and where is
    The rose now, fairies,
    So shrill the air is,
    So wild the sky?
    Poor last of roses,
    Her worst of woes is
    The noise she knows is
    The winter's cry;
    His hunting hollo
    Has scared the swallow;
    Fain would she follow
    And fain would fly:
    But wind unsettles
    Her poor last petals;
    Had she but wings, and she would not die.

    Come, as you love her,
    Come close and cover
    Her white face over,
    And forth again
    Ere sunset glances
    On foam that dances,
    Through lowering lances
    Of bright white rain;
    And make your playtime
    Of winter's daytime,
    As if the Maytime
    Were here to sing;
    As if the snowballs
    Were soft like blowballs,
    Blown in a mist from the stalk in the spring.

    Each reed that grows in
    Our stream is frozen,
    The fields it flows in
    Are hard and black;
    The water-fairy
    Waits wise and wary
    Till time shall vary
    And thaws come back.
    "O sister, water,"
    The wind besought her,
    "O twin-born daughter
    Of spring with me,
    Stay with me, play with me,
    Take the warm way with me,
    Straight for the summer and oversea."

    But winds will vary,
    And wise and wary
    The patient fairy
    Of water waits;
    All shrunk and wizen,
    In iron prison,
    Till spring re-risen
    Unbar the gates;
    Till, as with clamor
    Of axe and hammer,
    Chained streams that stammer
    And struggle in straits
    Burst bonds that shiver,
    And thaws deliver
    The roaring river in stormy spates.

    In fierce March weather
    White waves break tether,
    And whirled together
    At either hand,
    Like weeds uplifted,
    The tree-trunks rifted
    In spars are drifted,
    Like foam or sand,
    Past swamp and sallow
    And reed-beds callow,
    Through pool and shallow,
    To wind and lee,
    Till, no more tongue-tied,
    Full flood and young tide
    Roar down the rapids and storm the sea.

    As men's cheeks faded
    On shores invaded,
    When shorewards waded
    The lords of fight;
    When churl and craven
    Saw hard on haven
    The wide-winged raven
    At mainmast height;
    When monks affrighted
    To windward sighted
    The birds full-flighted
    Of swift sea-kings;
    So earth turns paler
    When Storm the sailor
    Steers in with a roar in the race of his wings.

    O strong sea-sailor,
    Whose cheek turns paler
    For wind or hail or
    For fear of thee?
    O far sea-farer,
    O thunder-bearer,
    Thy songs are rarer
    Than soft songs be.
    O fleet-foot stranger,
    O north-sea ranger
    Through days of danger
    And ways of fear,
    Blow thy horn here for us,
    Blow the sky clear for us,
    Send us the song of the sea to hear.

    Roll the strong stream of it
    Up, till the scream of it
    Wake from a dream of it
    Children that sleep,
    Seamen that fare for them
    Forth, with a prayer for them:
    Shall not God care for them
    Angels not keep?
    Spare not the surges
    Thy stormy scourges;
    Spare us the dirges
    Of wives that weep.
    Turn back the waves for us:
    Dig no fresh graves for us,
    Wind, in the manifold gulfs of the deep.

    O stout north-easter,
    Sea-king, land-waster,
    For all thine haste, or
    Thy stormy skill,
    Yet hadst thou never,
    For all endeavour,
    Strength to dissever
    Or strength to spill,
    Save of his giving
    Who gave our living,
    Whose hands are weaving
    What ours fulfil;
    Whose feet tread under
    The storms and thunder;
    Who made our wonder to work his will.

    His years and hours,
    His world's blind powers,
    His stars and flowers,
    His nights and days,
    Sea-tide and river,
    And waves that shiver,
    Praise God, the giver
    Of tongues to praise.
    Winds in their blowing,
    And fruits in growing;
    Time in its going,
    While time shall be;
    In death and living,
    With one thanksgiving,
    Praise him whose hand is the strength of the sea.



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