Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Unloosening by John Frederick Freeman
Public domain poetry and public domain stories from the literary greats of yesteryear.
Custom Search
Main Menu

Home

Latest Poetry

Latest Authors

Authors Surname

Authors First Name

Poetry Title

Poetry First Lines

Latest Stories

Stories Title

Top Authors

Top Poetry


Top Stories Etc.

Search

Contact Us

Useless Information!!

Store



Top Sites, Click here to vote for our site

Sponsored Links

Read, Rate, Comment on or Submit your poetry

The Unloosening

    By John Frederick Freeman



    Winter was weary. All his snows were failing--
    Still from his stiff grey head he shook the rime
    Upon the grasses, bushes and broad hedges,
    But all was lost in the new touch of Time.

    And the bright-globèd hedges were all ruddy,
    As though warm sunset glowed perpetual.
    The myriad swinging tassels of first hazel,
    From purple to pale gold, were swinging all

    In the soft wind, no more afraid of Winter.
    Nor chaffinch, wren, nor lark was now afraid.
    And Winter heard, or (ears too hard of hearing)
    Snuffed the South-West that in his cold hair played.

    And his hands trembled. Then with voice a-quaver
    He called the East Wind, and the black East ran,
    Roofing the sky with iron, and in the darkness
    Winter crept out and chilled the earth again.

    And while men slept the still pools were frozen,
    Mosses were white, with ice the long grasses bowed;
    The hawthorn buds and the greening honeysuckle
    Froze, and the birds were dumb under that cloud.

    And men and beasts were dulled, and children even
    Less merry, under that low iron dome.
    Early the patient rooks and starlings gathered;
    Any warm narrow place for men was home.

    And Winter laughed, but the third night grew weary,
    And slept all heavy, till the East Wind thought him dead.
    Then the returning South West in his nostrils
    Breathed, and his snows melted. And his head

    Uplifting, he saw all the laughing valley,
    Heard the unloosened waters leaping down
    Broadening over the meadows; saw the sun running
    From hill to hill and glittering upon the town.

    All day he stared. But his head drooped at evening,
    Bent and slow he stumbled into the white
    Cavern of a great chalk hill, hedged with tall bushes,
    And in its darkness found a darker night

    Among the broken cliff and falling water,
    Freezing or falling quietly everywhere;
    Locked in a long, long sleep, his brain undreaming,
    With only water moving anywhere.

    Old men at night dreamed that they saw him going,
    And looked, and dared not look, lest he should turn.
    And young men felt the air beating on their bodies,
    And the young women woke from dreams that burn.

    And children going through the fields at morning
    Saw the unloosened waters leaping down,
    And broke the hazel boughs and wore the tassels
    Above their eyes--a pale and shaking crown.



Extra Info:



Printable Page

Add Your Thoughts on this poem.



This page viewed 438 times.
Sponsored Links


Your Shops - Affordable Ecommerce stores and cheaper goods for customers - No listing fees!



Our Sites