A MERRY sound of clapping hands,
A call to see the sight;
And lo! the first soft snow-flakes fall,
So exquisitely virginal:
‘Tis my wee Nell at window stands,
And the world is all in white.
Her eyes, where dawns my bluest Day,
Dance with the dancing snow!
I see delicious shivers thrill
Her through and through. She feels the chill
Of Earth so white, and skies so gray
Enrich our fireside glow.
“No Winters now, my little Maid,
Like those that used to come,
Making our Christmas sparkle, bright
As crystallized plum-cake at night,
And Frost his Puck-like trickeries played,
With fancies frolicsome.
“He fixed your breath in flowers, the Trees
To Chandeliers would turn:
He pinched your toes, he nipped your nose,
He made your cheek a wrinkled Rose:
Perhaps at night you heard him sneeze,
And the Jug was cracked at morn!
“The Snow-Storms were magnificent!
And in the clear, still weather
Against the bitter wintry blue
And Sunset’s orange-tawny hue
You saw the smoke straight upward went,
For weeks and weeks together.
“At night the Waits mixed with our dream
Their music sweet and low:
We children knew not as we heard,
Each, listening, nestled like a Bird,
Whether from Heaven the music came,
Or only over the snow!
“No winters now-a-days like those.”
And then my darling tries
To coax me for a “tale that’s true:
A story that is new-quite new.”
And up the arch of wonder goes,
Above the frank, blue eyes!
“Once on a time”-“Do tell me when,
And where?” says my wee Nell-
“When Christmas came on Thursday-now,
Some five-and-thirty years ago!
Superbly we were snowed-up then,
Who lived in Ingle Dell.
“His icy Drawbridge Winter dropped;
The running springs he froze;
The Roads were lost; the hedges crossed;
All field-work ceased through the ‘Long Frost.’
But there was one thing never stopped-
That was Grandmother’s nose!
“The snow might fall by day, by night,
The weather wax more rough,
And up to our bedroom windows heap
The drift, and smother men like sheep,
And wrap the world in a shroud of white-
Old Gran must have her snuff!
“So Uncle Willie, then a lad
Not more than nine years old,
Upon the Christmas morn must go
And fetch her snuff, and face the Snow,
Which surely had gone dancing mad,
And wrestle with the cold.
“Wrapped in his crimson Comforter,
His basket on his arm,
He started. Mother followed him
With her proud eyes so dewy-dim;
While kisses from the heart of her
Within his heart were warm.
“How gentle is the gracious Snow,
When first you watch her dance;
Her feathery flutter, winding whorls;
Her finish perfect as the pearl’s;
She looks you in the face as though
‘Twere unveiled Innocence.
“But now, ’tis wild upon the waste,
And winged upon the wind:
You see, just passing out of sight,
The Ghost of things in a swirl of white!-
The Storm unwinkingly he faced,
Though it snowed enough to blind.
“Fire-pointed, stinging, strikes and burns
To the bone, each icy dart.
He stumbles-falls-is up again,
And onward for the Town a-strain;
Backward our Willie never turns,
And never loses heart.
“He looks a weird and wintry Elf
With face in ruddy glow;
And all his curls are straightened out,
Hanging in Icicles about
A sparkling statue of himself,
Shaped out of frozen snow.
“He still fought on, for though the Storm
Might bend him, he was tough;
And when the Blast would take his breath,
With kisses like the kiss of death,
One thought still kept his courage warm-
It was Grandmother’s Snuff!
“At length with many a danger passed,
Unboding worse to come,
He has got the Snuff. Far more than food,
Or wine, ’twill warm her poor old blood.
He has it safe at last, at last!
And sets his face for Home.
“He has the Snuff; but it were well
If Granny had it too!
For early closes such a day,
And wild and dreary is the way;
If dark before he reach the Dell,
What can poor Willie do?
“Within the Town the blast is hushed;
The snow-flakes from you melt:
But out upon the pathless moor,
The storm grows madder than before;
And at him all its furies rushed,
Till he faint and fainter felt.
“His thoughts are whirling with the Snow:
His eyes get dizzy and dim!
And on the path, ‘twixt him and night,
Now dancing left, now dancing right,
It seems a white Witch-Woman doth go,
With white hand beckoning him!
“To the last stile he clung-maybe
A furlong from our door;
Then missed his footing on the plank,
And deep into the snow-drift sank.
O, my belov
(Gerald Massey)
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Based on Topics: World Poems, Night Poems, Mind Poems, Time Poems, Death & Dying Poems, Nature Poems, Faces Poems, Sense & Perception Poems, Christianity Poems, Flowers Poems, Home PoemsBased on Keywords: snow-drift, chandeliers, drawbridge, whorls, now-a-days, a-strain, snow-storms, five-and-thirty, trickeries, field-work, snowed-up