THE BLIZZARD

The whited pumice of the storm

Is over house and hill

Or drifted into shroudlike form

About the ruined mill.

The fences hide beneath the drifts;

The snowy terraces

Ascend to where the hemlock lifts

Its virgin-broidered dress.

The trackless highway challenges

The sweltered caravan

Of traffic and in fastnesses

Of chalk imprisons man.

The wind-wolves howl at cottage-door

Or down the chimney leap;

The windows all are rimed with hoar

Where frozen fingers creep.

The house-frame groans at blast and frost

Like quarry of the pack

O’ertaken, but though torn and tossed

Still stout of heart and back;

Still stout of heart like us secure

By ruddy fire warm,

Too humbly thankful to be poor

While sheltered from the storm.