Where the mounded drifts lie soft and deep in the noiseless solitudes,

The hut of the lonely woodcutter stands, a few rough beams that show

A blunted peak and a low black line, from the glittering waste of snow.

In the frost-still dawn from his roof goes up in the windless, motionless air,

The thin, pink curl of leisurely smoke; through the forest white and bare

The woodcutter follows his narrow trail, and the morning rings and cracks

With the rhythmic jet of his sharp-blown breath and the echoing shout of his axe.

Only the waft of the wind besides, or the stir of some hardy bird—

The call of the friendly chickadee, or the pat of the nuthatch—is heard;

Or a rustle comes from a dusky clump, where the busy siskins feed,