MIDWINTER STORM IN THE
LAKE REGION.

Rises the wild, red dawn over the icicled edges Of black, wet, cavernous rocks, sheeted and winter-scarred, And heaving of grey-green waves, foaming the ice-blocks and ledges, Into this region of death, sky-bounded, solitude-barred.

Turned to the cold kiss of dawn, gilding their weird, dark faces, Lift the cyclopean rocks, silent, motionless, bare; Where high on each haggard front, in deep-plowed, passionate traces The storm hath graven his madness, the night hath furrowed her care.

Out of the far, grey skies comes the dread north with his blowing, That chills the warm blood in the veins, and cuts to the heart like fate. Quick as the fall of a leaf the lake-world is white with his snowing, Quick as the flash of a blade the waters are black with his hate.

God pity the sad-fated vessels that over these waters are driven To meet the rude shock of his strength and shudder at blast of his breath; God pity the tempest-drave sailors, for here naught on wave or in heaven Is heard but the hate of the night, the merciless grinding of death.


TO THE LAKES.

With purple glow at even, With crimson waves at dawn, Cool bending blue of heaven, O blue lakes pulsing on; Lone haunts of wilding creatures dead to wrong; Your trance of mystic beauty Is wove into my song.

I know no gladder dreaming In all the haunts of men, I know no silent seeming Like to your shore and fen; No world of restful beauty like your world Of curvèd shores and waters, In sunlight vapors furled.