MARCH

MARCH

In what a travail is our Springtime born!—’Mid leaden skies and garmenture of gloom.Wild waves of cloud the drifting stars consumeAnd shipless seas of heaven greet the morn.The forest trees stand sad and tempest-torn,Memorials of Summer’s ended bloom;For unto March, the sister most forlorn,No roses come her pathway to illume.Yet ’tis the month the Winter northward fliesWith one last trumpeting of savage might.Now stirs the earth of green that underliesThis other earth enwrapped in garb of white.And while poor March, grown weary, droops and diesThe little Springtime opens wide its eyes.

In what a travail is our Springtime born!—’Mid leaden skies and garmenture of gloom.Wild waves of cloud the drifting stars consumeAnd shipless seas of heaven greet the morn.The forest trees stand sad and tempest-torn,Memorials of Summer’s ended bloom;For unto March, the sister most forlorn,No roses come her pathway to illume.Yet ’tis the month the Winter northward fliesWith one last trumpeting of savage might.Now stirs the earth of green that underliesThis other earth enwrapped in garb of white.And while poor March, grown weary, droops and diesThe little Springtime opens wide its eyes.

In what a travail is our Springtime born!—’Mid leaden skies and garmenture of gloom.Wild waves of cloud the drifting stars consumeAnd shipless seas of heaven greet the morn.The forest trees stand sad and tempest-torn,Memorials of Summer’s ended bloom;For unto March, the sister most forlorn,No roses come her pathway to illume.Yet ’tis the month the Winter northward fliesWith one last trumpeting of savage might.Now stirs the earth of green that underliesThis other earth enwrapped in garb of white.And while poor March, grown weary, droops and diesThe little Springtime opens wide its eyes.

In what a travail is our Springtime born!—

’Mid leaden skies and garmenture of gloom.

Wild waves of cloud the drifting stars consume

And shipless seas of heaven greet the morn.

The forest trees stand sad and tempest-torn,

Memorials of Summer’s ended bloom;

For unto March, the sister most forlorn,

No roses come her pathway to illume.

Yet ’tis the month the Winter northward flies

With one last trumpeting of savage might.

Now stirs the earth of green that underlies

This other earth enwrapped in garb of white.

And while poor March, grown weary, droops and dies

The little Springtime opens wide its eyes.


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