The Storm Poem by Ozora Stearns Davis

The Storm



When morning broke, the air was thick with snow;
The burdened trees, with branches bending low,
Were softly mourning o'er the summer fled,
O'er leaves and flowers forever cold and dead.
The dancing flakes were shouting forth 'Heigh-ho;'
The sombre forests answered back, 'Oh, woe!'
When morning broke.

Ere evening's close, a welcome glory crept
Across the silent sky; the meadows slept
In mantles white; the peak was burnished gold,
And far away the tattered storm-clouds rolled.
A freezing wind across the valley swept;
The lightened swaying tress no longer wept,
Ere evening's close.

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