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1880–1948

FAIRIES OF THE FROST

Irving Sidney Dix

When the Frost-spirit, with her icy wand, Strikes the cold Northwind, bringing frost and snow, She sends her Fairies through the frozen land To deck with sculpture all the world below;

Soon every bank, so lately green with grass, Like streets of marble to the margin lies, And here and there, wherever one may pass, Frail, fairy structures magic-like arise;

The slender willows, bow'd in artless grief, Appear in white, as pledge of Winter's care, And every idle reed and clinging leaf Have spirits, full as bright, beside them there;

While pine and hemlock, shorn of all their green, Stand out like sculptur'd Druids of the wood; And the small beeches, hovering between, Seem children of some banish'd brotherhood;

The broken stumps become as kingly chairs, The fallen logs, great pillars, round and white, And the dead branches, Oriental stairs That lead to rooms all glittering with light;

Each mossy knoll becomes a marble mound, Th’ unlettered stones, all artless works of art, And e'en the brooklets in the forest round Are set with diamonds dear to Nature's heart.

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