Page:Southern Life in Southern Literature.djvu/452

434 And the aisles of the forest gleam With a splendor unearthly, that shines Like the light of a lurid dream Through the colonnaded pines.
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THE LIGHT OOD FIRE

When wintry days are dark and drear And all the forest ways grow still, When gray snow-laden clouds appear Along the bleak horizon hill, When cattle all are snugly penned And sheep go huddling close together, When steady streams of smoke ascend From farmhouse chimneys in such weather Give me old Carolina s own, A great log house, a great hearthstone, A cheering pipe of cob or brier And a red, leaping light ood fire. When dreary day draws to a close And all the silent land is dark, When Boreas down the chimney blows And sparks fly from the crackling bark, When limbs are bent with snow or sleet And owls hoot from the hollow tree, With hounds asleep about your feet, Then is the time for reverie. Give me old Carolina s own, A hospitable wide hearthstone, A cheering pipe of cob or brier And a red, rousing light ood fire.