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A wind blew by from icy hills, Shook with cold breath the daffodils, And shivered as with silver mist The lake's pale leaden amethyst. It pinched the barely budded trees And rent the twilight tapestries: Left for one hallowed instant bare A single star in lonely air O'er rocky fields the bitter wind Had swept of all their human kind.

Ere that, the fisher folk were all Snug under thatch and sheltering wall, Breathing the cabin's air of gold, Safe from blue storm and nipping cold. And, clustered round the hearth within, With fiery hands and burnished chin, They sat and listened to old tales Or legends of gigantic gales. Some told of phantom craft they knew That sailed with a flame-coloured crew, And came up strangely through the wind Havens invisible to find By those rare cities poets sung Cresting the Islands of the Young.

How do the heights above our head, The depths below the water spread, Waken the spirit in such wise That to the deep the deep replies, And in far spaces of the soul The oceans stir, the heavens roll?