Page:The ascent of man by Blind, Mathilde.djvu/33

 The stony channels of some river-bed Where filtering fresh perchance a liquid thread Of water may run clear.—Now dark o'erhead, Thickening with storm, the wintry clouds will loom, And wrap the land in weeds of mournful gloom; Shrouding the sun and every lesser light Till earth with all her aging woods grows white, And hurrying streams stop fettered in their flight. Then famished beasts freeze by the frozen lakes, And thick as leaves dead birds bestrew the brakes; And, cowering blankly by the flickering flame, Man feels a presence without form or name, When by the bodies of his speechless dead In barbarous woe he bows his stricken head. Then in the hunger of his piteous love He sends his thought, winged like a carrier dove— Through the unanswering silence void and vast, Whence from dim hollows blows an icy blast— To bring some sign, some little sign at last,