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Winters On The Farm

Freeman E. Miller

Glad winters on the olden farm!
  How raptures from those early times
  Commingle into fairy chimes
Which gently banish cries of harm!
  My fainting soul finds rest the whiles
Within the arms of memory,
And tender scenes of boyish glee
  Transform my sorrows into smiles.

How brightly beamed the pleasures then,
  When frigid fingers came to throw
  A wintry winding sheet of snow
Around the silent homes of men!
But happiness found no alarm,
  For safe with cheer, secure with love,
  She gladly grew and sweetly throve
Through winters on the olden farm.

With merry bells and busy sleighs,
  That sung and flew o’er icy vales
  And climbed the hills as fleet as gales,
Like singing phantoms died the days;
Or then with coat and muffler warm
  Sweet children glided on the lake,
  Or chased the rabbit through the brake,
In winters on the olden farm.

How glad the joys at eventide
  When ’round the hearth-stone’s pleasant heat
  The simple song in music sweet
From loving voices floated wide!
The mellowed apples gave a charm,
  While pop-corn white and cider bright
  With worlds of laughter lent delight
To winters on the olden farm.

Thrice happy nights and happy days,
  Sweet isles of pleasure in the past,
  May long your hallowed moments cast
A sacred sunshine o’er my ways!
And where life leads me, gladly arm
  My soul with angel songs of bliss,
  With true embrace and holy kiss,
O, winters on the olden farm!
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From Oklahoma and Other Poems | Charles Wells Moulton, 1895
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