It Is in Winter That We Dream of Spring

by Robert Burns Wilson English

  For all the barren bleakness and the cold,   The longing fancy sees the frozen mould Decked with sweet blossoming. Though all the birds be silent,—though   The fettered stream’s soft voice be still, And on the leafless bough the snow   Be rested, marble-like and chill,— Yet will the fancy build, from these,   The transient but well-pleasing dream Of leaf and bloom among the trees,   And sunlight glancing on the stream. Though, to the eye, the joyless landscape yields   No faintest sign to which the hope might cling,— Amidst the pallid desert of the fields,—   It is in Winter that we dream of Spring.

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