WIND-SILVERED willows hedge the stream, And all within is hushed and cool. The water, in an endless dream, Goes sliding down from pool to pool. And every pool a sapphire is, From shadowy deep to sunlit edge, Ribboned around with irises And cleft with emerald spears of sedge. O, every morn the winds are stilled, The sunlight falls in amber bars. O, every night the pools are filled With silver brede of shaken stars. O, every morn the sparrow flings His elfin trills athwart the hush, And here unseen at eve there sings One crystal-throated hermit-thrush. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE GUARDIAN OF THE RED DISK (SPOKEN BY A CITIZEN OF MALTA - 1300) by EMMA LAZARUS ON ANOTHER'S SORROW, FR. SONGS OF INNOCENCE by WILLIAM BLAKE THE LOST SHEEP by ELIZABETH CECILIA CLEPHANE TO A FAT LADY SEEN FROM THE TRAIN by FRANCES CROFTS DARWIN CORNFORD AN ELEGY ON THE DEATH OF A MAD DOG by OLIVER GOLDSMITH THE ASSAULT HEROIC by ROBERT RANKE GRAVES FRAGMENTS OF A LOST GNOSTIC POEM OF THE 12TH CENTURY by HERMAN MELVILLE |