Sonnet
Cold! bitter cold!—the northern breezes now
Down from their ice-mailed mountain-tops are coming;
And in their breath the withered leaflets humming
Tell of the winter. Low the forests bow,
And shower their honors on his icy brow;
While naked hills confess the iron reign
Of the stern monarch, over earth again.
Spring's living green hath faded, and the light
Of queenlier Summer has at last departed:
Passed is the golden harvest, and the bright
Autumnal fields are of their flocks deserted;
And like a pilgrim faint and heavy-hearted,
With travel long and weary toil oppressed,
The Year hath run his race and sunk to quiet rest.
- Title
- Sonnet
- Alternative Title
- Cold! Bitter cold! - the northern breezes now,
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Small Scrapbook 6
- Date
- 1840
- Subject
- Seasons - Winter
- note
- Dated precisely as "Twelfth month, 1840" and from "Pleasant Height"
- Published under the pseudonym "S."
- One of his earliest publications, it overlaps with the time that his brother Charles was editing The Pennsylvania Freeman
-
Charles Calistus Burleigh
- Media
-
Sonnet