The Earthly Paradise, (December-February), by William Morris, [1870], at sacred-texts.com
FROM this dull rainy undersky and low,
 This murky ending of a leaden day,
 That never knew the sun, this half-thawed snow,
 These tossing black boughs faint against the grey
 Of gathering night, thou turnest, dear, away
 Silent, but with thy scarce-seen kindly smile
 Sent through the dusk my longing to beguile.
   There, the lights gleam, and all is dark without!
 And in the sudden change our eyes meet dazed
 O look, love, look again! the veil of doubt
 Just for one flash, past counting, then was raised!
 O eyes of heaven, as clear thy sweet soul blazed
 On mine a moment! O come back again
 Strange rest and dear amid the long dull pain!
   Nay, nay, gone by! though there she sitteth still,
 With wide grey eyes so frank and fathomless
 Be patient, heart, thy days they yet shall fill
 With utter restYea, now thy pain they bless,
 And feed thy last hope of the world's redress
 O unseen hurrying rack! O wailing wind!
 What rest and where go ye this night to find? p. 88
THE year has changed its name since that last tale;
 Yet nought the prisoned spring doth that avail.
 Deep buried under snow the country lies;
 Made dim by whirling flakes the rook still flies
 South-west before the wind; noon is as still
 As midnight on the southward-looking hill,
 Whose slopes have heard so many words and loud
 Since on the vine the woolly buds first showed.
 The raven hanging oer the farmstead gate,
 While for another death his eye doth wait,
 Hears but the muffled sound of crowded byre
 And winds moan round the wall. Up in the spire
 The watcher set high oer the half-hid town
 Hearkens the sound of chiming bells fall down
 Below him; and so dull and dead they seem
 That he might well-nigh be amidst a dream
 Wherein folk hear and hear not.
                                   Such a tide,
 With all work gone from the hushed world outside,
 Still finds our old folk living, and they sit
 Watching the snow-flakes by the window flit
 Midmost the time twixt noon and dusk; till now
 One of the elders clears his knitted brow,
 And says:
            "Well, hearken of a man who first
 In every place seemed doomed to be accursed; p. 89
 To tell about his ill hap lies on me;
 Before the winter is quite oer, maybe
 Some other mouth of his good hap may tell;
 But no third tale there is, of what befell
 His fated life, when he had won his place;
 And that perchance is not so ill a case
 For him and us; for we may rise up, glad
 At all the rest and triumph that he had
 Before he died; while he, forgetting clean
 The sorrow and the joy his eyes had seen,
 Lies quiet and well famedand serves to-day
 To wear a space of winter-tide away."