Here you will find the Poem Another Spring Carol of poet Alfred Austin
Now Winter hath drifted To bygone years, And the sod is uplifted By crocus spears; And out of the hive the bee wings humming, And we know that the Spring, the Spring, is coming. For the snow hath melted From sunless cleft, And the clouds that pelted Slant sleet have left The sky as blue as a child's gaze after Its tears have vanished and veered to laughter. See! light is gleaming In primrose brakes, And out of its dreaming The speedwell wakes, And the tender tips of the timid clover Peep forth to see if the frost be over. The celandine gazes Straight at the sun; The starlike daisies Peer one by one; And, over the pool where the sallow glistens, The daffodil hangs its head and listens. At first but single, And then in flocks, In dell and dingle The lady-smocks Make mist for the golden cowslip tapers To shine like sunrise through morning vapours. In fat-ribbed fallows The lapwings nest, And the home-coming swallows Seek out where best They may build, with a love that is sure and stable, Their cosy cribs under last year's gable. The blackcaps treble A strain as sweet As stream o'er pebble, Or wind through wheat, While, like flickering light, the kinglet hovers Round woodbined haven of hiding lovers. The lark chants, soaring From moist brown heath, 'Twixt Heaven's high flooring And earth beneath, Like a true wise poet, in wavering weather, A carol to link the twain together. The cuckoo, flaunting O'er glen and glade, Flies loudly vaunting New loves betrayed, Till we all of us echo the madcap saying, And laugh, and joyously wend a'maying. Then in mask and tabard The mummer trips, And out of its scabbard The iris slips, And calls to the lily and rose, ``Why tarry, Now the nightingale under the silence starry, ``Keeps trilling, trilling, Its nest above, The descant thrilling Of straining love, That yearneth for more-more-more,-till gladness, Still winged with wanting, seems one with sadness.'' But once the roses And lilies blow, Our wilding posies Follow the snow, And, turning to greet the fair new comer, We find the face of the fearless Summer. But though sultry shimmer And panting heat Lure senses dimmer To deem them sweet, Who would not exchange their passionate thunder For May's moist blushes of maiden wonder? But Winter hath drifted To bygone years, And the sod is uplifted By crocus spears; And out of the hive the bee wings humming, And we know that the Spring is coming, coming!