The frost is still there, Throttling the rhododendron leaf, And ice stalls the dissolve Of the stone-like snow, Yet I am happy.
The sun-rays are almost Etruscan, Filtered low through lace and blind, Like that ***** of sunset on Irene’s hair Sad “couleur de feuille-morte”. Yet it is sultry.
I can open a window And breathe the warming air Finches flock close, careless, Now desperate for food And pluck menescent fruit Off an ice-bound branch. In the distance, a cardinal sings.
Thick drapes are drawn aside And geraniums strain toward the light. In a nook outside the door, An old cat basks on a corner of sun. He yawns, seeing me, and strolls across the snow.
All nature seems to wait, but poised, For the final unfettered token. Will it be a sudden, favonian breeze? Or the robin’s unrelenting noise? Telling us, “Winter is broken”?
This is pretty obvious: it was one of those days in winter which seem so close to spring.