An ekphrastic poem by Walter de la Mare, born on this day in 1873. A print of this picture (Hunters in the Snow) used to hang in the main corridor of my grammar school, so it's quite deeply imprinted on me...
 Jagg'd mountain peaks and skies ice-green
        Wall in the wild, cold scene below.
        Churches, farms, bare copse, the sea
        In freezing quiet of winter show;
        Where ink-black shapes on fields in flood
        Curling, skating, and sliding go.
        To left, a gabled tavern; a blaze;
        Peasants; a watching child; and lo,
        Muffled, mute--beneath naked trees
        In sharp perspective set a-row--
        Trudge huntsmen, sinister spears aslant,
        Dogs snuffling behind them in the snow;
        And arrowlike, lean, athwart the air
        Swoops into space a crow.
      
 But flame, nor ice, nor piercing rock,
        Nor silence, as of a frozen sea,
        Nor that slant inward infinite line
        Of signboard, bird, and hill, and tree,
        Give more than subtle hint of him
        Who squandered here life's mystery.
    
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