Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
III. The SeasonsRain
Ebenezer Jones (18201860)M
More than the sunshine, I love rain:
Whether it droppeth soft and low,
Whether it rusheth amain.
Slow and silently, up on the hills;
Then sweeps o’er the vale, like a steed that springs
From the grasp of a thousand wills.
And the land and the lakes and the main
Lie belted beneath with steel-bright light,
The light of the swift-rushing rain.
Soft the rain falls from opal-hued skies:
And the flowers the most delicate summer can show
Are not stirred by its gentle surprise.
But touching melts in, like the smile
That sinks in the face of a dreamer, but breaks
Not the calm of his dream’s happy wile.
The bird softlier sings in his bower,
And the circles of gnats circle on like winged seeds
Through the soft sunny lines of the shower.