The rabbit leaps,

The mouse out-creeps,

The flag out-peeps

⁠Beside the brook;

The ferret weeps,

The marmot sleeps,

The owlet keeps

⁠In his snug nook.

The apples thaw,

The ravens caw,

The squirrels gnaw

⁠The frozen fruit.

To their retreat

I track the feet

Of mice that eat

⁠The apple's root.

The snow-dust falls,

The otter crawls,

The partridge calls,

Far in the wood.

The traveller dreams,

The tree-ice gleams,

The blue-jay screams

⁠In angry mood.

The willows droop,

The alders stoop,

The pheasants group

⁠Beneath the snow.

The catkins green

Cast o'er the scene

A summer's sheen,

⁠A genial glow.

From Poems of Nature (The Bodley Head, 1895) by Henry David Thoreau. Copyright © 1895 by Henry David Thoreau. This poem is in the public domain.