POEM

A Thunderstorm

by Archibald Lampman

Poem

Posted April 27, 2001 · Issue 101




A moment the wild swallows like a flight
Of withered gust-caught leaves, serenely high,
Toss in the windrack up the muttering sky.
The leaves hang still. Above the weird twilight,
The hurrying centres of the storm unite
And spreading with huge trunk and rolling fringe,
Each wheeled upon its own tremendous hinge,
Tower darkening on. And now from heaven's height,
With the long roar of elm-trees swept and swayed,
And pelted waters, on the vanished plain
Plunges the blast. Behind the wild white flash
That splits abroad the pealing thunder-crash,
Over bleared fields and gardens disarrayed,
Column on column comes the drenching rain.


Archibald Lampman (1861-1899), generally acknowledged as Canada's greatest 19th-century poet, was born in Morpeth, Ontario, and studied at Trinity College (now the University of Toronto). He was one of the "Confederation Group" of poets, which included Duncan Campbell Scott and William Wilfred Campbell. Collections of his poems include Among the Millet and Other Poems (1888), Lyrics of Earth (1895), and the posthumous Alcyone (1899), and Poems (1900).
Cary Barnhard grew up in New Jersey, where his senior class voted him "most unique." He maintains that honor is a polite way of being voted "most likely to need therapy." After a few misadventures in the music industry, he started pretending to be a graphic artist. Eventually it became the truth.


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Previous Poems

Carolina Wren (For Cindy Hogan)
by Wallace Kaufman (Posted April 13, 2001 · Issue 100)
Sunflower
by Allen C. Fischer (Posted March 30, 2001 · Issue 98)
Jonah Remembers the Whale
by Ivy Warwick (Posted March 2, 2001 · Issue 97)
The World Below the Brine
by Walt Whitman (Posted February 16, 2001 · Issue 96)
Pilling the Man
by Lynn Kozlowski (Posted February 2, 2001 · Issue 95)
Late Autumn Night in Iowa
by Mitul Sarkar (Posted January 19, 2001 · Issue 94)

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