<h2><SPAN name="LV" id="LV"></SPAN>LV</h2>
<p class="caption">AN ICE-STORM</p>
<p>Of all the vagaries of winter weather,
one of the rarest is the ice-storm; rain
falling with a wind and from a quarter
that should bring snow, and freezing as
it falls, not penetrating the snow but
coating it with a shining armor, sheathing
every branch and twig in crystal and
fringing eaves with icicles of most fantastic
shapes.</p>
<p>On ice-clad roofs and fields and crackling
trees the rain still beats with a
leaden clatter, unlike any other sound of
rain; unlike the rebounding pelting of
hail or the swish of wind-blown snow.</p>
<p>The trees begin to stoop under their
increasing burden, and then to crack
and groan as it is laid still heavier upon
them. At times is heard the thin, echoless
crash of an overladen branch, first
bending to its downfall with a gathering
crackle of severed fibres, then with a<span class="pagenum">[277]</span>
sudden crash, shattering in a thousand
fragments the brief adornments that
have wrought its destruction.</p>
<p>Every kind of tree has as marked individuality
in its icy garniture as in its
summer foliage. The gracefulness of
the elms, the maples, the birches, the
beeches, and the hornbeams is preserved
and even intensified; the clumsy ramage
of the butternut and ash is as stiff as
ever, though every unbending twig bears
its row of glittering pendants. The
hemlocks and firs are tents of ice, but
the pines are still pines, with every
needle exaggerated in bristling crystal.</p>
<p>Some worthless things have become
of present value, as the wayside thistles
and the bejeweled grass of an unshorn
meadow, that yesterday with its dun
unsightliness, rustling above the snow,
proclaimed the shiftlessness of its owner.</p>
<p>Things most unpicturesque are made
beautiful. The wire of the telegraph
with its dull undulations is transformed
to festoons of crystal fringe, linking together
shining pillars of glass that yesterday
were but bare, unsightly posts.</p>
<p>The woods are a maze of fantastic<span class="pagenum">[278]</span>
shapes of tree growth. Wood roads are
barricaded with low arches of ice that
the hare and the fox can barely find
passage beneath, and with long, curved
slants of great limbs bent to the earth.
The wild vines are turned to ropes and
cables of ice, and have dragged down
their strong supports, about whose prostrate
trunks and limbs they writhe in a
tangle of rigid coils. The lithe trunks
of second growth are looped in an intricate
confusion of arches one upon another,
many upon one, over whole acres
of low-roofed forest floor.</p>
<p>The hare and the grouse cower in these
tents of ice, frightened and hungry; for
every sprout and bud is sheathed in
adamant, and scarlet berries, magnified
and unattainable, glow in the heart of
crystal globules. Even the brave chickadees
are appalled, and the disheartened
woodpecker mopes beside the dead trunk,
behind whose impenetrable shield he can
hear the grub boring in safety.</p>
<p>Through the frozen brambles that lattice
the doorway of his burrow the fox
peers dismayed upon a glassy surface
that will hold no scent of quarry, yet<span class="pagenum">[279]</span>
perhaps is comforted that the same conditions
impose a truce upon his enemies
the hounds. The squirrel sits fasting
in his chamber, longing for the stores
that are locked from their owner in his
cellar. It is the dismalest of all storms
for the wood folk, despite all the splendor
wherewith it adorns their realm.</p>
<p>One holds out his hand and lifts his
face skyward to assure himself that the
rain has ceased, for there is a continual
clattering patter as if it were yet falling.
But it is only the crackling of the icy
trees and the incessant dropping of
small fragments of their burden.</p>
<p>The gray curtain of the sky drifts
asunder, and the low sun shines through.
It glorifies the earth with the flash and
gleam of ten million diamonds set everywhere.
The fire and color of every gem
that was ever delved burn along the borders
of the golden pathway that stretches
from your feet far away to the silver portals
of the mountains that bar our glittering
world from the flaming sky.</p>
<p>The pallid gloom of the winter night
falls upon the earth. Then the full moon
throbs up behind the scintillating barrier<span class="pagenum">[280]</span>
of the hills. She presently paves from
herself to us a street of silver among the
long blue shadows, and lights it with a
thousand stars; some fallen quite to
earth, some twinkling among the drooping
branches, all as bright as the eternal
stars that shine in the blue sky above.<span class="pagenum">[281]</span></p>
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