(For Thomas Augustine Daly)
The Judge’s house has a splendid porch,
with pillars and steps of stone,
And the Judge has a lovely flowering hedge
that came from across the seas;
In the Hales’ garage you could put my
house and everything I own,
And the Hales have a lawn like an emerald
and a row of poplar trees.
Now I have only a little house, and only a little
lot,
And only a few square yards of lawn, with
dandelions starred;
But when Winter comes, I have something there
that the Judge and the Hales have
not,
And its better worth having than all their wealth
it’s a snowman in the
yard.
The Judge’s money brings architects to
make his mansion fair;
The Hales have seven gardeners to make
their roses grow;
The Judge can get his trees from Spain and France
and everywhere,
And raise his orchids under glass in the
midst of all the snow.
But I have something no architect or gardener
ever made,
A thing that is shaped by the busy touch
of little mittened hands:
And the Judge would give up his lonely estate,
where the level snow is laid
For the tiny house with the trampled yard,
the yard where the snowman
stands.
They say that after Adam and Eve were driven
away in tears
To toil and suffer their life-time through,
because of the sin they sinned,
The Lord made Winter to punish them for half
their exiled years,
To chill their blood with the snow, and
pierce
their flesh with the icy wind.
But we who inherit the primal curse, and labour
for our bread,
Have yet, thank God, the gift of Home,
though Éden’s gate is barred:
And through the Winter’s crystal veil,
Love’s roses blossom red,
For him who lives in a house that has
a snowman in the yard.