Morning Rain
A slight rain comes, bathed in dawn light.
Colors grace thatch homes for a moment.
A Line-Storm Song
The line-storm clouds fly tattered and swift.
The birds have less to say for themselves
There is the gale to urge behind
Oh, never this whelming east wind swells
Spring Rain
I thought I had forgotten,
I remembered a darkened doorway
The passing motor busses swayed,
With the wild spring rain and thunder
I thought I had forgotten,
Arterial
I
Frost upon small rain--the ebony-lacquered avenue
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by Tu Fu
I hear it among treetop leaves before mist
Arrives. Soon it sprinkles the soil and,
Windblown, follows clouds away. Deepened
Flocks and herds of things wild glisten
Faintly. Then the scent of musk opens across
Half a mountain -- and lingers on past noon.
by Robert Frost
The road is forlorn all day,
Where a myriad snowy quartz stones lift,
And the hoof-prints vanish away.
The roadside flowers, too wet for the bee,
Expend their bloom in vain.
Come over the hills and far with me,
And be my love in the rain.
In the wood-world's torn despair
Than now these numberless years the elves,
Although they are no less there:
All song of the woods is crushed like some
Wild, earily shattered rose.
Come, be my love in the wet woods, come,
Where the boughs rain when it blows.
And bruit our singing down,
And the shallow waters aflutter with wind
From which to gather your gown.
What matter if we go clear to the west,
And come not through dry-shod?
For wilding brooch shall wet your breast
The rain-fresh goldenrod.
But it seems like the sea's return
To the ancient lands where it left the shells
Before the age of the fern;
And it seems like the time when after doubt
Our love came back amain.
Oh, come forth into the storm and rout
And be my love in the rain.
by Sarah Teasdale
But it all came back again
To-night with the first spring thunder
In a rush of rain.
Where we stood while the storm swept by,
Thunder gripping the earth
And lightning scrawled on the sky.
For the street was a river of rain,
Lashed into little golden waves
In the lamp light's stain.
My heart was wild and gay;
Your eyes said more to me that night
Than your lips would ever say. . . .
But it all came back again
To-night with the first spring thunder
In a rush of rain.
by Rudyard Kipling
Reflecting lamps as a pool shows goldfish.
The sight suddenly emptied out of the young man's eyes
Entering upon it sideways.
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