Fire and Snow

Nora Hopper Chesson

1871 to 1906

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Track 1

Reconstruct the poem by dragging each line into its correct position. Your goal is to reassemble the original poem as accurately as possible. As you move the lines, you'll see whether your arrangement is correct, helping you explore the poem's flow and meaning. You can also print out the jumbled poem to cut up and reassemble in the classroom. Either way, take your time, enjoy the process, and discover how the poet's words come together to create something truly beautiful.

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That His snows fall only on me to-night. 
But wildfire signals to ships at sea — 
One may sit by the wild-fire, and half forget 
The fire is quenched with the drifted snow. 
The hands that parted, the lips that met: 
You passed ere the flowers on the thorn were dead: 
"What of the night, colleen, what of the night?" 
Oh, mother, mother, one thing alone 
By the fire that's quenched not of wind or rain? 
"What of the night, colleen, what of the night?" 
Oh, never a star dares show its light, 
Tis I; and I cry for a kind voice still — 
"What pain is it, colleen, you'd win again 
And I give God thanks, though the ways be white, 
What use of wailing? more use to spin, 
Keeps shut my lips that would fain make moan, 
And dree my weird betwixt snow and snow. 
Is the heart that has never a pain to hold. 
As if your sorrow were half a sin?" 
And the ghostly feet that I hear on the stair, 
For my place in a heart that to-night is cold. 
"What bird is it, colleen, that cries so shrill?" 
Oh, fires are red and the snows are white: 
One may warm one's grief there; for deathly cold 
But on one dear hearth that I used to know 
Why sit you silent the while you spin, 
And dearest is sorrow that's half a sin — 
Oh, they must walk soft though my heart go bare. 
And Miscann Many's the fire for me. 
It is that alone in the night I go 
Oh, sea-blue eyes of you, yellow head, 
For a kind hand slipped from my clinging hold,