The Topaz Story Book by  Ada M. Skinner and Eleanor L. Skinner

Jack Frost

The door was shut as doors should be

Before you went to bed last night;

Yet Jack Frost has got in, you see,

And left your windows silver white.


He must have waited till you slept,

And not a single word he spoke,

But penciled o'er the panes and crept

Away before you woke.


And now you can not see the trees

Nor fields that stretch beyond the lane

But there are fairer things than these

His fingers traced on every pane.


Rocks and castles towering high;

Hills and dales and streams and fields,

And knights in armour riding by,

With nodding plumes and shining shields.


And here are little boats, and there

Big ships with sails spread to the breeze,

And yonder, palm trees waving fair

And islands set in silver seas.


And butterflies with gauzy wings;

And herds of cows and flocks of sheep;

And fruit and flowers and all the things

You see when you are sound asleep.


For creeping softly underneath

The door when all the lights are out,

Jack Frost takes every breath you breathe

And knows the things you think about.


He paints them on the window pane

In fairy lines with frozen steam;

And when you wake, you see again

The lovely things you saw in dream.


Gabriel Setoun

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