High-Country California
V
intage Colorado Poetry
Poem of the Week
December 11, 2006


Winter in the Sierras
Mary Austin

The pines are black on Sierra's slope,
And white are the drifted snows ;
The flowers are gone, the buckthorn bare,
And chilly the northwind blows.
The pine-boughs creak,
And the pine-trees speak
A language the north wind knows.

There 's never a track leads in or out
Of the cave of the big brown bear ;
The squirrels have hid in their deepest holes,
And fastened the doors with care.
The red fox prowls,
and the lean wolf howls
As he hunts far down from the lair.

The eagle hangs on the wing all day,
On the chance of a single kill ;
The little gray hawk hunts far and wide
Before he can get his fill.
The snow-wreaths sift,
And the blown snows drift
To the canyons deep and still.
Mary Austin is most remembered for The Land of Little Rain, her 1903 book of sketches & tales of the flora, fauna, and people of California's Owens Valley.

"Winter in the Sierras"
is reprinted from
St. Nicholas:
An Illustrated Magazine
for Young
Folks,
December 1901 issue.
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