This site may be going away; please consider the Donate link above... or LiberaPay:
A huge thank you to all who have donated: 2025 October/November Web hosting paid
Buy print-size file for commercial or other use
The title for this poem show a boy gathering a snowball, and some houses with roofs covered in snow, and an old-fashioned lamp-post.
Nothing is quite so quiet and clean
     As snow that falls in the night;
 And isn’t it jolly to jump from bed
     And find the whole world white?
It lies on the window ledges,
     It lies on the boughs of the trees,
 While Sparrows crowd at the kitchen door,
     With a pitiful “If you please!”
It lies on the arm of the lamp-post,
     Where the lighter’s ladder goes
 And the policeman under it beats his arms,
     And stamps—to feel his toes;
The butcher’s boy is rolling a ball
     To throw at the man with the coals,
 And old Mrs Ingram has fastened a piece
     Of flannel under her soles;
No sound there is in the snowy road
     From the horse’s cautious feet,
 And all is hushed but the postman’s knocks
     Rat-tatting down the street.
Till the men come round with shovels
     To clear the snow away,—
 What a pity it is that when it falls
     They never let it stay!
Rickman mark