Текст песни Birches - Robert Frost
When
I
see
birches
bend
to
left
and
right
Across
the
lines
of
straighter
darker
trees,
I
like
to
think
some
boy's
been
swinging
them.
But
swinging
doesn't
bend
them
down
to
stay
As
ice-storms
do.
Often
you
must
have
seen
them
Loaded
with
ice
a
sunny
winter
morning
After
a
rain.
They
click
upon
themselves
As
the
breeze
rises,
and
turn
many-colored
As
the
stir
cracks
and
crazes
their
enamel.
Soon
the
sun's
warmth
makes
them
shed
crystal
shells
Shattering
and
avalanching
on
the
snow-crust--
Such
heaps
of
broken
glass
to
sweep
away
You'd
think
the
inner
dome
of
heaven
had
fallen.
They
are
dragged
to
the
withered
bracken
by
the
load
And
they
seem
not
to
break;
though
once
they
are
bowed
So
low
for
long,
they
never
right
themselves:
You
may
see
their
trunks
arching
in
the
woods
Years
afterwards,
trailing
their
leaves
on
the
ground
Like
girls
on
hands
and
knees
that
throw
their
hair
Before
them
over
their
heads
to
dry
in
the
sun.
But
I
was
going
to
say
when
Truth
broke
in
With
all
her
matter-of-fact
about
the
ice-storm,
I
should
prefer
to
have
some
boy
bend
them
As
he
went
out
and
in
to
fetch
the
cows--
Some
boy
too
far
from
town
to
learn
baseball
Whose
only
play
was
what
he
found
himself,
Summer
or
winter,
and
could
play
alone.
One
by
one
he
subdued
his
father's
trees
By
riding
them
down
over
and
over
again,
Until
he
took
the
stiffness
out
of
them
And
not
one
but
hung
limp,
not
one
was
left
For
him
to
conquer.
He
learned
all
there
was
To
learn
about
not
launching
out
too
soon
And
so
not
carrying
the
tree
away
Clear
to
the
ground.
He
always
kept
his
poise
To
the
top
branches,
climbing
carefully
With
the
same
pains
you
use
to
fill
a
cup
Up
to
the
brim,
and
even
above
the
brim.
Then
he
flung
outward,
feet
first,
with
a
swish
Kicking
his
way
down
through
the
air
to
the
ground.
So
was
I
once
myself
a
swinger
of
birches,
And
so
I
dream
of
going
back
to
be.
It's
when
I'm
weary
of
considerations,
And
life
is
too
much
like
a
pathless
wood
Where
your
face
burns
and
tickles
with
the
cobwebs
Broken
across
it,
and
one
eye
is
weeping
From
a
twig's
having
lashed
across
it
open.
I'd
like
to
get
away
from
earth
awhile,
And
then
come
back
to
it
and
begin
over.
May
no
fate
willfully
misunderstand
me
And
half
grant
what
I
wish
and
snatch
me
away
Not
to
return.
Earth's
the
right
place
for
love:
I
don't
know
where
it's
likely
to
go
better.
I'd
like
to
go
by
climbing
a
birch
tree
And
climb
black
branches
up
a
snow-white
trunk
Toward
heaven,
till
the
tree
could
bear
no
more,
But
dipped
its
top
and
set
me
down
again.
That
would
be
good
both
going
and
coming
back.
One
could
do
worse
than
be
a
swinger
of
birches.
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