Framed by our window, skaters, winding
 so kept in motion, on a well-honed
 edge spin out a gilded ceiling.
 Fish, reflecting glow for glow,
 saints around the sun, are frozen
 with amazement just one pane below.
 Skates flash like stars, so madly
 whirling one can hardly tell which
 is sky and which the watery floor ...
 one night two straitlaced couples,
 a footman over them, rode out
 in a dappled-horse-drawn sleigh
 onto the river, a moonlit lark.
 The ice broke and they—sleigh,
 footman and all—riding in state,
 rode straight on into the lidded water.
 That winter all winter folks twirled
 over them who—framed in lace,
 frost the furs, the shiny harness
 and their smiles the fire that keeps
 the place—sat benignly watching.
 “One foot out, one foot in,
 are we real,” thought one, “we who
 wander sheepishly in dreams, or they,
 the really sleepless eyes, under us?
 And every night who knows (a laughter
 troubles us like dreams) who skates
 (a thousand watch fires the stars)
 above, peering through the pane?”

















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