Night in March

A luminous meditation on the threshold between seasons, Duncan Campbell Scott's 'Night in March' captures the restless Canadian landscape at the moment winter begins to loosen its grip. The poem inhabits that liminal hour when darkness still dominates but the first tremors of spring stir beneath the frozen earth. Scott's characteristic precision renders the stark beauty of a northern night: the cold, the silence, the waiting. This is nature poetry that refuses to sentimentalize the landscape, instead finding in its harshness something both terrifying and transcendent. The poem pulses with anticipation, as if the very air holds its breath before the seasonal turning. For readers who crave poetry that roots itself in specific, unforgiving geography rather than generic pastoral Idealization, 'Night in March' offers the real thing: a poem that makes you feel the chill on your skin and the hopehidden in frozen soil.
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Bruce Kachuk, ChadH94, Newgatenovelist, Harmon Lee Busby +4 more









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