The day's wild ocean sings and thunders, And beats against the fatal shore, This breaker with dumb sorrow sunders, And these like laughing victors roar, Their sheenthe joy of vernal wonders, Their sheenvast winter's shining hoar. In wrath triumphant forward-swinging, The lifted billow calls, and fails, A joyous giant, shouting, singing, Its voice the voice of sounding gales, Its glory in the sunlight flinging Whose noonday glow it holds and hails. Across the sea, now lightly foaming, Another rears, that stirs the deep, And floods the shore with silence, gloaming; Morose and slow it seems to creep Like one who drops, worn out with roaming, From his bent back a fatal heap. Each moment new, with changing power, The surf is thundering, alone. Now idle, now it seems to lower, Hymning a Silence all unknown, Like a dark heart asleep,for hour On hour in restless monotone. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE COMING OF WAR: ACTAEON by EZRA POUND THEME IN YELLOW by CARL SANDBURG THE PROSPECT by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING MY AIN WIFE by ALEXANDER LAING STELLA'S BIRTHDAY, 1726-7 by JONATHAN SWIFT NOW PRECEDENT SONGS, FAREWELL by WALT WHITMAN STORM AT SEA (1) by ALCAEUS OF MYTILENE |