He was a hill man, And she watched the spray Until he came and won her All in a day. Sea-folk will talk all day, But mountain-folk are still And the tide dashes vainly Against a cliff's will. He knows not how to answer Her salt tide of talk. He goes no further from his hills Than a day's walk! Though she climb to roof or hill-top As if her soul to save, All that her eastward staring sees Is a hill-wave. Hill-folk cannot easily Speak what they feel, But his look follows her Like a dog at heel. Far up a hillside Seas cannot climb . . . Her tide of talk is going out Before its time. Destiny that mated them Was less than kind or human; All in a day to tether Hill-man . . . sea-woman. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LIKE A BULRUSH by MARIANNE MOORE ON A TREE FALLEN ACROSS THE ROAD (TO HEAR US TALK) by ROBERT FROST ROBERT E. LEE by JULIA WARD HOWE THE WINGLESS VICTORY by WILLIAM HERVEY ALLEN JR. SONNETS OF MANHOOD: 42. 'GRECIAN AND ENGLISH' by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) THE SINGERS OF DELLA ROBBIA by ALFRED BARRETT THE FIRE WITHIN by ROBERT BRENDON |