LACK-LUSTRE eye, and idle wing, And smirched breast that skims no more, White as the foam itself, the wave -- Hast thou not even a grave Upon the dreary shore, Forlorn, forsaken thing? Thou whom the deep seas could not drown, Nor all the elements affright, Flashing like thought across the main, Mocking the hurricane, Screaming with shrill delight When the great ship went down. Thee not thy beauty saved, nor mirth, Nor daring, nor thy humble lot, One among thousands -- in quick haste Fate clutched thee as she passed; Dead -- how, it matters not: Corrupting, earth to earth. And not a league from where it lies Lie bodies once as free from stain, And hearts as gay as this sea-bird's, Whom all the preachers' words Will ne'er make white again, Or from the dead to rise. Rot, pretty bird, in harmless clay: -- We sing too much poetic woes; Let us be doing while we can: Blessed the Christian man Who on life's shore seeks those Dying of soul decay. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FOR LAUREL AND HARDY ON MY WORKROOM WALL by DAVID WAGONER OUT OF THE OLD HOUSE, NANCY by WILLIAM MCKENDREE CARLETON ON THE MORNING OF CHRIST'S NATIVITY: THE HYMN by JOHN MILTON THE IVY; ADDRESSED TO A YOUNG FRIEND by BERNARD BARTON THE FOREST POOL by MATHILDE BLIND |