Across the Bay are low-lying cliffs, Where stand fishermen's cottages: I can barely distinguish them with the naked eye. But to-day the cliffs are lifted, escarpt, Perpendicular, mysterious, inaccessible, And those sordid dwellings have become The magnificent fortified castles of Sea-kings. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE RETIRED CAT by WILLIAM COWPER NOTHING GOLD CAN STAY by ROBERT FROST UPON THE SAYING THAT MY VERSES WERE MADE BY ANOTHER by ANNE KILLIGREW THE HORSE AND HIS RIDER by JOANNA BAILLIE A CHARACTER OF SARAH HALLOWELL VAUGHAN by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD LIFE AND DEATH by WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE BALLADE OF DREAMS TRANSPOSED by FRANK GELETT BURGESS VERSES, SPOKEN EXTEMPORE AT THE MEETING OF A CLUB by JOHN BYROM |