All ye who have gained the haven of safe days, And rest at ease, your wanderings being done, Except the last, inevitable one, Be well content, I say, and hear men's praise: Yet in the quiet of your sheltered bays,-- Bland waters shining in an equal sun,-- Forget not that the awful storm-tides run In far, unsheltered, and tempestuous ways: Remember near what rocks, and through what shoals. Worn, desperate mariners strain with all their might: They may not come to your sweet restful goals, Your waters placid in the level light:-- Their graves wait in that sea no moon controls, That is in dreadful fellowship with Night. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SONG OF THE MAD WOMAN'S SON by KAREN SWENSON OLD FOLKS AT HOME by STEPHEN COLLINS FOSTER THE MOTHER WATCH by EDGAR ALBERT GUEST A POET'S FANCIES: 8. THE MODERN POET; A SONG OF DERIVATIONS by ALICE MEYNELL UP-HILL by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI THE HERO OF VIMY; AN INCIDENT OF THE GREAT WAR by BRENT DOW ALLINSON |