O THE gloom of the night with the wind and the rain Howling in, beating in from the desolate main, And anon with a cry o'er the tempest prevailing Some wreck of the deep the wild ruin bewailing! From the Shoals to Nantucket the lights are half hid The rush and the roar of the breakers amid; Ships turn from their moorings; the boats are adrift; Not a merciful star looking down through a rift; But blackness and fear with the wind and the rain Howling in, beating in from the desolate main. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...JONES'S PRIVATE ARGYMENT by SIDNEY LANIER OF THE THEME OF LOVE by MARGARET LUCAS CAVENDISH A SOLILOQUY; OCCASIONED BY THE CHIRPING OF A GRASSHOPPER by WALTER HARTE THE PRIMROSE by ROBERT HERRICK THE LAST BUCCANEER by CHARLES KINGSLEY FOUND' (FOR A PICTURE) by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI SONNET: 130 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE SONGS OF TRAVEL: 45. TO S.R. CROCKETT by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON |