I sit up here at midnight, The wind is in the street, The rain besieges the windows Like the sound of many feet. I see the street lamps flicker, I see them wink and fail; The streets are wet and empty, It blows an easterly gale. Some think of the fisher skipper Beyond the Inchcape stone; But I of the fisher woman That lies at home alone. She raises herself on her elbow And watches the firelit floor; Her eyes are bright with terror, Her heart beats fast and sore. Between the roar of the flurries, When the tempest holds its breath, She holds her breathing also''" It is all as still as death. She can hear the cinders dropping, The cat that purrs in its sleep''" The foolish fisher woman! Her heart is on the deep. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...UPON MY LADY CARLISLE'S WALKING IN HAMPTON COURT GARDEN by JOHN SUCKLING TO FORTUNE by JAMES THOMSON (1700-1748) PERPLEXED MUSIC by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING A WINTER NIGHT by ROBERT BURNS THE BEECH TREE'S PETITION by THOMAS CAMPBELL TO AN HOUR-GLASS by JOHN CLARE ON A LATE CONUBIAL RUPTURE IN HIGH LIFE by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE |