Sometimes I walk where the deep water dips Against the land. Or on where fancy drives I walk and muse aloud, like one who strives To tell his half-shaped thought with stumbling lips, And view the ocean sea, the ocean ships, With joyless heart: still but myself I find And restless phantoms of my restless mind: Only the moaning of my wandering words, Only the wailing of the wheeling plover, And this high rock beneath whose base the sea Has wormed long caverns, like my tears in me: And hard like this I stand, and beaten and blind, This desolate rock with lichens rusted over, Hoar with salt-sleet and chalkings of the birds. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MOUNTAIN FARM by MALCOLM COWLEY TO MARY CHURCH TERRELL - LECTURER by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON EARTH IS ENOUGH by EDWIN MARKHAM CITIES OF THE PLAIN by EDGAR LEE MASTERS DOMESDAY BOOK: DOMESDAY BOOK by EDGAR LEE MASTERS FROM THE AGES WITH A SMILE by EDGAR LEE MASTERS |