They open of their own will to the place Where Captain Kidd stands with averted face And folded arms, as solid as an oak, His loosely knotted sash and scarlet cloak Encircling him, and flapping in the breeze That lines the withered, undulating seas. Upon the page across from him, a frame Of knives lie point to point about the name Of a dim verse fantastically made In praise of him,a ragged block of shade; A block of shade, with blurs and puckers where Admiring hands have often brought to bear Their pressure on the picture and the rhyme Of buccaneering in the olden time. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...GRAMERCY PARK by SARA TEASDALE APPRECIATION by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH EXILE OF ERIN by THOMAS CAMPBELL TOM MOONEY by WILLIAM ELLERY LEONARD THE KLONDIKE by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON GRANDMOTHER'S TEACHING by ALFRED AUSTIN STANZAS ON THE DEATH OF THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE by BERNARD BARTON ON THE VIRGINITY OF THE VIRGIN MARY AND JOHANNA SOUTHCOTT by WILLIAM BLAKE |