THERE was a gather'd stillness in the room: Only the breathing of the great sea rose From far off, aiding that profound repose, With regular pulse and pause within the gloom Of twilight, as if some impending doom Was now approaching;--I sat moveless there, Watching with tears and thoughts that were like prayer, Till the hour struck,--the thread dropp'd from the loom; And the Bark pass'd in which freed souls are borne. The dear still'd face lay there; that sound forlorn Continued; I rose not, but long sat by: And now my heart oft hears that sad sea-shore, When she is in the far-off land, and I Wait the dark sail returning yet once more. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE FIELD MOUSE by WILLIAM SHARP A SONG ABOUT SINGING by ANNE REEVE ALDRICH ECHO by AULUS LICINIUS ARCHIAS LITTLE GREGORY by THEODORE BOTREL THE UNBIDDEN GUEST by LUELLA J. CASE THE SECEDERS: 1 by CHRISTOPHER PEARSE CRANCH HOME ON THE COLUMBIA by SUSIE B. DILLARD |