LOUD roared the dreadful thunder, The rain a deluge showers, The clouds were rent asunder By lightning's vivid powers; The night both drear and dark, Our poor devoted bark, Till next day, there she lay, In the Bay of Biscay, O! Now dashed upon the billow, Her opening timbers creak, Each fears a watery pillow, None stops the dreadful leak; To cling to slippery shrouds Each breathless seaman crowds, As she lay, till the day, In the Bay of Biscay, O! At length the wished-for morrow Broke through the hazy sky, Absorbed in silent sorrow, Each heaved a bitter sigh; The dismal wreck to view Struck horror to the crew, As she lay, on that day, In the Bay of Biscay, O! Her yielding timbers sever, Her pitchy seams are rent, When Heaven, all bounteous ever, Its boundless mercy sent, -- A sail in sight appears! We hail her with three cheers; Now we sail, with the gale, From the Bay of Biscay, O! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LINES FOR THE HOUR by HAMILTON FISH ARMSTRONG WHAT IS THE SPIRIT? by KATHARINE LEE BATES A CONCEPTION by DAISY MAUD BELLIS AT SEA by FRANCIS WILLIAM BOURDILLON WANDERING WILLIE by ROBERT BURNS ON THE RAILWAY BRIDGES (TO W.M.C.) by RHYS CARPENTER PINDARIC ODE: TO DR. SCARBOROUGH by ABRAHAM COWLEY |