WITH streaming pennons, scorning sail and oar, With steady tramp and swift revolving wheel, And even pulse from throbbing heart of steel, She plies her arrowy course from shore to shore. In vain the siren calms her steps allure; In vain the billows thunder on her keel; Her giant form may toss and rock and reel And shiver in the wintry tempest's roar; The calms and storms alike her pride can spurn. True to the day she keeps her appointed time. Long leagues of ocean vanish at her stern -- She drinks the air, and tastes another clime, Where men their former wonder fast unlearn, Which hailed her coming as a thing sublime. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CHILTERNS by RUPERT BROOKE BLACK SAMSON OF BRANDYWINE by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR SUMMER'S LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT: SPRING by THOMAS NASHE THE DAY OF JUDGEMENT; AN ODE ATTEMPTED IN ENGLISH SAPPHIC by ISAAC WATTS AFTER SUNSET by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM ELIJAH AND THE PRIESTS OF BAAL: IN A TIME OF FAMINE by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE PSALM 25. AD TE DOMINE by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE |