THE noisy fire, The drumming wind, The creaking trees, And all that hum Of summer air And all the long inquietude Of breaking seas Sweet and delightful are In loneliness. But more than these The quiet light From the morn's sun And night's astonished moon, Falling gently upon breaking seas. Such quietness Another beauty is Ah, and those stars So gravely still More than light, than beauty pour Upon the strangeness Of the heart's breaking seas. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE NEGRO'S TRAGEDY by CLAUDE MCKAY SONGS AND THE POET (FOR SARA TEASDALE) by LOUIS UNTERMEYER THE BALLAD OF LOVELY LADYES OF LONG AGOE by FRANCOIS VILLON THE HERITAGE by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL ON MILTON'S PARADISE LOST by ANDREW MARVELL ROUTE MARCH by CHARLES HAMILTON SORLEY A BALLAD OF LIFE by ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE |