So I grew half delirious and quite sick, And thro' the darkness saw strange faces grin Of Monsters at me. One put forth a fin, And touched me clammily: I could not pick A quarrel with it: it began to lick My hand, making meanwhile a piteous din And shedding human tears: it would begin To near me, then retreat. I heard the quick Pulsation of my heart, I marked the fight Of life and death within me; then sleep threw Her veil around me; but this thing is true: When I awoke the sun was at his height, And I wept sadly, knowing that one new Creature had love for me, and others spite. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BEFORE THE RAIN by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH ON A DEAD CHILD by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES SONNET TO GEORGE SAND: 2. A DESIRE by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING SONNET: 33 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE PICKEN O' SCROFF by WILLIAM BARNES TRAVELLING GIPSIES by CHARLES BAUDELAIRE THE MIXED ASSEMBLY by JOHN CLEVELAND EPISTLE; TO THE EARL OF... by CHARLES COTTON AN ANSWER TO A COPY OF VERSES SENT ME TO JERSEY by ABRAHAM COWLEY |