Our happy bathers, - pardon my romance! I thought of gladness only, for the tide Ran sparkling to the land in merry dance; But, oh! what sorrows haunt our sweet seaside! Man, child, and woman mourn the wide world o'er; Yon maiden's snowy foot, that meets the wave, Has just come faltering from her lover's grave, Just pass'd that orphan-group upon the shore; The yacht glides gaily on, but as it nears The beach, I see a night-black dress on board; The lonely widow dreams of those three years Of summer-voyaging with her lost lord: Too oft, when human figures fill the scene, We count from woe to woe, with no glad hearts between! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PRAISE FOR AN URN; IN MEMORIAM: ERNEST NELSON by HAROLD HART CRANE ABRAHAM LINCOLN WALKS AT MIDNIGHT by NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY TO A LADY: SHE REFUSING TO CONTINUE A DISPUTE WITH ME by MATTHEW PRIOR SONNET PREFIXED TO 'NENNIO, OR A TREATISE OF NOBILITY' by EDMUND SPENSER A DESCRIPTION OF A CITY SHOWER by JONATHAN SWIFT TO THE RIGHT HON! WILLIAM EARL OF DARTMOUTH by PHILLIS WHEATLEY THE RIVER DUDDON: SONNET 34. AFTER-THOUGHT by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH |