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A Burial At Sea.

Topics: classic

The shore hath blent with the distant skies,      O'er the bend of the crested seas,     And the leaning ship in her pathway flies,      On the sweep of the freshened breeze.     Swift be its flight! for a dying guest      It bears across the billow,     And she fondly sighs in her native West      To find a peaceful pillow.     There, o'er the tide, her kindred sleep,      And she would sleep beside them     It may not be! for the sea is deep,      And the waves the waves divide them!     It may not be! for the flush is flown,      That lighted her lily cheek     'Twas the passing beam, ere the sun goes down.      Life's last and loveliest streak.     'Tis gone, and a dew is o'er her now      The dew of the mornless eve     No morrow will shine on that pallid brow,      For the spirit hath ta'en its leave.      * * * * *     The ship heaves to, and the funeral rite,      O'er the lovely form is said,     And the rough man's cheek with tears is bright,      As he lowers the gentle dead.     The corse sinks down, alone alone,      To its dark and dreary grave,     And the soul on a lightened wing hath flown,      To the world beyond the wave.      * * * * *     'Tis a fearful thing in the sea to sleep      Alone in a silent bed     'Tis a fearful thing on the shoreless deep      Of the spirit-world to tread!

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"The shore hath blent with the distant skies,..."

This evocative piece by Samuel Griswold Goodrich, titled "A Burial At Sea.", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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