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1
Against the stone breakwater,
Only an ominous lapping,
While the wind whines overhead,
Coming down from the mountain,
Whistling between the arbors, the
winding terraces;
A thin whine of wires, a rattling and
flapping of leaves,
And the small street-lamp swinging
and slamming against
the
lamp pole.
Where have the people gone?
There is one light on the mountain.
2
Along the sea-wall, a steady sloshing
of the swell,
The waves not yet high, but even,
Coming closer and closer upon each
other;
A fine fume of rain driving in from
the sea,
Riddling the sand, like a wide spray
of buckshot,
The wind from the sea and the wind
from the mountain contending,
Flicking the foam from the whitecaps
straight upward into the darkness.
A time to go home!--
And a child's dirty shift billows
upward out of an alley,
A cat runs from the wind as we do,
Between the whitening trees, up Santa
Lucia,
Where the heavy door unlocks,
And our breath comes more easy,--
Then a crack of thunder, and the
black rain runs over us, over
The flat-roofed houses, coming down
in gusts, beating
The walls, the slatted windows,
driving
The last watcher indoors, moving the
cardplayers closer
To their cards, their anisette.
3
We creep to our bed, and its straw
mattress.
We wait; we listen.
The storm lulls off, then redoubles,
Bending the trees half-way down to
the ground,
Shaking loose the last wizened
oranges in the orchard,
Flattening the limber carnations.
A spider eases himself down from a
swaying light-bulb,
Running over the coverlet, down under
the iron bedstead.
The bulb goes on and off, weakly.
Water roars into the cistern.
We lie closer on the gritty pillow,
Breathing heavily, hoping--
For the great last leap of the wave
over the breakwater,
The flat boom on the beach of the
towering sea-swell,
The sudden shudder as the jutting
sea-cliff collapses,
And the hurricane drives the dead
straw into the living pine-tree.
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October 30, 2012
The Storm by Theodore Roethke
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