Sea
Katherine Mansfield
The Sea called--I lay on the rocks and said: "I am come." She mocked and showed her teeth, Stretching out her long green arms. "Go away!" she thundered. "Then tell me what I am to do," I begged. "If I leave you, you will not be silent, But cry my name in the cities And wistfully entreat me in the plains and forests; All else I forsake to come to you--what must I do?" "Never have I uttered your name," snarled the Sea. "There is no more of me in your body Than the little salt tears you are frightened of shedding. What can you know of my love on your brown rock pillow.... Come closer."
Next 10 Poems
- Katherine Mansfield : Sea Song
- Katherine Mansfield : Sleeping Together
- Katherine Mansfield : Song By The Window Before Bed
- Katherine Mansfield : Song Of Karen, The Dancing Child
- Katherine Mansfield : Song Of The Little White Girl
- Katherine Mansfield : Sorrowing Love
- Katherine Mansfield : Spring Wind In London
- Katherine Mansfield : Stars
- Katherine Mansfield : The Arabian Shawl
- Katherine Mansfield : The Awakening River
Previous 10 Poems
- Katherine Mansfield : Sanary
- Katherine Mansfield : Out In The Garden
- Katherine Mansfield : Opposites
- Katherine Mansfield : On A Young Lady's Sixth Anniversary
- Katherine Mansfield : Now I Am A Plant, A Weed...
- Katherine Mansfield : Night- Scented Stock
- Katherine Mansfield : Loneliness
- Katherine Mansfield : Jangling Memory
- Katherine Mansfield : In The Rangitaki Valley
- Katherine Mansfield : Grown- Up Talk