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Best Famous Weaning Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Weaning poems. This is a select list of the best famous Weaning poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Weaning poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of weaning poems.

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Written by Eliza Cook | Create an image from this poem

The Sea-Child

 HE crawls to the cliff and plays on a brink 
Where every eye but his own would shrink; 
No music he hears but the billow’s noise, 
And shells and weeds are his only toys. 
No lullaby can the mother find
To sing him to rest like the moaning wind; 
And the louder it wails and the fiercer it sweeps, 
The deeper he breathes and the sounder he sleeps. 

And now his wandering feet can reach 
The rugged tracks of the desolate beach;
Creeping about like a Triton imp, 
To find the haunts of the crab and shrimp. 
He clings, with none to guide or help, 
To the furthest ridge of slippery kelp; 
And his bold heart glows while he stands and mocks
The seamew’s cry on the jutting rocks. 

Few years have wan’d—and now he stands 
Bareheaded on the shelving sands. 
A boat is moor’d, but his young hands cope 
Right well with the twisted cable rope;
He frees the craft, she kisses the tide; 
The boy has climb’d her beaten side: 
She drifts—she floats—he shouts with glee; 
His soul hath claim’d its right on the sea. 

’T is vain to tell him the howling breath
Rides over the waters with wreck and death: 
He ’ll say there ’s more of fear and pain 
On the plague-ridden earth than the storm-lash’d main. 
’T would be as wise to spend thy power 
In trying to lure the bee from the flower,
The lark from the sky, or the worm from the grave, 
As in weaning the Sea-Child from the wave.



Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry