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Poem by William Wordsworth


Fish-Women


On Landing at Calais

’T IS said, fantastic ocean doth enfold
The likeness of whate’er on land is seen;
But if the Nereid sisters and their queen,
Above whose heads the tide so long hath rolled,
The dames resemble whom we here behold,
How fearful were it down through opening waves
To sink, and meet them in their fretted caves,
Withered, grotesque, immeasurably old,
And shrill and fierce in accent! Fear it not:
For they earth’s fairest daughters do excel;
Pure, undecaying beauty is their lot;
Their voices into liquid music swell,
Thrilling each pearly cleft and sparry grot,
The undisturbed abodes where sea-nymphs dwell!



William Wordsworth


William Wordsworth's other poems:
  1. Processions
  2. Monastery of Old Bangor
  3. On Revisiting Dunolly Castle
  4. For the Spot Where the Hermitage Stood on St. Herbert’s Island, Derwent Water
  5. Roman Antiquities


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