Saturday 19 September 2015

The Sea (frida)


The sea is a hungry dog,
Giant and grey.
He rolls on the beach all day.
With his clashing teeth and shaggy jaws
Hour upon hour he gnaws
The rumbling, tumbling stones,
And ‘Bones, bones, bones, bones!’
The giant sea-dog moans,
Licking his greasy paws.

And when the night wind roars
And the moon rocks in the stormy cloud,
He bounds to his feet and snuffs and sniffs,
Shaking his wet sides over the cliffs,
And howls and hollos long and loud.

But on quiet days in May or June,
When even the grasses on the dune
Play no more their reedy tune,
With his head between his paws
He lies on the sandy shores,
So quiet, so quiet, he scarcely snores. 
Reeves, James. “The Sea.” One Hundred Years of Poetry for Children. Eds. Michael Harrison and Christopher Stuart-Clark. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999. 139. Print.
- lower sec
- faces of nature
- mood, atmosphere, metaphor, simile, alliteration, assonance, onomatopoeia rhythm, rhyme
- lesson on metaphors and similes in poetry

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