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The Dread Voyage: Poems

Chapter 31: A DECEMBER MORNING.
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About This Book

The collection gathers lyrical and narrative poems that move between storm-borne sea voyages, winter and seasonal landscapes, and intimate meditations on love, guilt, death, and memory. Imagery is vivid and elemental—wind, ice, waves, and night recur—while voices shift from elegiac solitude to dramatic confession. Several pieces use dreamlike and mythic resonance to explore fate and remorse; others observe rural and shoreline scenes with tonal shifts from awe to foreboding. The sequence alternates compressed narrative episodes and reflective lyrics, creating an atmosphere of haunting inevitability and contemplative mourning.

A DECEMBER MORNING.

Breaks in the wild and bleak December morn, Across shrunk woods and pallid skies like pearl: From hooded roofs white, sinuous smoke-wreaths curl Into the clear, sharp air; great boughs, wind-torn And storm-dismantled, sway from trunks forlorn. Under stark fences, snow-mists sift and swirl, And overhead, where night was wont to hurl Her ghostly drift, white clouds, wind-steered, are borne.
By drifted ways I climb the eastern hills, And watch the wind-swayed maples creak and strain; The muffled beeches moan their wintry pain; While over fields and frosty, silent rills, The breaking day the great, grey silence fills With far-heard voice and stir of life again.