Haunted Seas

Summary


"Haunted Seas" is a short poem that conjures a world of eerie stillness on the open ocean. Beneath a grey sky, glassy water barely stirs, a lone bird cries and vanishes, and brown seaweed drifts far from shore. At the centre of this desolate seascape lies a derelict vessel, now motionless — yet still haunted by a circling shark drawn to death. Rice builds a mood of quiet dread through spare, precise imagery, making the sea feel less like a place and more like a threshold between the living and the lost.

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A gleaming glassy ocean
Under a sky of grey;
A tide that dreams of motion,
Or moves, as the dead may;
A bird that dips and wavers
Over lone waters round,
Then with a cry that quavers
Is gone—a spectral sound.

The brown sad sea-weed drifting
Far from the land, and lost;
The faint warm fog unlifting,
The derelict long tossed,
But now at rest—though haunted
By the death-scenting shark,
Whose prey no more undaunted
Slips from it, spent and stark.

Credits

Cale Young Rice was an American poet and playwright, born in 1872, known for his lyrical and often brooding verse exploring nature, fate, and human frailty. "Haunted Seas" is a striking example of his gift for atmosphere, compressing an entire desolate ocean world into just two tightly controlled stanzas.