Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Storm At Hastings, And The Little Unknown. by Thomas Hood
Public domain poetry and public domain stories from the literary greats of yesteryear.
Custom Search
Main Menu

Home

Latest Poetry

Latest Authors

Authors Surname

Authors First Name

Poetry Title

Poetry First Lines

Latest Stories

Stories Title

Top Authors

Top Poetry


Top Stories Etc.

Search

Contact Us

Useless Information!!

Store



Top Sites, Click here to vote for our site

Sponsored Links

Read, Rate, Comment on or Submit your poetry

A Storm At Hastings, And The Little Unknown.

    By Thomas Hood



    'Twas August - Hastings every day was filling -
    Hastings, that "greenest spot on memory's waste"!
    With crowds of idlers willing and unwilling
    To be bedipped - be noticed - or be braced,
    And all things rose a penny in a shilling.
    Meanwhile, from window, and from door, in haste
    "Accommodation bills" kept coming down,
    Gladding "the world of-letters" in that town.

    Each day poured in new coachfuls of new cits,
    Flying from London smoke and dust annoying,
    Unmarried Misses hoping to make hits,
    And new-wed couples fresh from Tunbridge toying,
    Lacemen and placemen, ministers and wits,
    And Quakers of both sexes, much enjoying
    A morning's reading by the ocean's rim,
    That sect delighting in the sea's broad brim.

    And lo! amongst all these appeared a creature,
    So small, he almost might a twin have been
    With Miss Crachami - dwarfish quite in stature,
    Yet well proportioned - neither fat nor lean,
    His face of marvellously pleasant feature,
    So short and sweet a man was never seen -
    All thought him charming at the first beginning -
    Alas, ere long they found him far too winning!

    He seemed in love with chance - and chance repaid
    His ardent passion with her fondest smile,
    The sunshine of good luck, without a shade,
    He staked and won - and won and staked - the bile
    It stirred of many a man and many a maid,
    To see at every venture how that vile
    Small gambler snatched - and how he won them too -
    A living Pam, omnipotent at loo!

    Miss Wiggins set her heart upon a box,
    'Twas handsome rosewood, and inlaid with brass,
    And dreamt three times she garnished it with stocks
    Of needles, silks, and cottons - but, alas!
    She lost it wide awake. We thought Miss Cox
    Was lucky - but she saw three caddies pass
    To that small imp; - no living luck could loo him!
    Sir Stamford would have lost his Raffles to him!

    And so he climbed - and rode - and won - and walked,
    The wondrous topic of the curious swarm
    That haunted the Parade. Many were balked
    Of notoriety by that small form
    Pacing it up and down: some even talked
    Of ducking him - when lo! a dismal storm
    Stopped in - one Friday, at the close of day -
    And every head was turned another way -

    Watching the grander guest. It seemed to rise
    Bulky and slow upon the southern brink
    Of the horizon - fanned by sultry sighs -
    So black and threatening, I cannot think
    Of any simile, except the skies
    Miss Wiggins sometimes shades in Indian ink -
    Mis-shapen blotches of such heavy vapor,
    They seem a deal more solid than her paper.

    As for the sea, it did not fret, and rave,
    And tear its waves to tatters, and so dash on
    The stony-hearted beach; - some bards would have
    It always rampant, in that idle fashion -
    Whereas the waves rolled in, subdued and grave,
    Like schoolboys, when the master's in a passion,
    Who meekly settle in and take their places,
    With a very quiet awe on all their faces.

    Some love to draw the ocean with a head,
    Like troubled table-beer - and make it bounce,
    And froth, and roar, and fling - but this, I've said,
    Surged in scarce rougher than a lady's flounce:
    But then, a grander contrast thus it bred
    With the wild welkin, seeming to pronounce
    Something more awful in the serious ear,
    As one would whisper that a lion's near -

    Who just begins to roar: so the hoarse thunder
    Growled long - but low - a prelude note of death,
    As if the stifling clouds yet kept it under,
    But still it muttered to the sea beneath
    Such a continued peal, as made us wonder
    It did not pause more oft to take its breath,
    Whilst we were panting with the sultry weather,
    And hardly cared to wed two words together,

    But watched the surly advent of the storm,
    Much as the brown-cheeked planters of Barbadoes
    Must watch a rising of the Negro swarm:
    Meantime it steered, like Odin's old Armadas,
    Right on our coast; - a dismal, coal-black form;
    Many proud gaits were quelled - and all bravadoes
    Of folly ceased - and sundry idle jokers
    Went home to cover up their tongs and pokers.

    So fierce the lightning flashed. In all their days
    The oldest smugglers had not seen such flashing,
    And they are used to many a pretty blaze,
    To keep their Hollands from an awkward clashing
    With hostile cutters in our creeks and bays:
    And truly one could think, without much lashing
    The fancy, that those coasting clouds, so awful
    And black, were fraught with spirits as unlawful.

    The gay Parade grew thin - all the fair crowd
    Vanished - as if they knew their own attractions, -
    For now the lightning through a near-hand cloud
    Began to make some very crooked fractions -
    Only some few remained that were not cowed,
    A few rough sailors, who had been in actions,
    And sundry boatmen, that with quick yeo's,
    Lest it should blow, - were pulling up the Rose:

    (No flower, but a boat) - some more were hauling
    The Regent by the head: - another crew
    With that same cry peculiar to their calling -
    Were heaving up the Hope: - and as they knew
    The very gods themselves oft get a mauling
    In their own realms, the seamen wisely drew
    The Neptune rather higher on the beach,
    That he might lie beyond his billows' reach.

    And now the storm, with its despotic power,
    Had all usurped the azure of the skies,
    Making our daylight darker by an hour,
    And some few drops - of an unusual size -
    Few and distinct - scarce twenty to the shower,
    Fell like huge teardrops from a giant's eyes -
    But then this sprinkle thickened in a trice
    And rained much harder - in good solid ice.

    Oh for a very storm of words to show
    How this fierce crash of hail came rushing o'er us!
    Handel would make the gusty organs blow
    Grandly, and a rich storm in music score us: -
    But ev'n his music seemed composed and low,
    When we were handled by this Hailstone Chorus;
    Whilst thunder rumbled, with its awful sound,
    And frozen comfits rolled along the ground -

    As big as bullets: - Lord! how they did batter
    Our crazy tiles: - and now the lightning flashed
    Alternate with the dark, until the latter
    Was rarest of the two! - the gust too dashed
    So terribly, I thought the hail must shatter
    Some panes, - and so it did - and first it smashed
    The very square where I had chose my station
    To watch the general illumination.

    Another, and another, still came in,
    And fell in jingling ruin at my feet,
    Making transparent holes that let me win
    Some samples of the storm: - Oh! it was sweet
    To think I had a shelter for my skin,
    Culling them through these "loopholes of retreat" -
    Which in a little we began to glaze -
    Chiefly with a jacktowel and some baize!

    But which, the cloud had passed o'erhead, but played
    Its crooked fires in constant flashes still,
    Just in our rear, as though it had arrayed
    Its heavy batteries at Fairlight Mill,
    So that it lit the town, and grandly made
    The rugged features of the Castle Hill
    Leap, like a birth, from chaos into light,
    And then relapse into the gloomy night -

    As parcel of the cloud; - the clouds themselves,
    Like monstrous crags and summits everlasting,
    Piled each on each in most gigantic shelves,
    That Milton's devils were engaged in blasting.
    We could e'en fancy Satan and his elves
    Busy upon those crags, and ever casting
    Huge fragments loose, - and that we felt the sound
    They made in falling to the startled ground.

    And so the tempest scowled away, - and soon
    Timidly shining through its skirts of jet,
    We saw the rim of the pacific moon,
    Like a bright fish entangled in a net,
    Flashing its silver sides, - how sweet a boon
    Seemed her sweet light, as though it would beget,
    With that fair smile, a calm upon the seas -
    Peace in the sky - and coolness in the breeze!

    Meantime the hail had ceased: - and all the brood
    Of glaziers stole abroad to count their gains;
    At every window there were maids who stood
    Lamenting o'er the glass's small remains, -
    Or with coarse linens made the fractions good,
    Stanching the wind in all the wounded panes, -
    Or, holding candles to the panes, in doubt
    The wind resolved - blowing the candles out.

    No house was whole that had a southern front, -
    No greenhouse but the same mishap befell;
    Bow-windows and bell-glasses bore the brunt, -
    No sex in glass was spared! - For those who dwell
    On each hill-side, you might have swum a punt
    In any of their parlors; - Mrs. Snell
    Was slopped out of her seat, - and Mr. Hitchin
    Had a flower-garden washed into a Kitchen.

    But still the sea was mild, and quite disclaimed
    The recent violence. - Each after each
    The gentle waves a gentle murmur framed,
    Tapping, like woodpeckers, the hollow beach.
    Howbeit his weather eye the seaman aimed
    Across the calm, and hinted by his speech
    A gale next morning - and when morning broke,
    There was a gale - "quite equal to bespoke."

    Before high water - (it were better far
    To christen it not water then, but waiter,
    For then the tide is serving at the bar)
    Rose such a swell - I never saw one greater!
    Black, jagged billows rearing up in war
    Like ragged roaring bears against the baiter,
    With lots of froth upon the shingle shed,
    Like stout poured out with a fine beachy head.

    No open boat was open to a fare,
    Or launched that morn on seven-shilling trips;
    No bathing woman waded - none would dare
    A dipping in the wave - but waived their dips;
    No seagull ventured on the stormy air,
    And all the dreary coast was clear of ships;
    For two lea shores upon the River Lea
    Are not so perilous as one at sea.

    Awe-struck we sat, and gazed upon the scene
    Before us in such horrid hurly-burly, -
    A boiling ocean of mixed black and green,
    A sky of copper color, grim and surly, -
    When lo, in that vast hollow scooped between
    Two rolling Alps of water, - white and curly!
    We saw a pair of little arms a-skimming,
    Much like a first or last attempt at swimming!

    Sometimes a hand - sometimes a little shoe -
    Sometime a skirt - sometimes a hank of hair
    Just like a dabbled seaweed rose to view,
    Sometimes a knee - sometimes a back was bare -
    At last a frightful summerset he threw
    Right on the shingles. Any one could swear
    The lad was dead - without a chance of perjury,
    And battered by the surge beyond all surgery!

    However, we snatched up the corse thus thrown,
    Intending, Christian-like, to sod and turf it,
    And after venting Pity's sigh and groan,
    Then curiosity began with her fit;
    And lo! the features of the Small Unknown!
    'Twas he that of the surf had had this surfeit!
    And in his fob, the cause of late monopolies,
    We found a contract signed with Mephistopheles!

    A bond of blood, whereby the sinner gave
    His forfeit soul to Satan in reversion,
    Providing in this world he was to have
    A lordship over luck, by whose exertion
    He might control the course of cards and brave
    All throws of dice, - but on a sea excursion
    The juggling demon, in his usual vein,
    Seized the last cast - and Nicked him in the main!



Extra Info:



Printable Page

Add Your Thoughts on this poem.



This page viewed 455 times.
Sponsored Links


Your Shops - Affordable Ecommerce stores and cheaper goods for customers - No listing fees!



Our Sites