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  2. The Wave (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wave_(poem)

    It is a llatai poem, which is to say one in which an animal or inanimate object is sent bearing a message of love. In this case an ocean wave is sent by the poet's beloved in Anglesey, and reaches him as he returns by ship from a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostella. It is thought to have been written in or about the 1370s.

  3. A Life on the Ocean Wave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Life_on_the_Ocean_Wave

    "A Life on the Ocean Wave" is a poem-turned-song by Epes Sargent published in 1838 and set to music by Henry Russell. It is the iconic Regimental March of His Majesty's Royal Marines . Origin of the poem and song

  4. Nine Daughters of Ægir and Rán - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nine_Daughters_of_Ægir_and...

    References to the waves as 'Ægir's daughters' appear in the Poetic Edda. The poem Helgakviða Hundingsbana I describes how the hero Helgi's boat crashes through intense seas, in doing so referencing Rán, Ægir, and their daughters as personifications of the sea. For example, two sequential stanzas reference the wave daughters:

  5. The Song of the Stormy Petrel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Song_of_the_Stormy_Petrel

    Ever darker, clouds descending ever lower over the sea, and the waves are singing, racing to the sky to meet the thunder. Thunder sounds. In foamy anger the waves groan, with wind in conflict. Now the wind firmly embraces flocks of waves and sends them crashing on the cliffs in wild fury, smashing into dust and seaspray all these mountains of ...

  6. Old Ironsides (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Ironsides_(poem)

    "Old Ironsides" is a poem written by American writer Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. on September 16, 1830, as a tribute to the 18th-century USS Constitution. The poem was one reason that the frigate was saved from being decommissioned, and it is now the oldest commissioned ship in the world that is still afloat.

  7. Lines Composed in a Wood on a Windy Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lines_Composed_in_a_Wood...

    Brontë's love of the sea is expressed in this poem. In it, the sea is portrayed as "The Great Liberator". [2]The line "the long withered grass in the sunshine is glancing" and the footnote she wrote at the bottom of the poem reveals that Brontë "loved wild weather, as she loved the sea, and hard country and snow". [3]

  8. A Sea Symphony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Sea_Symphony

    Whitman's use of free verse was also beginning to make waves in the compositional world, where fluidity of structure was beginning to be more attractive than traditional, metrical settings of text. Vaughan Williams sets sections from the following poems in A Sea Symphony: Movement 1: “Song of the Exposition” and “Song for all Seas, all Ships"

  9. The Oceanides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Oceanides

    The Oceanides (in Finnish: Aallottaret; literal English translation: Nymphs of the Waves or Spirits of the Waves; original working title: Rondeau der Wellen; in English: Rondo of the Waves), Op. 73, is a single-movement tone poem for orchestra written from 1913 to 1914 by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius.