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C.N. Douglas, comp. Forty Thousand Quotations: Prose and Poetical. 1917.

Tempests

  • The southern wind
  • Doth play the trumpet to his purposes,
  • And, by his hollow whistling in the leaves,
  • Foretells a tempest and a blustering day.
  • Shakespeare.

  • The sky
  • Is overcast, and musters muttering thunder,
  • In clouds that seem approaching fast, and show
  • In forked flashes a commanding tempest.
  • Byron.

  • Suddeine they see from midst of all the maine
  • The surging waters like a mountaine rise,
  • And the great sea, puft up with proud disdaine,
  • To swell above the measure of his guise,
  • As threatning to devoure all that his powre despise.
  • Spenser.

  • From cloud to cloud the rending lightnings rage;
  • Till, in the furious elemental war
  • Dissolv’d, the whole precipitated mass
  • Unbroken floods and solid torrents pour.
  • Thomson.

  • I have seen tempests, when the scolding winds
  • Have riv’d the knotty oaks; and I have seen
  • The ambitious ocean swell, and rage, and foam,
  • To be exalted with the threat’ning clouds,
  • But never till to-night, never till now,
  • Did I go through tempest dropping fire.
  • Shakespeare.

  • An horrid stillness first invades the ear,
  • And in that silence we the tempest fear.
  • Dryden.

  • Who shall face
  • The blast that wakes the fury of the sea?
  • *****
  • The vast hulks
  • Are whirled like chaff upon the waves; the sails
  • Fly, rent like webs of gossamer; the masts
  • Are snapped asunder.
  • William Cullen Bryant.

  • Along the woods, along the moorish fens,
  • Sighs the sad genius of the coming storm;
  • And up among the loose disjointed cliffs,
  • And fractured mountains wild, the brawling brook
  • And cave, presageful, send a hollow moan,
  • Resounding long in listening fancy’s ear.
  • Thomson.

  • Meanwhile
  • The sun, in his setting, sent up the last smile
  • Of his power, to baffle the storm. And, behold!
  • O’er the mountains embattled, his armies, all gold,
  • Rose and rested: while far up the dim airy crags,
  • Its artillery silenced, its banners in rags,
  • The rear of the tempest its sullen retreat
  • Drew off slowly, receding in silence, to meet
  • The powers of the night, which, now gathering afar,
  • Had already sent forward one bright, single star.
  • Owen Meredith.

  • Look, from the turbid south
  • What floods of flame in red diffusion burst,
  • Frequent and furious, darted thro’ the dark
  • And broken ridges of a thousand clouds,
  • Pil’d hill on hill; and hark, the thunder rous’d,
  • Groans in long roarings through the distant gloom.
  • Mallet.

  • Blow, wind, and crack your cheeks! rage! blow!
  • You cataracts and hurricanoes, spout
  • Till you have drench’d our steeples, drown’d the cocks!
  • You sulphurous and thought-executing fires,
  • Vaunt-couriers to oak-cleaving thunderbolts,
  • Singe my white head! And thou, all-shaking thunder,
  • Strike flat the thick rotundity o’ the world!
  • Crack nature’s moulds, all germens spill at once,
  • That make ungrateful man.
  • Shakespeare.

  • There is war in the skies!
  • Lo! the black-winged legions of tempest arise
  • O’er those sharp splinter’d rocks that are gleaming below
  • In the soft light, so fair and so fatal, as though
  • Some seraph burn’d through them, the thunderbolt searching
  • Which the black cloud unbosom’d just now.
  • Owen Meredith.

  • A boding silence reigns,
  • Dread through the dun expanse; save the dull sound
  • That from the mountain, previous to the storm,
  • Rolls o’er the muttering earth, disturbs the flood,
  • And shakes the forest leaf without a breath.
  • Prone, to the lowest vale, aerial tribes
  • Descend: the tempest-loving raven scarce
  • Dares wing the dubious dusk. In awful gaze
  • The cattle stand, and on the scowling heavens
  • Cast a deploring eye; by man forsook,
  • Who to the crowded cottage hies him fast,
  • Or seeks the shelter of the downward cave.
  • Thomson.

  • And sometimes too a burst of rain,
  • Swept from the black horizon, broad, descends
  • In one continuous flood. Still over head
  • The mingling tempest weaves its gloom, and still
  • The deluge deepens; till the fields around
  • Lie sunk, and flatted, in the sordid wave.
  • Sudden the ditches swell; the meadows swim.
  • Red, from the hills, innumerable streams
  • Tumultuous roar; and high above its banks
  • The river lift; before whose rushing tide,
  • Herds, flocks, and harvests, cottages, and swains,
  • Roll mingled down; all that the winds had spar’d
  • In one wild moment ruined; the big hopes
  • And well-earned treasures of the painful year.
  • Thomson.