Henry Lawson

The Cliffs

The Cliffs - meaning Summary

Steadfast Cliffs, Solitary Self

The poem contrasts human transience with the enduring ocean cliffs. The speaker admires the cliffs' steadfastness and their practical role guarding the shore, using them as a refuge from fickle friends and lovers. He identifies with their age and constancy, feeling alienated from other people and imagining what he might have done differently. The cliffs become a symbol of personal resilience and a promised permanence beyond social judgment.

Read Complete Analyses

They sing of the grandeur of cliffs inland, But the cliffs of the ocean are truly grand; And I long to wander and dream and doubt Where the cliffs by the ocean run out and out. To the northward far as the eye can reach Are sandhill, boulder, and sandy beach; But southward rises the track for me, Where the cliffs by the ocean run out to sea. Friends may be gone in the morning fair, But the cliffs by the ocean are always there; Lovers may leave when the wind is chill, But the cliffs by the ocean are steadfast still. They watch the sea and they ward the land, And they warn the ships from the treacherous sand; And I sadly think in the twilight hour What I might have been had I known my power. Where the smoke-cloud blurs and the white sails fill, They point the ships to keep seaward still; And I think Ah, me! and I think Ah, me! Of the wreck I’d saved had I kept to sea. Oh! the cliffs are old and the cliffs are sad, And they know me sane, while men deem me mad. Oh! the cliffs are firm and the cliffs are strong, And they know me right, while men deem me wrong. And I sometimes think in the dawning gray, I am old as they, I am old as they; And I think, I think that in field and town My spirit shall live till the cliffs come down.

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