Louisa May Alcott was an American writer and a poet. She was born in the year 1832. Her father Bronson Alcott was an educator and philosopher and her mother Abigail Alcott was a homemaker.
She wrote novels, short stories and poems. Her most famous work was 'Little Women' which was partly based on her life.
She resided in Boston and Concord after her birth. She worked as a domestic servant and also as a teacher from 1850 to 1862 to support her family. She was also a reformer who worked to gain the right to vote for women. She even opposed drinking of alcohol.
Alcott served as nurse until her health failed and she wrote down her experience in her work 'Hospital Sketches'. This is how she came into attention.
She died on 6th of March in the year 1888.
Oh! a bare, brown rock
Stood up in the sea,
The waves at its feet
Dancing merrily.
A little bubble
Once came sailing by,
And thus to the rock
Did it gayly cry,-
”Ho! clumsy brown stone,
Quick, make way for me:
I’m the fairest thing
That floats on the sea.
”See my rainbow-robe,
See my crown of light,
My glittering form,
So airy and bright.
”O’er the waters blue,
I’m floating away,
To dance by the shore
With the foam and spray,
“Now, make way, make way;
For the waves are strong,
And their rippling feet
Hear me that along.”
But the great rock stood
Straight up in the sea;
It looked gravely down,
And said pleasantly-
"Little friend, you must
Go some other way;
For l have not stirred
this marry a long day,
"Great billows have clashed,
And angry winds blown;
But my sturdy form
Is not overthrown.
"Nothing can stir me
In the air or sea;
Then, how can I move,
Little friend, for thee?"
Then the waves all laughed
In their voices sweet;
And the sea-birds looked,
From their rocky seat,
At the bubble gay,
Who angrily cried,
While its round cheek glowed
With a foolish pride,-
"You shall move for me;
And you shall not mock
At the words I say,
You ugly, rough rock.
”Be silent, wild birds!
While stare you so?
Stop laughing, rude waves,
And help me to go!
”For I am the queen
Of the ocean here,
And this cruel stone
Cannot make me fear.”
Dashing fiercely up,
With a scornful word,
Foolish Bubble broke;
But Rock never stirred.
Then said the sea-birds,
Sitting in their nests
To the little ones
Leaning on their breasts,-
”Be not like Bubble,
Headstrong, rude, and vain,
Seeking by violence
Your object to gain;
”But be like the rock,
Steadfast, true, and strong,
Yet cheerful and kind,
And firm against wrong.
"Heed, little birdlings,
And wiser you’ll be
For the lesson learned
Today by the sea.”
Describe Rock.
Describe Bubble.
Why did the waves laugh?
What are the adjectives Bubble uses for Rock? Why does Bubble use them?
What, according to the sea birds, has been the lesson learned from Rock and Bubble?
For I am the queen
Of the ocean here,
And this cruel stone
Cannot make me fear.