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Under the walls

Where swells and falls

The bay's deep breast at intervals,
At peace I lie,
Blown softly by,

A cloud upon the liquid sky.

The day so mild

Is Heaven's own child,

With Earth and Ocean reconciled;
The airs I feel

Around me steal

Are murmuring to the murmuring keel.

Over the rail

My hand I trail

Within the shadow of the sail;
A joy intense,

The cooling sense

Glides down my drowsy indolence.

With dreamful eyes

My spirit lies

Where summer sings and never dies;
O'erveiled with vines,

She glows and shines
Among her future oil and wines.

Her children, hid

The cliffs amid,

Are gambolling with the gambolling kid;

Or down the walls

With tipsy calls,

Laugh in the rocks like waterfalls.

The fisher's child,

With tresses wild,

Unto the smooth, bright sand beguiled,

With glowing lips

Sings as she skips,

And gazes at the far-off ships.

Yon deep bark goes

Where traffic blows,

From lands of sun to lands of snows;
This happier one,

Its course is run

From lands of snow to lands of sun.

O happy ship,
To rise and dip,

With the blue crystal at your lip!
O happy crew,

My heart with you

Sails, and sails, and sings anew!

No more, no more
The worldly shore

Upbraids me with its loud uproar!

With dreamful eyes

My spirit lies

Under the walls of Paradise.

Thomas Buchanan Read

T

IN GUERNSEY

I

HE heavenly bay, ringed round with cliffs and moors,

Storm-stain'd ravines, and crags that lawns in

lay,

Soothes as with love the rocks whose guard se

cures

The heavenly bay.

O friend, shall time take ever this away,
This blessing given of beauty that endures,
This glory shown us, not to pass but stay?

Though sight be changed for memory, love en

sures

What memory, changed by love to sight, would

say

The word that seals forever mine and yours
The heavenly bay.

II

My mother sea, my fostress, what new strand, What new delight of waters, may this be,

The fairest found since time's first breezes fanned

My mother sea?

Once more I give me body and soul to thee, Who hast my soul forever: cliff and sand Recede, and heart to heart once more are we.

My heart springs first and plunges, ere my hand Strike out from shore: more close it brings to me,

More near and dear than seems my fatherland, My mother sea.

III

Across and along, as the bay's breadth opens, and o'er us

Wild autumn exults in the wind, swift rapture and strong

Impels us, and broader the wide waves brighten before us

Across and along.

The whole world's heart is uplifted and knows not wrong;

The whole world's life is a chant to the seatide's chorus;

Are we not as waves of the water, as notes of the song?

Like children unworn of the passions and toils that wore us,

We breast for a season the breadth of the seas that throng,

Rejoicing as they, to be borne as of old they bore us

Across and along.

Algernon Charles Swinburne

B

TRISTRAM OF LYONESSE

UT by the sea-banks where at morn their foes
Might find them, lay those knightly name-
fellows,

One sick with grief of heart and sleepless, one
With heart of hope triumphant as the sun
Dreaming asleep of love and fame and fight:
But sleep at last wrapped warm the wan young
knight;

And Tristram with the first pale windy light
Woke ere the sun spake summons, and his ear
Caught the sea's call that fired his heart to hear,
A noise of waking waters: for till dawn
The sea was silent as a mountain lawn

When the wind speaks not, and the pines are dumb,

And summer takes her fill ere autumn comes Of life more soft than slumber: but ere day

Rose, and the first beam smote the bounding bay, Up sprang the strength of the dark East, and

took

With its wide wings the waters as they shook,
And hurled them huddling on aheap, and cast
The full sea shoreward with a great glad blast,
Blown from the heart of morning: and with joy
Full-souled and perfect passion, as a boy

That leaps up light to wrestle with the sea
For pure heart's gladness and large ecstasy,
Up sprang the might of Tristram; and his soul
Yearned for delight within him, and waxed
whole

As a young child's with rapture of the hour That brought his spirit and all the world to flower,

And all the bright blood in his veins beat time To the wind's clarion and the water's chime That called him and he followed it and stood On the sand's verge before the grey great flood Where the white hurtling heads of waves that

met

Rose unsaluted of the sunrise yet.

And from his heart's root outward shot the sweet Strong joy that thrilled him to the hands and feet,

Filling his limbs with pleasure and glad might,
And his soul drank the immeasurable delight
That earth drinks in with morning, and the free
Limitless love that lifts the stirring sea
When on her bare bright bosom as a bride
She takes the young sun, perfect in his pride,
Home to his place with passion: and the heart
Trembled for joy within the man whose part
Was here not least in living; and his mind
Was rapt abroad beyond man's meaner kind

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