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Poem by George Darley Lenimina Laborum. 39. Hymn to the Ocean Roll on vasty Ocean! Like mountains in motion Your grey waters rise Till they melt in the skies, And mingle the azure of Heav'n with their own; 'Mid the roll of her drums Queen Amphitrite comes, And her white horses prance In an Apennine dance, As they wheel her about on her hollow-shell throne! O'er the green furrows dashing, Thro' the heavy ooze splashing, Down the snow-hillocks sliding, In the vallied deeps hiding, They mark out their flight in a pathway of foam: The gleaming-hair'd Daughters And Sons of the Waters, With shout follow after, With song and with laughter,— Then sink all at once to their coralline home. Foot and foot far asunder, Wind-Gods step in thunder From billow to billow, Kicking up a white pillow For him who will sleep stiff and stark on the sea! Viewless and vapoury, Their sea-green drapery Down their backs flowing Keep the gazer from knowing Of what form, of what face, of what fashion they be! How glorious the sight! But no less than the Night From her couch up-risen Like the Moon out of prison To roam her wild hour, her lone vigil to keep,— O'er the still waters blazing. Where the green stars are gazing, As if each were an eye Of a creature on high, That saw such a gem as itself in the deep. Then, then the low tolling Of swift waves wide rolling, And whelming and coiling;— Like a serpent-brood boiling In Hell's ample cauldron, they writhe and they hiss! Sin's Son laughs to hear it, And longs to be near it, That for each whishing eddy He might have a ship ready To heave with a—Ho! down the Joyous abyss! O this is the hour To look out from the tower, Looming dim o'er the surge, And behold how they urge. The rack-riders each, his blue courser afar: How in ranks o'er the plain Of the steadiless main, They tilt and they joust Till they're scattered to dust, With a roar that rings round the wild Ocean of war! Yet wend thee there too When the calm sea is blue, When the sweet summer-wave Has forgotten to rave, And smooth o'er its ripple the Mer-maiden glides; Thine eyes at the sight Will half-close with delight, For in rage or at rest, Like a proud beauty's breast, A charm with great Ocean forever abides! George Darley George Darley's other poems:
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