The Pilgrim spirit has not fled;
It walks in the noon’s
broad light;
And it watches the bed of the glorious
dead,
With their holy stars, by
night.
It watches the bed of the brave who have
bled,
And shall guard this ice-bound
shore,
Till the waves of the bay, where the Mayflower
lay,
Shall foam and freeze no more.
* * * * *
=_James G. Percival, 1786-1856._= (Manual, p. 515.)
=_328._= THE CORAL GROVE.
Deep in the wave is a coral grove,
Where the purple mullet and gold-fish
rove;
Where the sea-flower spreads its leaves
of blue,
That never are wet with the falling dew,
But in bright and changeful beauty shine,
Far down in the green and glassy brine.
The floor is of sand, like the mountain
drift,
And the pearl-shells spangle the flinty
snow;
From coral rocks, the sea-plants lift
Their boughs, where the tides and billows
flow;
The water is calm and still below,
For the winds and waves are absent there,
And the sands are bright as the stars
that glow
In the motionless fields of upper air.
There, with its waving blade of green,
The sea-flag streams through the silent
water,
And the crimson leaf of the dulse is seen
To blush like a banner bathed in slaughter.
There, with a light and easy motion,
The fan-coral sweeps through the clear,
deep sea,
And the yellow and scarlet tufts of ocean
Are bending like corn on the upland lea,
And life, in rare and beautiful forms,
Is sporting amid those bowers of stone.
* * * * *
=_Richard H. Dana, 1787-._= (Manual, pp. 501, 504, 514.)
From “The Buccaneer.”
=_329._=
A sweet, low voice,
in starry nights,
Chants
to his ear a ’plaining song;
Its tones come
winding up the heights,
Telling
of woe and wrong;
And he must listen, till the stars grow
dim,
The song that gentle voice doth sing to
him.
O, it is sad that
aught so mild
Should
bind the soul with bands of fear;
That strains to
soothe a little child
The
man should dread to hear!
But sin hath broke the world’s sweet
peace, unstrung
The harmonious chords to which the angels
sung.
* * * * *
But he no more
shall haunt the beach,
Nor
sit upon the tall cliff’s crown,
Nor go the round
of all that reach,
Nor
feebly sit him down,
Watching the swaying weeds; another day,
And he’ll have gone far hence that
dreadful way.
To-night the charmed
number’s told.
“Twice
have I come for thee,” it said.
“Once more,
and none shall thee behold.
Come,
live one, to the dead!”
So hears his soul, and fears the coming
night,
Yet sick and weary of the soft, calm light.