When the storm is done and
the revel is o’er,
I love to sit on the rocky
shore,
And tell to the ear of the
dying breeze,
The tales that are hushed
in the sullen seas;
Of the ship that sank in the
reefy surge,
And left her fate to the sea-gull’s
dirge:
Of the lover that sailed to
meet his bride,
And his story gave to the
secret tide:
Of the father that went on
the trustless main,
And never was met by his child
again:
Of the hidden things which
the waves conceal,
And the sea-bird’s song
can alone reveal.
I tell of the ship that hath
found a grave—
Her spars still float on the
restless wave,
But down in the halls of the
voiceless deep,
The forms of the brave and
the beautiful sleep.
I saw the storm as it gathered
fast,
I heard the roar of the coming
blast,
I marked the ship in her fearful
strife,
As she flew on the tide, like
a thing of life.
But the whirlwind came, and
her masts were wrung,
Away, and away on the waters
flung.
I sat on the gale o’er
the sea-swept deck,
And screamed in delight o’er
the coming wreck:
I flew to the reef with a
heart of glee,
And wiled the ship to her
destiny.
On the hidden rocks like a
hawk she rushed,
And the sea through her riven
timbers gushed:
O’er the whirling surge
the wreck was flung,
And loud on the gale wild
voices rung.
I gazed on the scene—I
saw despair
On the pallid brows of a youthful
pair.
The maiden drooped like a
gentle flower,
When lashed by the gale in
its quivering bower:
Her arms round her lover she
wildly twined,
And gazed on the sea with
a wildered mind.
He bent o’er the trembler,
and sheltered her form,
From the plash of the sea,
and the sweep of the storm;
But woe to the lover, and
woe to the maid,
Whose hopes on the treacherous
deep are laid!
For the Sea hath a King whose
palaces shine,
In lustre and light down the
pearly brine,
And he loves to gather in
glory there,
The choicest things of the
earth and air.
In his deep saloons with coral
crowned,
Where gems are sparkling above
and around,
He gathers his harem of love
and grace,
And beauty he takes to his
cold embrace.
The winds and the waves are
his messengers true.
And lost is the wanderer whom
they pursue.
They sweep the shore, they
plunder the wreck,
His stores to heap, and his
halls to deck.
Oh! lady and lover, ye are
doomed their prey—
They come! they come! ye are
swept away!
Ye sink in the tide,—but
it cannot sever
The fond ones who sleep in
its depths for ever!