Then did the voice awake and speak again;
It murmured, “Man, look up!”
But he replied,
“I cannot. O, mine eyes, mine eyes are
fain
Down on the red wood-ashes to abide
Because they warm me.” Then the voice was
still,
And left the lonely mariner to his will.
And soon it came to pass that he got gain.
He had great flocks of pigeons which he
fed,
And drew great store of fish from out the main,
And down from eiderducks; and then he
said,
“It is not good that I should lead my life
In silence, I will take to me a wife.”
He took a wife, and brought her home to him;
And he was good to her and cherished her
So that she loved him; then when light waxed dim
Gloom came no more; and she would minister
To all his wants; while he, being well content,
Counted her company right excellent.
But once as on the lintel of the door
She leaned to watch him while he put to
sea,
This happy wife, down-gazing at the shore,
Said sweetly, “It is better now
with me
Than it was lately when I used to spin
In my old father’s house beside the lin.”
And then the soft voice of the cave awoke—
The soft voice which had haunted it erewhile—
And gently to the wife it also spoke,
“Woman, look up!” But she,
with tender guile,
Gave it denial, answering, “Nay, not so,
For all that I should look on lieth below.
“The great sky overhead is not so good
For my two eyes as yonder stainless sea,
The source and yielder of our livelihood,
Where rocks his little boat that loveth
me.”
This when the wife had said she moved away,
And looked no higher than the wave all day.
Now when the year ran out a child she bore,
And there was such rejoicing in the cave
As surely never had there been before
Since God first made it. Then full,
sweet, and grave,
The voice, “God’s utmost blessing brims
thy cup,
O, father of this child, look up, look up!”
“Speak to my wife,” the mariner replied.
“I have much work—right
welcome work ’tis true—
Another mouth to feed.” And then it sighed,
“Woman, look up!” She said,
“Make no ado,
For I must needs look down, on anywise,
My heaven is in the blue of these dear
eyes.”
The seasons of the year did swiftly whirl,
They measured time by one small life alone;
On such a day the pretty pushing pearl,
That mouth they loved to kiss had sweetly
shown,
That smiling mouth, and it had made essay
To give them names on such another day.
And afterward his infant history,
Whether he played with baubles on the
floor,
Or crept to pat the rock-doves pecking nigh,
And feeding on the threshold of the door,
They loved to mark, and all his marvellings dim,
The mysteries that beguiled and baffled him.
He was so sweet, that oft his mother said,
“O, child, how was it that I dwelt
content
Before thou camest? Blessings on thy head,
Thy pretty talk it is so innocent,
That oft for all my joy, though it be deep,
When thou art prattling, I am like to weep.”