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Home  »  library  »  Song  »  Richard Garnett (1835–1906)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Richard Garnett (1835–1906)

The Ballad of the Boat

THE STREAM was smooth as glass: we said, “Arise and let’s away;”

The Siren sang beside the boat that in the rushes lay;

And, spread the sail and strong the oar, we gayly took our way.

When shall the sandy bar be crossed? When shall we find the bay?

The broadening flood swells slowly out o’er cattle-dotted plains;

The stream is strong and turbulent, and dark with heavy rains:

The laborer looks up to see our shallop speed away.

When shall the sandy bar be crossed? When shall we find the bay?

Now are the clouds like fiery shrouds; the sun, superbly large,

Slow as an oak to woodman’s stroke sinks flaming at their marge.

The waves are bright with mirrored light as jacinths on our way.

When shall the sandy bar be crossed? When shall we find the bay?

The moon is high up in the sky, and now no more we see

The spreading river’s either bank; and surging distantly,

There booms a sullen thunder as of breakers far away:

Now shall the sandy bar be crossed; now shall we find the bay!

The sea-gull shrieks high overhead, and dimly to our sight

The moonlit crests of foaming waves gleam towering through the night.

We’ll steal upon the mermaid soon, and start her from her lay,

When now the sandy bar is crossed, and we are in the bay.

What rises white and awful as a shroud-infolded ghost?

What roar of rampant tumult bursts in clangor on the coast?

Pull back, pull back! The raging flood sweeps every oar away.

O stream, is this thy bar of sand? O boat, is this the bay?