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Home  »  library  »  Song  »  Eva L. Ogden

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

Eva L. Ogden

The Sea

SHE was rich and of high degree;

A poor and unknown artist he.

“Paint me,” she said, “a view of the sea.”

So he painted the sea as it looked the day

That Aphrodite arose from its spray;

And it broke, as she gazed on its face the while,

Into its countless-dimpled smile.

“What a poky, stupid picture!” said she:

“I don’t believe he can paint the sea!”

Then he painted a raging, tossing sea,

Storming, with fierce and sudden shock,

A towering, mighty fastness-rock;—

In its sides, above those leaping crests,

The thronging sea-birds built their nests.

“What a disagreeable daub!” said she:

“Why, it isn’t anything like the sea!”

Then he painted a stretch of hot brown sand,

With a big hotel on either hand,

And a handsome pavilion for the band;—

Not a sign of water to be seen,

Except one faint little streak of green.

“What a perfectly exquisite picture!” said she:

“It’s the very image of the sea!”