SEAWARD he set his course, nor hugg'd the shore Of circumstance, resolv'd, dauntless, to sound The deep unfathomable seas, explore Alone far caverns measureless, profound, Seek that which lies below, beyond, behind The knower and the known, and when the West Salutes the stars with rose and gold, to find The foam-reef'd Isles of Hesperusthe Bless'd. Teach me your secret, O great mariner, That when my tides of faith are all but spent, When night and chilling winds afflict the sea, When though at home I am a foreigner And homesick, I may somehow learn content And find the pole-star of your loyalty! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE BARD'S ANNUAL DEFIANCE by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS THE BLIND MAN by WILLIAM HERVEY ALLEN JR. THERE IS NOTHING STRANGE by ARCHILOCHUS STEEL OR GOLD?; THE QUESTION by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON THE ENTERED APPRENTICES' SONG by MATTHEW BIRKHEAD OBSERVATIONS IN THE ART OF ENGLISH POESY: THE WRITER TO HIS BOOK by THOMAS CAMPION ON KINGSTON BRIDGE by ELLEN MACKAY HUTCHINSON CORTISSOZ TALE: 1. THE DUMB ORATORS; OR, THE BENEFIT OF SOCIETY by GEORGE CRABBE |