I have grown weary of the open sea, The chartless ways, the storms, the loneliness, The coast that topples, tall and shelterless -- Weary of faring where all things are free! Yet once the open sea was all romance, Purple and olive-stained and golden-scaled; And every breeze from some adventure hailed, And shoals were silver for the moon to dance. The cliffs were only tall to keep untrod The kingdom of the fay hung high in air, And every storm was but Poseidon's dare, And brave it was to battle with a god. Ah, blithe it was when the mad night was done And day with flying hair woke wild and white, To see the salty sail loom in the light And know one battle more was bravely won. Then these were magic seas that ever rang With melodies, now wild, now sweet, now glad; At dusk the drifting choirs unseen were sad And in the lulls of night the sirens sang. They sing no more; the colors now are grey; The cliffs defend not fairyland, but home; And when th' impenitent, hoar sea has clomb The clouds, I have no heart to sing or pray. Oh, I am weary of the open sea, Vigils and storms and watches without name, The ache of long resistance without aim, The fetters of the fetterless and free. There is some haven that no tempest mars, Some brown-hilled harbor, hushed and clear and deep, Where tired evening may sit down and weep, And, waking, find not water there but stars. There would I creep at last ere day is done, With ashen sail dropped down and cordage white; There rest secure, there find before the night A little hour of peace, a little sun! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SIMON SURNAMED PETER by EDGAR LEE MASTERS THE MAIDEN QUEEN: SONG by JOHN DRYDEN A SNOW-STORM; SCENE IN A VERMONT WINTER by CHARLES GAMAGE EASTMAN BINSEY POPLARS (FELLED 1879) by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS HAUNTED HOUSES by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW SUMMER BY THE LAKESIDE by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER |