Poems (Cook)/'Tis a Wild Night at Sea

'TIS A WILD NIGHT AT SEA.
The clouds arose in a giant shape,And the wind with a piercing gust—Dark as a murderer's mask of crape,And sharp as a poniard-thrust.
Thicker and wider the gloom stretch'd out,With a flush of angry red;Till the hissing lightning blazed about,And the forest bent its head.
A maiden look'd from a lattice-paneToward where the ocean lay;And her gaze was fix'd with earnest strainOn the beacon, leagues away.
She knew that he who had won her soulWas getting close to land;And she clutched at every thunder rollWith a hard, convulsive hand.
He had promised he would sail no moreTo far and fearful climes;He had talk'd of a cottage on the shore,And the sound of wedding chimes.
They had loved each other many a year,They had grown up side by side;She had reckon'd the days—his ship must be near—He was coming to claim his bride.
An old crone pass'd the lattice-pane,—"God help us all!" quoth she;'Tis bad on the mountain, but worse on the main,—'Tis a wild night at sea!"
The maiden heard, but never stirr'dHer gaze from the beacon lamp;Her heart alone felt a sepulchre-stoneRoll up to it, heavy and damp.
A gray-hair'd mariner look'd around,—"Here's a wind," cried he:"May God preserve the homeward bound;'Tis a wild night at sea!"
The maiden heard, yet never stirr'dHer eyes from the distant part;But shadow was thrown upon the stone,And the stone was over her heart.
The Lightning blades fenced fierce and long;The Blast wings madly flew;But Morning came, with the skylark's song,And an arch of spotless blue.
Morning came with a tale too true,As sad as tale could be:"A homeward bound" went down with her crew,—"'Twas a wild night at sea!"
The maiden heard, yet never stirr'd,Nor eye, nor lip, nor brow;But moss had grown on the sepulchre-stone,And it cover'd a skeleton now.
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Summer and Winter came and went,With their frosty and flowery time;Autumn branches lusciously bent,And Spring buds had their prime.
The maiden still is in her home;But not a word breathes she;Save those that seal'd her spirit doom,"'Tis a wild night at sea!"
The hedgerow thorn is out again,And her cheek is as pale as the bloom;She bears a wound whose bleeding painCan only be stanched by the tomb.
Children show her the violet bed,And where young doves will be;But they hear her say, as she boweth her head,—"'Tis a wild night at sea!"
She may be seen at the lattice-paneWhen the climbing moon is bright;With the gaze distraught of a dreaming brainToward the beacon height.
There's not a cloud a star to shroud,The song-birds haunt the tree;But she faintly sighs, as the dewdrops rise,—"'Tis a wild night at sea!"
Golden beams of a sunny JuneThe work with light are filling;Till the roses fall asleep at noonO'er the draught of their own distilling:
The maiden walks where aspen stalksOnly move with the moth and the bee;But she sigheth still, with shivering chill,—"'Tis a wild night at sea!"
Her beautiful Youth has wither'd away;Sorrow has eaten the core;But, weak and wan, she lingereth onTill the thorn is white once more.
There are bridal robes at the old church porch,And orange-bloom so fair;The merry bells say, 'tis a wedding-day,And the priest has bless'd the pair.
The maiden is under the churchyard yew,Watching with hollow eye;Till the merry bells race with faster pace,And the bridal robes go by.
She dances out to the ding-dong tune,She laughs with raving glee:And Death endeth the dream in her requiem scream,—"'Tis a wild night at sea!"