TO—
So when, mere child, I crossed the Atlantic tide,
Ah! ne’er to see our Carib isle again-
There, as it chanced, the watchful seaman spied
A bark come drifting o’er the azure plain;
Which, as it neared us, we beheld it void
Of living thing-alone on that wide main;
Hinting a tale of wretches that had died
By rock, or whelming surge, or hunger-slain
On the waste wave. So on that bark did go
Unquestioned; bearing o’er the waters blue
Its own mysterious story-none might know;
But left me, as it faded on the view,
With spirit stirred, and eye unconsciously
That strained upon that solitary sea.
(John Kenyon)
More Poetry from John Kenyon:
- Moonlight (John Kenyon Poems)
- Pretence. Part II - The Library (John Kenyon Poems)
- Dorchester Amphitheatre . (John Kenyon Poems)
- The Streams (John Kenyon Poems)
- The Gods Of Greece (John Kenyon Poems)
- Silchester (John Kenyon Poems)