Jessie B. Rittenhouse, ed. (1869–1948). The Little Book of Modern Verse. 1917.
George Sterling
The Ashes in the Sea
W
Whither, with cheeks that held the light
Of winter’s dawn in cloudless skies,
Evadne, was thy flight?
Thy hair seemed fallen from the moon—
Part of its radiance, as now,
Of shifting tide and dune.
Or silence ultimate beguile?
Ever our things of consequence
Awakened but thy smile.
A stranger sorrow to its tone?
With thee the star of evening wakes
More beautiful, more lone?
A subtle tinge and touch of thee;
Thy shadow lingers in the day,
Thy voice in winds to be.
By deeper seas no moons control?
What stars have magic now to stir
Thy swift and wilful soul?
The grievous world that once was home.
That here, where love awaits thee yet,
Thou seemest yet to roam?
Thy witchery on the haunted mind,
In valleys of thy loneliness,
Made clean with ocean’s wind.
A waif of elemental deeps,
When, at its vigils unconsoled,
Some night of winter weeps.