Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
South Carolina
By Paul Hamilton Hayne (18301886)O
Of the bowed pine-tops in the gloaming gray,
Casting across the melancholy lea
A tint of browner blight;
Outside my exile’s home, borne to and fro,
I hear the inarticulate murmurs flow
Of the faint wind-tides breathing like a sea;
When, in clear vision, softly dawns on me
(As if in contrast with yon slow decay)
The loveliest land that smiles beneath the sky,
The coast-land of our Western Italy:
I view the waters quivering; quaff the breeze,
Whose briny raciness keeps an under taste
Of flavorous tropic sweets (perchance swept home
Across the flickering waste
Of summer waves, capped by the Ariel foam)
From Cuba’s perfumed groves and garden spiceries!
Pale rose and amethyst, melting into gold;
Up to our feet the fawning ripples rolled,
Glimmer an instant, tremble, lapse, and—die:
The whole rare scene, its every element
Etherealized, transmuted, subtly blent
By viewless alchemy,
Into the glory of a golden mood,
Brings potent exaltations, while I walk
(A joyful youth again)
The snow-white beaches by the Atlantic Main!