Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
III. The SeasonsThe Pleasure-Boat
Richard Henry Dana, Sr. (17871879)C
They’re seated side by side;
Wave chases wave in pleasant flow;
The bay is fair and wide.
Loose! Give her to the wind!
She shoots ahead; they’re all afloat;
The strand is far behind.
Thou goddess of the foam,
I ’ll ever pay thee worship due,
If thou wilt bring them home.
The prow is dashing wide,
Soft breezes take you on your way,
Soft flow the blessèd tide.
And touch that arching brow,
I ’d dwell forever on the sea
Where ye are floating now.
The waves go tilting by;
There dips the duck,—her back she laves;
O’erhead the sea-gulls fly.
The little vessel stoops;
Now, rising, shooting along her way,
Like them, in easy swoops.
It glitters like the drift,
Sparkling, in scorn of summer’s heat
High up some mountain rift.
Upon the bending tide;
The crinkling sail, and crinkling mast,
Go with her side by side.
Why hangs the pennant down?
The sea is glass; the sun at noon.—
Nay, lady, do not frown;
Is painted on the sea;
Below, a cheek of lovely bloom.
Whose eyes look up to thee?
And see, beside her face,
A rich, white cloud that doth not stir:
What beauty, and what grace!
And peakèd rock and hill,
Change the smooth sea to fairy-land;
How lovely and how still!
Strikes close upon the ear;
The leaping fish, the swinging sail
Of yonder sloop, sound near.
Across the placid bay,
Touching with glory all the show.—
A breeze! Up helm! Away!
With laugh and call, the shore.
They ’ve left their footprints on the beach,
But them I hear no more.