Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Off Shore by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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Off Shore

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    When the might of the summer
    Is most on the sea;
    When the days overcome her
    With joy but to be,
    With rapture of royal enchantment, and sorcery that sets her not free,
    But for hours upon hours
    As a thrall she remains
    Spell-bound as with flowers
    And content in their chains,
    And her loud steeds fret not, and lift not a lock of their deep white manes;
    Then only, far under
    In the depths of her hold,
    Some gleam of its wonder
    Man's eye may behold,
    Its wild-weed forests of crimson and russet and olive and gold.
    Still deeper and dimmer
    And goodlier they glow
    For the eyes of the swimmer
    Who scans them below
    As he crosses the zone of their flowerage that knows not of sunshine and snow.
    Soft blossomless frondage
    And foliage that gleams
    As to prisoners in bondage
    The light of their dreams,
    The desire of a dawn unbeholden, with hope on the wings of its beams.
    Not as prisoners entombed
    Waxen haggard and wizen,
    But consoled and illumed
    In the depths of their prison
    With delight of the light everlasting and vision of dawn on them risen,
    From the banks and the beds
    Of the waters divine
    They lift up their heads
    And the flowers of them shine
    Through the splendour of darkness that clothes them of water that glimmers like wine.
    Bright bank over bank
    Making glorious the gloom,
    Soft rank upon rank,
    Strange bloom after bloom,
    They kindle the liquid low twilight, the dusk of the dim sea's womb.
    Through the subtle and tangible
    Gloom without form,
    Their branches, infrangible
    Ever of storm
    Spread softer their sprays than the shoots of the woodland when April is warm.
    As the flight of the thunder, full
    Charged with its word,
    Dividing the wonderful
    Depths like a bird,
    Speaks wrath and delight to the heart of the night that exults to have heard,
    So swiftly, though soundless
    In silence's ear,
    Light, winged from the boundless
    Blue depths full of cheer,
    Speaks joy to the heart of the waters that part not before him, but hear.
    Light, perfect and visible
    Godhead of God,
    God indivisible,
    Lifts but his rod,
    And the shadows are scattered in sunder, and darkness is light at his nod.
    At the touch of his wand,
    At the nod of his head
    From the spaces beyond
    Where the dawn hath her bed,
    Earth, water, and air are transfigured, and rise as one risen from the dead.
    He puts forth his hand,
    And the mountains are thrilled
    To the heart as they stand
    In his presence, fulfilled
    With his glory that utters his grace upon earth, and her sorrows are stilled.
    The moan of her travail
    That groans for the light
    Till dayspring unravel
    The weft of the night,
    At the sound of the strings of the music of morning, falls dumb with delight.
    He gives forth his word,
    And the word that he saith,
    Ere well it be heard,
    Strikes darkness to death;
    For the thought of his heart is the sunrise, and dawn as the sound of his breath.
    And the strength of its pulses
    That passion makes proud
    Confounds and convulses
    The depths of the cloud
    Of the darkness that heaven was engirt with, divided and rent as a shroud,
    As the veil of the shrine
    Of the temple of old
    When darkness divine
    Over noonday was rolled;
    So the heart of the night by the pulse of the light is convulsed and controlled.
    And the sea's heart, groaning
    For glories withdrawn,
    And the waves' mouths, moaning
    All night for the dawn,
    Are uplift as the hearts and the mouths of the singers on leaside and lawn.
    And the sound of the quiring
    Of all these as one,
    Desired and desiring
    Till dawn's will be done,
    Fills full with delight of them heaven till it burns as the heart of the sun.
    Till the waves too inherit
    And waters take part
    In the sense of the spirit
    That breathes from his heart,
    And are kindled with music as fire when the lips of the morning part,
    With music unheard
    In the light of her lips,
    In the life-giving word
    Of the dewfall that drips
    On the grasses of earth, and the wind that enkindles the wings of the ships.
    White glories of wings
    As of seafaring birds
    That flock from the springs
    Of the sunrise in herds
    With the wind for a herdsman, and hasten or halt at the change of his words.
    As the watchword's change
    When the wind's note shifts,
    And the skies grow strange,
    And the white squall drifts
    Up sharp from the sea-line, vexing the sea till the low cloud lifts.
    At the charge of his word
    Bidding pause, bidding haste,
    When the ranks are stirred
    And the lines displaced,
    They scatter as wild swans parting adrift on the wan green waste.
    At the hush of his word
    In a pause of his breath
    When the waters have heard
    His will that he saith,
    They stand as a flock penned close in its fold for division of death.
    As a flock by division
    Of death to be thinned,
    As the shades in a vision
    Of spirits that sinned;
    So glimmer their shrouds and their sheetings as clouds on the stream of the wind.
    But the sun stands fast,
    And the sea burns bright,
    And the flight of them past
    Is no more than the flight
    Of the snow-soft swarm of serene wings poised and afloat in the light.
    Like flowers upon flowers
    In a festival way
    When hours after hours
    Shed grace on the day,
    White blossomlike butterflies hover and gleam through the snows of the spray.
    Like snow-coloured petals
    Of blossoms that flee
    From storm that unsettles
    The flower as the tree
    They flutter, a legion of flowers on the wing, through the field of the sea.
    Through the furrowless field
    Where the foam-blossoms blow
    And the secrets are sealed
    Of their harvest below
    They float in the path of the sunbeams, as flakes or as blossoms of snow.
    Till the sea's ways darken,
    And the God, withdrawn,
    Give ear not or hearken
    If prayer on him fawn,
    And the sun's self seem but a shadow, the noon as a ghost of the dawn.
    No shadow, but rather
    God, father of song,
    Shew grace to me, Father
    God, loved of me long,
    That I lose not the light of thy face, that my trust in thee work me not wrong.
    While yet I make forward
    With face toward thee
    Not turned yet in shoreward,
    Be thine upon me;
    Be thy light on my forehead or ever I turn it again from the sea.
    As a kiss on my brow
    Be the light of thy grace,
    Be thy glance on me now
    From the pride of thy place:
    As the sign of a sire to a son be the light on my face of thy face.
    Thou wast father of olden
    Times hailed and adored,
    And the sense of thy golden
    Great harp's monochord
    Was the joy in the soul of the singers that hailed thee for master and lord.
    Fair father of all
    In thy ways that have trod,
    That have risen at thy call,
    That have thrilled at thy nod,
    Arise, shine, lighten upon me, O sun that we see to be God.
    As my soul has been dutiful
    Only to thee,
    O God most beautiful,
    Lighten thou me,
    As I swim through the dim long rollers, with eyelids uplift from the sea.
    Be praised and adored of us
    All in accord,
    Father and lord of us
    Alway adored,
    The slayer and the stayer and the harper, the light of us all and our lord.
    At the sound of thy lyre,
    At the touch of thy rod,
    Air quickens to fire
    By the foot of thee trod,
    The saviour and healer and singer, the living and visible God.
    The years are before thee
    As shadows of thee,
    As men that adore thee,
    As cloudlets that flee:
    But thou art the God, and thy kingdom is heaven, and thy shrine is the sea.



Extra Info:
From "Studies in Song" - 1880


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