Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Santorin by James Elroy Flecker
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Santorin

    By James Elroy Flecker



    (A Legend of the Ęgean)

    'Who are you, Sea Lady,
    And where in the seas are we?
    I have too long been steering
    By the flashes in your eyes.
    Why drops the moonlight through my heart,
    And why so quietly
    Go the great engines of my boat
    As if their souls were free?'
    'Oh ask me not, bold sailor;
    Is not your ship a magic ship
    That sails without a sail:
    Are not these isles the Isles of Greece
    And dust upon the sea?
    But answer me three questions
    And give me answers three.
    What is your ship?" 'A British.'
    'And where may Britain be?'
    'Oh it lies north, dear lady;
    It is a small country.'
    'Yet you will know my lover,
    Though you live far away:
    And you will whisper where he has gone,
    That lily boy to look upon
    And whiter than the spray.'
    'How should I know your lover,
    Lady of the sea?'
    'Alexander, Alexander,
    The King of the World was he.'
    'Weep not for him, dear lady,
    But come aboard my ship.
    So many years ago he died,
    He's dead as dead can be.'
    'O base and brutal sailor
    To lie this lie to me.
    His mother was the foam-foot
    Star-sparkling Aphrodite;
    His father was Adonis
    Who lives away in Lebanon,
    In stony Lebanon, where blooms
    His red anemone.
    But where is Alexander,
    The soldier Alexander,
    My golden love of olden days
    The King of the world and me?'

    She sank into the moonlight
    And the sea was only sea.



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