On Cormorant Rock, Seaconnet, Lighting of the Pharos
Ha! What is this? What color-changing star
Over the gnarled, contorted forest-trees,
That darkly faced the gales of centuries,
Flings the new splendor of its avatar?
November’s baying hounds around it gnarr,
The billowy dragons of the stormy seas,
Writhing below in foam-lopped agonies,
Dash the mad spray against it from afar!
But still it burns unquenchable and bright,
A fixed and never setting star, with beams
Now Mars-like red, and now like Venus, white,
Shifting and beautiful as a maiden’s dreams,
New Sirius, I hail thee with delight,
As through my glittering pane thy varied radiance streams.
Now joy to thee, O sailor, tempest tost!
When clouds and darkness scowl like hungry doom,
And far around thee roars the dismal boom
Of thunderous breakers on our iron coast,
No more shall terror reign, and hope be lost;
A golden pharos through the shuddering gloom
Shall guide thee safely from the watery tomb
That yawns to swallow all thy daring host
Our granite crags, with red, insatiate fangs,
No more shall grind the giant warder hands
His starry signal flaming o’er our heads;
That lamp shall banish gloom-fed fears and pangs
From many a wakeful home far from the beam it sheds.
Behold the giant in his iron armor,
Firm on his narrow rock, himself a rock,
Unmoved by vast Atlantic’s charging shock,
Bearing his flambeau as a stately palmer
His golden bough; and never a god was calmer
Than this red Titan as he dares to mock
The rage of Neptune and the black-winged flock
Of wintry storms! – the while, a gallant charmer
Into still seas he guides the white-winged ships,
And lures, like moths, against his flaring lamp,
Great, dazzled sea-birds, blown by foaming lips
Of tempest landward, as with steady tramp
The hosted billows beat around his base,
And with a loud recoil roll backward to their place.
Blow winds! and rage ye billows! till ye make
The gnarled woods shudder, and the welkin crack;
Scowl on, O, night! till all the air is black!
Our strong light-bearer ye may never shake,
His steel-clad bosom was not formed to quake;
Your utter darkness cheers him, and calls back
The fire of gladness to his pulses slack;
Gloom is the foe that holds his glee awake!
Sing for the triumph of his dauntless torch,
O rescued mariner in your harbor’s calm!
And thou unwidowed, sing thy cradle psalm
With cheerful hope! I too, who see him scorch
The dun mist into glory, will confer
A poet’s boon on this, the unfallen Lucifer!
- Title
- On Cormorant Rock, Seaconnet, Lighting of the Pharos
- Alternative Title
- Ha! What is this? What color-changing star
- Bibliographic Citation
- "Unpublished Poems from the Manuscript Collection of Miss Bessy Grey of Little Compton," in Spies, Minnie Lee, George Shepard Burleigh. Masters’ Thesis, Department of English, Brown University, 1934, p. 55-57
- Date
- In this case, the poem likely dates between 1884 and 1898, given that there are internal references to the lighthouse. In general, the "Unpublished Poems from the Manuscript Collection of Miss Bessy Grey of Little Compton" date from October 19, 1868 through March 29, 1899; Spies, Minnie Lee, George Shepard Burleigh. Masters’ Thesis, Department of English, Brown University, 1934, p. 32.
- Subject
- Nature
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