Ground Swell, The
Though the moon in silver silence,
Floods the highlands and the islands
With a peace that cannot jar,
On the gates of Narragansett,
Storm-advanced to the onset,
Plunge the billows from afar.
Heavily the long swell rages
On the ledges, and the sedges
Scattered, strow the foamy beach;
Many a garden fair it crosses
Of bright mosses, which it tosses
Up to human eye and reach.
Many a beauty have the waters
Pluck'd and brought us, aye and taught us
Of a wealth we never knew,
Which, in granite earthquake-chasm'd
Deep embosomed, sweetly blossomed
To the dark concealing blue;
Till an unseen tempest, urging
The wild surging, by the scourging
Of its wind-lash, cast them here,
To make glad, and blest moreover,
Beauty's lover, though they suffer
Martyr-pangs to give him cheer.
When a heart or spirit queenly
Most serenely foldeth inly
The white calm of holy thought,
Little are our souls aware of
Any jar of storms afar off,
From whose tramp are throbbings caught.
O, divine deeds, in the fitness
Of completeness, pour their sweetness
Round our gladdened souls' career;
And we bless the new revealing,
Never feeling the long reeling
Of the pangs that bore it here.
Deepest thoughts of love's devotion
Heave like ocean, with a motion
Grand from pulsings of a storm;
All the thrills which Poets lend us,
All the splendors valor renders,
With heart's agony are warm.
Finest feelings which we cherish
Nor let perish, farthest flourish
From the taint of vulgar reach;
And the woes that ruin past them
As to blast them, only cast them
Forth like sea-flowers on the beach.
- Title
- Ground Swell, The
- Alternative Title
- Though moon in silver silence
- Date
- 1849 (latest)
- Bibliographic Citation
- Burleigh, George Shepard. The Maniac and Other Poems. Philadelphia: J. W. Moore, 1849, 202-204.
- Subject
- Weather (Storm)
- Ocean/Sea/Water
- Nature
- Media
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The Ground Swell
Part of Ground Swell, The
