Night waned and wasted, and the fading stars  
Died out like lamps that long survived a feast,  
And the moon, pale with watching, sank to rest  
Behind the cloud-piled ramparts of the main.  
Young, blooming Morn, crowned with her bridal wreath,  
Bent oer her mirror clear, the faithful sea;  
And gazing on her loveliness therein,  
Blushed to the brows, till every imaged charm  
Flung roses on the bosom of the wave,  
Then, glancing heavenward, both, they blushed again,  
As sprang the Sun to claim his radiant bride;  
And sea and sky seemed but one rose of morn,  
Which thenceforth grew in glory, and the world  
Shot back her lesser light upon the day,  
While night sped on to seek the sombre shades  
That sleep in silent caves beyond the sea.  
The day grew calmer, hotter, and our barque  
Lay like a sleeping swan upon a lake,  
And such soft airs as blew from off the land  
Brought with them fragrant odours, and we felt  
That orange groves lay blooming neath the sun  
Which blazed so fiercely overhead at sea.  
We heard (with Fancys ear) a distant bell;  
And thro the haze that simmered on the Main  
Pictured a purple shorea convent towr  
And snowy cots, that from the dark hill-side  
Peeped forth tween plantain-patches at the sky,  
Or smiled through groves of cocos on the sea.  
Meanwhile our ship slid on, with breathing sails  
Fraught with the melody of murmured song  
Such as the zephyr chanted to the morn,  
And showers of diamonds flashed before the prow  
While sternwards whirled unstrungpale beads of foam,  
Pearls from the loosend chaplet of the sea.  
Mid these the flame-bright Nautilus, that seemed  
Itself a flowret cast upon the stream,  
Spread out its crimson sail and drifted on.  
Beyond arose a cloud (as twere) of birds,  
That leapt from out the wave to meet the sun,  
Flew a short circuit, till their wings grew dry,  
And seaward fell in showers of silver rain.  
Mid these careered the dolphin-squadrons swift,  
With mail of changeful hue, and Iris tints;  
And floating slowly on, a sea-flowr passed,  
A living creature (none the less a flowr)  
That lives its life in love, and dies for joy,  
Unmissed mid myriads in the sapphire sea.
Morning At Sea In The Tropics
written byGeorge Gordon McCrae
© George Gordon McCrae


 



