Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
By the Autumn Sea
By Paul Hamilton Hayne (18301886)F
Sad as the evening’s tender gray,
By the latest lustre of sunset kissed,
That wavers and wanes through an amber mist,—
There cometh a dream of the past to me,
On the desert sands, by the autumn sea.
And the face of the ocean is dim and pale,
And there rises a wind from the chill northwest,
That seemeth the wail of a soul’s unrest,
As the twilight falls, and the vapors flee
Far over the wastes of the autumn sea.
Upborne on the swell of the seaward tides;
And above the gleam of her topmost spar
Are the virgin eyes of the vesper-star
That shine with an angel’s ruth on me,—
A hopeless waif, by the autumn sea.
Through the shimmering surf, and the curlew’s scream
Falls faintly shrill from the darkening height;
The first weird sigh on the lips of Night
Breathes low through the sedge and the blasted tree,
With a murmur of doom, by the autumn sea.
Your gloom but deepens this human pain;
Those waves seem big with a nameless care,
That sky is a type of the heart’s despair,
As I linger and muse by the sombre lea,
And the night-shades close on the autumn sea.