Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
The Three Ships
By Julia C. R. Dorr (18251913)O
Flew, like a startled bird, our bark.
Sea-gulls followed us over the deep.
Rich with their wealth of buried ores;
With the secrets locked in their hearts away;
Towered aloft in the clear sunshine;
And the priest with his chanted prayer and hymn.
As one who sails in a dream, sailed we,
Nothing was round us but sea and sky.
A crescent dim in the azure hung;
With bars of purple across his breast.
The billows were all aflame below;
To some mystic world’s enchanted state;
Crimson and amber and amethyst.
Into the heart of the mystery,—
The fairest visions under the sun.
Were the sails that flew from each mast of jet;
Streamer and pennant floated high.
Into the glowing, reddening west;
They slowly passed through its gate of gold.
Than schooners laden with common ore?
And the decks were stained with earthly moil?
Into the west from our yearning sight,
Was laden not for an earthly shore!
Where all we have lost shall yet be won;
Bright as that sunset’s golden gleams;
Grew fairer still in the twilight hush.
Thoughts no mortal may utter here,—
Words too holy for human tongue,—
The fadeless wreaths that we would have won!
Traversed the measureless waste of blue,
And to us a voice said, softly, “Wait!”