Thomas R. Lounsbury, ed. (1838–1915). Yale Book of American Verse. 1912.
Thomas Bailey Aldrich 1836–1907
Thomas Bailey Aldrich191 On Lynn Terrace
A
All night to hear it plunging on the shore—
In this sea-dream such draughts of life I take,
I cannot ask for more.
The task unfinished, and the weary hours;
That long wave softly bears me back to Spain
And the Alhambra’s towers!
To list the mule-bells jingling on the height;
Below, against the dull esparto grass,
The almonds glimmer white.
Invite my fancy, and I wander through
The gable-shadowed, zigzag streets of towns
The world’s first sailors knew.
Low-lying cliffs of lovely Calais rise;
Or yonder, with the pomp of olden days,
Venice salutes my eyes.
I see, far off, the red tiled hamlets shine,
And catch, through slits of windows here and there,
Blue glimpses of the Rhine.
And through bleak wastes to where the sunset’s fires
Light up the white-walled Russian citadel,
The Kremlin’s domes and spires.
By garden-plots of rose and heliotrope;
And now I face the sudden pelting rains
On some lone Alpine slope.
I saunter, and the merchants at the doors
Smile, and entice me: here are jewels like stars,
And curved knives of the Moors;
What would Howadji—silver, gold, or stone?
Prone on the sun-scorched plain outside the gates
The camels make their moan.
High on the windy terrace, day by day;
And mine the children’s laughter, sweet and clear,
Ringing across the bay.
For me the petulant sea-gull takes its flight;
And mine the tender moonrise on the sea,
And hollow caves of night.