In Memory of a Brother Drowned at Sea.
TO THE DAISY.
Sweet Flower! belike one day to haveA place upon thy poet’s grave,I welcome thee once more:But He, who was on land, at sea,My Brother, too, in loving thee,Although he loved more silently,Sleeps by his native shore.
Ah! hopeful, hopeful was the dayWhen to that ship he bent his way,To govern and to guide:His wish was gained: a little timeWould bring him back in manhood’s primeAnd free for life, these hills to climb;With all his wants supplied.
And full of hope day followed dayWhile that stout Ship at anchor layBeside the shores of Wight;The May had then made all things green;And, floating there, in pomp serene,That Ship was goodly to be seen,His pride and his delight!
Yet then, when called ashore, he soughtThe tender peace of rural thought:In more than happy moodTo your abodes, bright daisy Flowers!He then would steal at leisure hours,And loved you glittering in your bowers,A starry multitude.
But hark the word!—the ship is gone;—Returns from her long course:—anonSets sail:—in season due,Once more on English earth they stand:But, when a third time from the landThey parted, sorrow was at handFor Him and for his crew.
Ill-fated Vessel?—ghastly shock!—At length delivered from the rock,The deep she hath regained;And through the stormy night they steer;Labouring for life, in hope and fear,To reach a safer shore—how near,Yet not to be attained!
“Silence!” the brave Commander cried;To that calm word a shriek replied,It was the last death-shriek.—A few (my soul oft sees that sight)Survive upon the tall mast’s height;But one dear remnant of the night—For Him in vain I seek.
Six weeks beneath the moving seaHe lay in slumber quietly;Unforced by wind or waveTo quit the Ship for which he died,(All claims of duty satisfied);And there they found him at her side;And bore him to the grave.
Vain service! yet not vainly doneFor this, if other end were none,That He, who had been castUpon a way of life unmeetFor such a gentle Soul and sweet,Should find an undisturbed retreatNear what he loved, at last—
That neighbourhood of grove and fieldTo Him a resting-place should yield,A meek man and a brave!The birds shall sing and ocean makeA mournful murmur forhissake;And Thou, sweet Flower, shalt sleep and wakeUpon his senseless grave.