Rampolli by George MacDonald
page 61 of 162 (37%)
page 61 of 162 (37%)
|
Then the water above grows smooth as glass, While, below, dull roarings ply; And, trembling, they hear the murmur pass-- "High-hearted youth, farewell! good-bye!" And, hollower still, comes the howl affraying, Till their hearts are sick with the frightful delaying. If the crown itself thou in should fling, And say, "Who back with it hies Himself shall wear it, and shall be king," I should not covet the precious prize! What Ocean hides in that howling hell of it, Live soul will never come back to tell of it! Ships many, caught in that whirling surge, Shot sheer to their dismal doom: Keel and mast only did ever emerge, Shattered, from out the all-gulping tomb!-- Like the bluster of tempest, clearer and clearer, Comes its roaring nearer and ever nearer! It wallows, seethes, hisses, in raging rout, As when water wrestles with fire, Till to heaven the yeasty tongues they spout, Wave upon wave's back mounting higher; And as with the rumble of distant thunder Bellowing it bursts from the dark lap under. And see, from its bosom, flowing dark, |
|