Poems in Wartime - From Volume III., the Works of Whittier: Anti-Slavery - Poems and Songs of Labor and Reform by John Greenleaf Whittier
page 44 of 65 (67%)
page 44 of 65 (67%)
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"For vain is mortal skill
The good ship on a stormy sea Is drifting at its will." Then up spake John de Matha "My mariners, never fear The Lord whose breath has filled her sail May well our vessel steer!" So on through storm and darkness They drove for weary hours; And lo! the third gray morning shone On Ostia's friendly towers. And on the walls the watchers The ship of mercy knew, They knew far off its holy cross, The red, the white, and blue. And the bells in all the steeples Rang out in glad accord, To welcome home to Christian soil The ransomed of the Lord. So runs the ancient legend By bard and painter told; And lo! the cycle rounds again, The new is as the old! With rudder foully broken, |
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