Page:The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 15.djvu/292

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284
The Frozen Harbor.
[March,

I linger, until, at evening,
  The town-roofs, towering high,
Uprear in the dimness their tall, dark chimneys,
  Indenting the sunset sky,
And the pendent spear on the edge of the pier
  Signals my homeward way,
As it gleams through the dusk like a walrus's tusk
  On the floes of a polar bay.

Then I think of the desolate households
  On which the day shuts down,—
What misery hides in the darkened tides
  Of life in yonder town!
I think of the lonely poet
  In his hours of coldness and pain,
His fancies full-freighted, like lighters belated,
  All frozen within his brain.

And I hearken to the moanings
  That come from the burdened bay:
As a camel, that kneels for his lading, reels,
  And cannot bear it away,
The mighty load is slowly
  Upheaved with struggle and pain
From centre to side, then the groaning tide
  Sinks heavily down again.

So day and night you may hear it
  Panting beneath its pack,
Till sailor and saw, till south wind and thaw,
  Unbind it from its back.
O Sun! will thy beam ever gladden the stream
  And bid its burden depart?
O Life! all in vain do we strive with the chain
  That fetters and chills the heart?

Already in vision prophetic
  On yonder height I stand:
The gulls are gay upon the bay,
  The swallows on the land;—
'Tis spring-time now; like an aspen-bough
  Shaken across the sky,
In the silvery light with twinkling flight
  The rustling plovers fly.

Aloft in the sunlit cordage
  Behold the climbing tar,
With his shadow beside on the sail white and wide,
  Climbing a shadow-spar!
Up the glassy stream with issuing steam
  The cutter crawls again,
All winged with cloud and buzzing loud,
  Like a bee upon the pane.