Poems (Welby)/The Captive Sailor-Boy

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
4490622Poems — The Captive Sailor-BoyAmelia Welby
THE CAPTIVE SAILOR BOY.
  The light of many stars
Quivers in tremulous softness on the air,
And the night-breeze is singing here and there,
  Yet from my prison-bars
A narrow strip of sky is all I see—
O! that some kindly hand would set me free!

  The bright new moon is hung
Up 'mid the softness of the fleecy clouds,
And the far ocean 'neath its foamy shrouds
  Thrills like a harp fresh strung,
And the wild sea-birds on quick pinions flee—
O! for one glance upon the deep blue sea!

  Why should the young and brave
Be fettered thus upon the fresh green earth?
Give me one hour beside my mother's hearth,
  And then for ocean's wave!
Free as the laughing billows I would toss—
O! for the swift wing of the albatros!

  When slumber waves her wand
Over my brow, I wander in my dreams
Close by the ripples of our soft blue streams
  Far in my native land,
And lovely visions o'er my eye-lids play!
that I could but dream my life away!

  I see my mother then;
A pleasant smile sleeps on her features fair,
And the low cadence of her whispered prayer
  Steals on my ear again,
As when I knelt beside her blessed knee—
Mother, sweet Mother, dost thou pray for me?

  Upon the summer rose
Nature's faint pencilings are softly seen,
Laid on with cunning hand, and bright and green,
  Where the wood-branches close
The honey-suckle wreathes our cottage eaves—
Alas! I may not sit beneath its leaves!

  Before I sought the sea,
1 used to wander with my sister sweet,
And many a winding path our little feet
  Made round the old oak tree,
Where in the sunshine we were wont to play—
And they are there—but I am far away!

  O! could I only ride
Upon the ocean where the wild winds meet,
And where the sea-shell singeth passing sweet
  Under the trembling tide,
The demon of the storms I would not fear—
But O! I am a fettered captive here!

  O! could I see my home
If but to kiss my sister's cheek once more,
And hear thee, Mother, bless me o'er and o'er!
  For then not e'en my doom
Could dim thy truant's laughter-loving eye—
Alas! without thy blessing I must die!

  Die in this dreary cell,
With no fond ear to catch my parting breath;
In bondage I must wrestle here with death,
  Without one sweet farewell
From lips, that oft have smiled on me in joy—
Alas! sweet Mother, for thy captive boy!