V.

The black men bow'd, the long oars bent,

They struck as if for sweet life's sake,

And one look'd back, but no man spake,

And all wills bent to one intent.

On through the golden fringe of day

Into the deep, dark night, away

And up the wave 'mid walls of wood

They cleft, they climb'd, they bowed, they bent,

But one stood tall, and restless stood,

And one sat still all night, all day,

And gazed in helpless wonderment.

Her hair pour'd down like darkling wine,

The black men lean'd, a sullen line,

The bent oars kept a steady song,

And all the beams of bright sunshine

That touch'd the waters wild and strong,

Fell drifting down and out of sight

Like fallen leaves, and it was night.

And night and day, and many days

They climb'd the sudden, dark gray tide,

And she sat silent at his side,

And he sat turning many ways:

Sat watching for his wily foe;

At last he baffled him. And yet

His brow gloom'd dark, his lips were set;

He lean'd, he peer'd through boughs, as though

From heart of forests deep and dim

Grim shapes could come confronting him.

A grand, uncommon man was he,

Broad-shoulder'd, and of Gothic form,

Strong-built, and hoary like a sea;

A high sea broken up by storm.

His face was brown and overwrought

By seams and shadows born of thought,

Not over gentle. And his eyes,

Bold, restless, resolute, and deep,

Too deep to flow like shallow fount

Of common men where waters mount

And men bend down their heads and weep—

Fierce, lumin'd eyes, where flames might rise

Instead of flood, and flash and sweep—

Strange eyes, that look'd unsatisfied

With all things fair or otherwise;

As if his inmost soul had cried

All time for something yet unseen,

Some long-desired thing denied.

A man whose soul was mightier far

Than his great self, and surged and fell

About himself as heaving seas

Lift up and lash, and boom, and swell

Above some solitary bar

That bursts through blown Samoa's sea,

And wreck and toss eternally.