The Atlantic Cable

This giant nerve, at whose command

The world’s great pulses throb or sleep,—

It threads the undiscerned repose

Of the dark bases of the deep.

Around it settle in the calm

Fine tissues that a breath might mar,

Nor dream what fiery tidings pass,

What messages of storm and war.

Far over it, where filtered gleams

Faintly illume the mid-sea day,

Strange, pallid forms of fish or weed

In the obscure tide softly sway.

And higher, where the vagrant waves

Frequent the white, indifferent sun,

Where ride the smoke-blue hordes of rain

And the long vapors lift and run,

Passes perhaps some lonely ship

With exile hearts that homeward ache,—

While far beneath is flashed a word

That soon shall bid them bleed or break.