THE BALLAD OF DEAD MEN'S BAY

[Original]

The sea swings owre the slants of sand,

All white with winds that drive.,

The sea swirls up to the still dim strand,

Where nae man comes alive.

At the grey soft edge of the fruitless surf

A light flame sinks and springs;

At the grey soft rim of the flowerless turf

A low flame leaps and clings.

What light is this on a sunless shore,

What gleam on a starless sea?

Was it earth's or hell's waste womb that bore

Such births as should not be?

As lithe snakes turning, as bright stars burning,

They bicker and beckon and call;

As wild waves churning, as wild winds yearn-

ing,

They flicker and climb and fall.

A soft strange cry from the landward rings—

"What ails the sea to shine?"

A keen sweet note from the spray's rim springs—

"What fires are these of thine?"

"A soul am I that was born on earth

For ae day's waesome span:

Death bound me fast on the bourn of birth,

Ere I were christened man.

"A light by night, I fleet and fare

Till the day of wrath and woe;

On the hems of earth and the skirts of air

Winds hurl me to and fro."

"O well is thee, though the weird be strange

That bids thee flit and flee;

For hope is child of the womb of change,

And hope keeps watch with thee.

"When the years are gone, and the time is

come

God's grace may give thee grace;

And thy soul may sing, though thy soul were

dumb,

And shine before God's face.

"But I, that lighten and revel and roll

With the foam of the plunging sea,

No sign is mine of a breathing soul

That God should pity me.

"Nor death, nor heaven, nor hell, nor birth

Hath part in me nor mine:

Strong lords are these of the living earth

And loveless lords of thine.

"But I that know nor lord nor life

More sure than storm or spray,

Whose breath is made of sport and strife,

Whereon shall I find stay?"

"And wouldst thou change thy doom with me,

Full fain with thee would I:

For the life that lightens and lifts the sea

Is more than earth or sky.

"And what if the day of doubt and doom

Shall save nor smite not me?

I would not rise from the slain world's tomb

If there be no more sea.

"Take he my soul that gave my soul,

And give it thee to keep;

And me, while seas and stars shall roll

Thy life that falls on sleep."

That word went up through the mirk mid sky,

And evén to God's own ear:

And the Lord was ware of the keen twin cry,

And wroth was he to hear.

He's tane the soul of the unsained child

That fled to death from birth;

He's tane the light of the wan sea wild,

And bid it burn on earth.

He's given the ghaist of the babe new-born

The gift of the water-sprite,

To ride on revel from morn to morn

And roll from night to night.

He's given the sprite of the wild wan sea

The gift of the new-born man,

A soul for ever to bide and be

When the years have filled their span.

When a year was gone and a year was come,.

O loud and loud cried they—

"For the lee-lang year thou hast held us dumb

Take now thy gifts away!"

O loud and lang they cried on him,

And sair and sair they prayed:

"Is the face of thy grace as the night's face

grim

For those thy wrath has made?"

A cry more bitter than tears of men

From the rim of the dim grey sea;—

"Give me my living soul again,

The soul thou gavest me,

The doom and the dole of kindly men,

To bide my weird and be!"

A cry more keen from the wild low land

Than the wail of waves that roll;—

"Take back the gift of a loveless hand,

Thy gift of doom and dole,

The weird of men that bide on land;

Take from me, take my soul!"

The hands that smite are the hands that spare

They build and break the tomb;

They turn to darkness and dust and air

The fruits of the waste earth's womb *

But never the gift of a granted prayer,

The dole of a spoken doom.

Winds may change at a word unheard,

But none may change the tides:

The prayer once heard is as God's own word;

The doom once dealt abides.

And ever a cry goes up by day,

And ever a wail by night;

And nae ship comes by the weary bay

But her shipmen hear them wail and pray,

And see with earthly sight

The twofold flames of the twin lights play

Where the sea-banks green and the sea-floods

grey

Are proud of peril and fain of prey,

And the sand quakes ever; and ill fare they

That look upon that light.

——A. C. Swinburne.