



 

|
Ballads
and Lyrics
by
Bliss Carman
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IN
BAY STREET
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"WHAT
do you sell, John Camplejohn,
In Bay Street by the sea?"
"Oh, turtle shell is what I sell,
In great variety:
"Trinkets
and combs and rosaries,
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All
keepsakes from the sea;
’T is choose and buy what takes the eye,
In such a treasury."
"’Tis
none of these, John Camplejohn,
Though curious they be,
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But
something more I’m looking for,
In Bay Street by the sea.
"Where
can I buy the magic charm
Of the Bahaman sea,
That fills mankind with peace of mind
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And
soul’s felicity?
"Now,
what do you sell, John Camplejohn,
In Bay Street by the sea,
Tinged with that true and native blue
Of lapis lazuli?
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"Look from your door, and tell me now
The color of the sea.
Where can I buy that wondrous dye,
And take it home with me?
"And
where can I buy that rustling sound,
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In
this city by the sea,
Of the plumy palms in their high blue calms;
Or the stately poise and free
"Of
the bearers who go up and down,
Silent as mystery,
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Burden
on head, with naked tread,
In the white streets by the sea?
"And
where can I buy, John Camplejohn,
In Bay Street by the sea,
The sunlight’s fall on the old pink wall, |
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Or
the gold of the orange-tree?"
"Ah,
that is more than I’ve heard tell
In Bay Street by the sea,
Since I began, my roving man,
A trafficker to be. |
40 |
"As sure as I’m John Camplejohn,
And Bay Street’s by the sea,
Those things for gold have not been sold,
Within my memory.
"But
what would you give, my roving man
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From
countries over-sea,
For the things you name, the life of the same,
And the power to bid them be?"
"I’d
give my hand, John Camplejohn,
In Bay Street by the sea, |
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For
the smallest dower of that dear power
To paint the things I see."
"My roving man, I never heard,
On any land or sea
Under the sun, of any one
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55 |
Could
sell that power to thee."
"’Tis
sorry news, John Camplejohn,
If this be destiny,
That every mart should know that art,
Yet none can sell it me. |
60 |
"But look you, here’s the grace of
God:
There’s neither price nor fee,
Duty nor toll, that can control
The power to love and see.
"To
each his luck, John Camplejohn,
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Say
I. And as for me,
Give me the pay of an idle day
In Bay Street by the sea." |
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