



 

|
Ballads
and Lyrics
by
Bliss Carman
|
WHITE
NASSAU
|
|
THERE
is fog upon the river, there is mirk upon the
town;
You can hear the groping ferries as they hoot
each other down;
From the Battery to Harlem there’s seven
miles of slush,
Through looming granite canyons of glitter, noise,
and rush.
Are
you sick of phones and tickers and crazing cable
gongs,
|
5 |
Of
the theatres, the hansoms, and the breathless
Broadway throngs,
Of Flouret’s and the Waldorf and the chilly,
drizzly Park,
When there’s hardly any morning and five
o’clock is dark?
I know
where there’s a city, whose streets are
white and clean,
And sea-blue morning loiters by walls where roses
lean,
|
10 |
And
quiet dwells; that’s Nassau, beside her
creaming key,
The queen of the Lucayas in the blue Bahaman sea.
She’s
ringed with surf and coral, she’s crowned
with sun and palm;
She has the old-world leisure, the regal tropic
calm;
The trade winds fan her forehead; in everlasting
June
|
15 |
| She
reigns from deep verandas above her blue lagoon.
She has had many suitors, —Spaniard and
Buccaneer,—
Who roistered for her beauty and spilt their blood
for her;
But none has dared molest her, since the Loyalist
Deveaux
Went down from Carolina a hundred years ago.
|
20 |
Unmodern, undistracted, by grassy ramp and fort,
In decency and order she holds her modest court;
She seems to have forgotten rapine and greed and
strife,
In that unaging gladness and dignity of life.
Through
streets as smooth as asphalt and white as bleaching
shell,
|
25 |
Where
the slip-shod heel is happy and the naked foot
goes well,
In their gaudy cotton kerchiefs, with swaying
hips and free,
Go her black folk in the morning to the market
of the sea.
Into
her bright sea-gardens the flushing tide-gates
lead,
Where fins of chrome and scarlet loll in the lifting
weed;
|
30 |
With
the long sea-draft behind them, through luring
coral groves
The shiny water-people go by in painted droves.
Under
her old pink gateways, where Time a moment turns,
Where hang the orange lanterns and the red hibiscus
burns,
Live the harmless merry lizards, quicksilver in
the sun,
|
35 |
Or
still as any image with their shadow on a
stone.
Through
the lemon-trees at leisure a tiny olive bird
Moves all day long and utters his wise assuring
word;
While up in their blue chantry murmur the solemn
palms,
At their litanies of joyance, their ancient ceaseless
psalms.
|
40 |
There in the endless sunlight, within the surf’s
low sound,
Peace tarries for a lifetime at doorways unrenowned;
And a velvet air goes breathing across the sea-girt
land,
Till the sense begins to waken and the soul to
understand.
There’s
a pier in the East River, where a black Ward Liner
lies, |
45 |
With
her wheezy donkey-engines taking cargo and
supplies;
She will clear the Hook to-morrow for the Indies
of the West,
For the lovely white girl city in the Islands
of the Blest.
She’ll
front the riding winter on the gray Atlantic seas,
And thunder through the surf-heads till her funnels
crust and freeze;
|
50 |
She’ll
grapple the Southeaster, the Thing without a Mind,
Till she drops him, mad and monstrous, with the
light ship far behind.
Then
out into a morning all summer warmth and blue!
By the breathing of her pistons, by the purring
of the screw,
By the springy dip and tremor as she rises, you
can tell
|
55 |
Her
heart is light and easy as she meets the lazy
swell.
With
the flying fish before her, and the white
wake running aft,
Her smoke-wreath hanging idle, without breeze
enough for draft,
She will travel fair and steady, and in the afternoon
Run down the floating palm-tops where lift the
Isles of June.
|
60 |
With the low boom of breakers for her only signal
gun,
She will anchor off the harbor when her thousand
miles are done,
And there’s my love, white Nassau, girt with
her foaming key,
The queen of the Lucayas in the blue Bahaman
sea! |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|