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The
Dread Voyage Poems
by
William Wilfred Campbell
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THE
DREAD VOYAGE
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TRIM
the sails the weird stars under—
Past the iron hail and thunder,
Past the mystery and the wonder,
Sails
our fated bark;
Past the myriad voices hailing,
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5 |
Past
the moaning and the wailing,
The far voices failing, failing,
Drive
we to the dark.
Past the headlands grim and sombre,
Past the shores of mist and slumber,
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10 |
Leagues
on leagues no man may number,
Soundings
none can mark;
While the olden voices calling,
One by one behind are falling;
Into silence dread, appalling,
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15 |
| Drift
we to the dark.
Far behind, the sad eyes yearning,
Hands that wring for our returning,
Lamps of love yet vainly burning:
Past
the headlands stark!
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20 |
Through
the wintry snows and sleeting,
On our pallid faces beating,
Through the phantom twilight fleeting.
Drive
we to the dark.
Without knowledge, without warning,
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25 |
Drive
we to no lands of morning;
Far ahead no signals horning
Hail our
nightward bark.
Hopeless, helpless, weird, outdriven,
Fateless, friendless, dread, unshriven,
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30 |
For
some race-doom unforgiven,
Drive
we to the dark.
Not one craven or unseemly;
In the flare-light gleaming dimly,
Each ghost-face is watching grimly:
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35 |
Past
the headlands stark!
Hearts wherein no hope may waken,
Like the clouds of night wind-shaken,
Chartless, anchorless, forsaken,
Drift
we to the dark.
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40 |
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