AT SEA.
Shall we, the storm-tossed sailors, weep For those who may not sail again : Or wisely envy them, and keep Our pity for the living men ? Beyond the weary waste of sea, Beyond the wider waste of death, I strain my gaze and cry to thee Whose still heart never answereth. 0 brother, is thy coral bed So Bweet thou wilt not hear my speech ? This hand, methinks, if I were dead, To thy deai hand would strive to reach. 1 would not, if God gave us choice For each to bear the other's part, That mine should be the silent voice, And thine the silent, aching heart. Ab, well for any voyage done, Whate'er its end — or port, or reef : Better the voyage "e'er begun, For all ships sail the sea of Grief. —Atlantic Monthly. James Jeffrey Roche.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18900509.2.16
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Tablet, Volume XVIII, Issue 2, 9 May 1890, Page 13
Word Count
140AT SEA. New Zealand Tablet, Volume XVIII, Issue 2, 9 May 1890, Page 13
Using This Item
See our copyright guide for information on how you may use this title.