Cape Cod Ballads, and Other Verse. Joseph Crosby Lincoln

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Cape Cod Ballads, and Other Verse - Joseph Crosby Lincoln

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Its clammy curtain, damp and cold; He minds it not—his work he knows, 'T is but to fill an empty hold. Oft, driven through the night's blind wrack, He feels the dread berg's ghastly breath, Or hears draw nigh through walls of black A throbbing engine chanting death; But with a calm, unwrinkled brow He fronts them, grim and undismayed, For storm and ice and liner's bow— These are but chances of the trade. Yet well he knows—where'er it be, On low Cape Cod or bluff Cape Ann— With straining eyes that search the sea A watching woman waits her man: He knows it, and his love is deep, But work is work, and bread is bread, And though men drown and women weep The hungry thousands must be fed. To some the gain, to some the loss, To each his chance, the game with Fate: For men must die that men may liveDear Lord, be kind to those who wait.

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      Oh, the song of the Sea—

       The wonderful song of the Sea!

       Like the far-off hum of a throbbing drum

       It steals through the night to me:

       And my fancy wanders free

       To a little seaport town,

       And a spot I knew, where the roses grew

       By a cottage small and brown;

       And a child strayed up and down

       O'er hillock and beach and lea,

       And crept at dark to his bed, to hark

       To the wonderful song of the Sea.

       Oh, the song of the Sea—

       The mystical song of the Sea!

       What strains of joy to a dreaming boy

       That music was wont to be!

       And the night-wind through the tree

       Was a perfumed breath that told

       Of the spicy gales that filled the sails

       Where the tropic billows rolled

       And the rovers hid their gold

       By the lone palm on the key—

       But the whispering wave their secret gave

       In the mystical song of the Sea.

       Oh, the song of the Sea—

       The beautiful song of the Sea!

       The mighty note from the ocean's throat,

       The laugh of the wind in glee!

       And swift as the ripples flee

       With the surges down the shore,

       It bears me back, o'er life's long track,

       To home and its love once more.

       I stand at the open door,

       Dear mother, again with thee,

       And hear afar on the booming bar

       The beautiful song of the Sea.

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      Oh, the wild November wind,

       How it blew!

       How the dead leaves rasped and rustled,

       Soared and sank and buzzed and bustled

       As they flew;

       While above the empty square,

       Seeming skeletons in air,

       Battered branches, brown and bare,

       Gauntly grinned;

       And the frightened dust-clouds, flying.

       Heard the calling and the crying

       Of the wind—

       The wild November wind.

       Oh, the wild November wind,

       How it screamed!

       How it moaned and mocked and muttered

       At the cottage window, shuttered,

       Whence there streamed

       Fitful flecks of firelight mild:

       And within, a mother smiled,

       Singing softly to her child

       As there dinned

       Round the gabled roof and rafter

       Long and loud the shout and laughter

       Of the wind—

       The wild November wind.

       Oh, the wild November wind,

       How it rang

       Through the rigging of a vessel

       Rocking where the great waves wrestle!

       And it sang,

       Light and low, that mother's song;

       And the master, staunch and strong,

       Heard the sweet strain drift along—

       Softened, thinned—

       Heard the tightened cordage ringing

       Till it seemed a loved voice singing

       In the wind—

       The wild November wind.

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      (Dedicated to the Men in the United States Life-saving Service.) When the Lord breathes his wrath above the bosom of the waters, When the rollers are a-poundin' on the shore, When the mariner's a-thinkin' of his wife and sons and daughters, And the little home he'll, maybe, see no more; When the bars are white and yeasty and the shoals are all a-frothin', When the wild no'theaster's cuttin' like a knife; Through the seethin' roar and screech he's patrollin' on the beach— The

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