University of Virginia Library

ON THE STREAM.

Night, but no cloud in the sky;
And yonder the lights of the stream gleam and quiver
In a flame-spotted pyramid up from the river,
As I float in my boat so despairingly by
On the stream.

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Quiet the ships at the piers;
Like a forest in winter, their masts and their spars
Stand in relief from the sky and the stars;
I can see them in spite of my fast-falling tears,
On the stream.
Creeping from wooden-walled slips,
I watch the filled ferry-boats ply to and fro,
Impatiently pawing the wave as they go,
Threading their way through the fast-anchored ships
On the stream.
In the far distance, I see
No light of a lamp from a window on shore;
That was her signal last summer—no more
Will that lamp through the pane cast a glimmer for me
On the stream.
Though as my life she was dear,
I could have borne it to think of her dead;
But deeper than that was the pang when she fled
Away with another—fled, leaving me here,
On the stream.
Sometimes they tell me I'm crazed;
God knows if I am; but I think not, although
I feel somewhat stunned with this dull, crushing blow;
I still keep my senses, though floating, amazed,
On the stream.
Floating half way from the shore—
Thus in my boat, in and out of the light,
I drift and I drift with my woe and the night,
Till the storm comes—and then, they will see me no more
On the stream.