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Madeline

With other poems and parables: By Thomas Gordon Hake

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 I. 
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IV. ON THE STORM OF LIFE.
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IV. ON THE STORM OF LIFE.

The heaving waters, quarried from the Deep,
Are piled above in one Atlantine wave.
Indented, lava-washed, the glairy steep
Hangs doubting o'er its hollow, empty grave.
And now like slimy serpents peak on peak
Erects its crest to strike the creviced dawn,
Then gnashed in foam before the billows break
Scatters the barren valley with its spawn.

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Yet fall not, Soul! thy pure and flaky form
Touched by the briny tumulus were lost.
Better for thee to drift before the storm
And be along the waste of waters tossed.
No aid accept, no aid to others tend:
Through dusk and foam can only such descend.
Myriads with thee across the darkness driven,
Snatch at the phantoms howling in the wind,
To share the crash of storms asunder riven,
And at their lull no further morrow find.
Gust after gust palls on the wretched ear,
The shriek prolongs the whistle of the gale.
Splash after splash, the graves are coming near,
One burial flood the surf-encircled vale.
Dark the horizon, lost its gentle line!
But He who stills the tempest walks the deck.
A like ordeal passed the One divine
To bear a world in safety through the wreck;
To reef the sails of Night, and through its shrouds
Point out the dawn amid dispersing clouds.