Poseidon
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Thou who controllest
- “Thou who controllest the wide-spuming Ocean and settest its paces,
- Hear me, thou strong and resistless Poseidon, lord of the waters.
- Dancing thy waves in their revel Titanic, tossing my vessel
- One to another, laugh from their raucous throats of derision,
- Dropping it deep in their troughs till it buries its prow in the welter.
- Comrades dear as the drops of my heart have been left when it rises,
- Left in thy salt and lonely seas, and the scream of the tempest
- Chides me that still I live, but I live and I yield not to Hades.
- Staggering on as one laughed at and buffeted, straining for shelter,
- Hopes despairingly, so by the pitiless mob of thy billows
- Seized the ship goes stumbling on and is wounded and blinded,
- Seeming allowed to run through their ranks, but they mock at the struggle,
- Seeming allowed to escape, but they mean it not. They are thy minions.
- They are thy servants, thy nation, heartless and loud and triumphant,
- God of the waters, ruthless Poseidon.”[1]
- ↑ Collected Poems, p.519
See also