THE PIMPERNEL
by: Celia Thaxter (1835-1894)
HE walks beside the silent shore,
The tide is high, the breeze is still;
No ripple breaks the ocean-floor,
The sunshine sleeps upon the hill.
-
- The turf is warm beneath her feet,
Bordering the beach of stone and shell,
And thick about her path the sweet
Red blossoms of the pimpernel.
-
- O sleep not yet, my flower! she cries,
Nor prophesy of storm to come;
Tell me that under steadfast skies
Fair winds shall bring my lover home.
-
- She stoops to gather flower and shell,
She sits, and, smiling, studies each
She hears the full tide rise and swell
And whisper softly on the beach.
-
- Waking she dreams a golden dream,
Remembering with what still delight,
To watch the sunsets fading gleam,
Here by the waves they stood last night.
-
- She leans on that encircling arm,
Divinely strong with power to draw
Her nature, as the moon doth charm
The swaying sea with heavenly law.
-
- All lost in bliss the moments glide,
She feels his whisper, his caress;
The murmur of the mustering tide
Brings her no presage of distress.
-
- What breaks her dream? She lifts her eyes,
Reluctant to destroy the spell;
The color from her bright cheek dies,
Close folded is the pimpernel!
-
- With rapid glance she scans the sky:
Rises a sudden wind, and grows,
And charged with storm the cloud-heaps lie.
Well may the scarlet blossoms close!
-
- A touch, and bliss is turned to bale!
Life only keeps the sense of pain;
The world holds naught save one white sail
Flying before the wind and rain.
- Broken upon the wheel of fear
She wears the storm-vexed hour away;
And now in gold and fire draws near
The sunset of her troubled day.
-
- But to her sky is yet denied
The sun that lights the world for her:
She sweeps the rose-flushed ocean wide
With eager eyes that quick tears blur.
-
- And lonely, lonely all the space
Stretches, with never sign of sail,
And sadder grows her wistful face,
And all the sunset splendors fail.
-
- And cold and pale, in still despair,
With heavier grief than tongue can tell,
She sinks, upon her lips a prayer,
Her cheek against the pimpernel.
-
- Wee blossoms wet with showery tears
On her shut eyes their droplets shed,
Only the wakened waves she hears
That singing drown his rapid tread.
-
- "Sweet, I am here !" Joys gates swing wide,
And heaven is theirs, and all is well,
And left beside the ebbing tide
Forgotten is the pimpernel.
|
"The Pimpernel" is reprinted
from The Atlantic Monthly, vol. 32, issue 190 (August
1873). |
MORE
POEMS BY CELIA THAXTER |
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