Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.
The Old Seaport
By David Macbeth Moir (17981851)W
And Day, with closing eye,
Scowled from beneath the sullen clouds
Of pale November’s sky,
In downcast meditation
All silently I stood,
Gazing the wintry ocean’s
Rough, bleak, and barren flood.
Was nowhere to be seen;
The caverned sea-rocks beetled o’er
The billows rushing green;
There was no sound from aught around,
Save, mid the echoing caves,
The plashing and the dashing
Of the melancholy waves.
The gray gulls flew in swarms;
And far beneath the surf upheaved
The sea-weed’s tangly arms;
The face of Nature in a pall
Death-shrouded seemed to be,
As by St. Serf’s lone tomb arose
The dirges of the sea.
Not far remote there lay
Thine old dim harbor, Culross,
Smoky and worn and gray;
Through far-back generations
Thy blackened piles had stood,
And, though the abodes of living men,
All looked like solitude.
And ruin and decay;
Of fierce, wild times departed;
Of races passed away;
Of quaint, grim vessels beating up
Against the whelming breeze;
Of tempest-stricken mariners,
Far on the foamy seas.
Now dust within their graves,
Who sailed with Barton or with Spens,
To breast the trampling waves;
And how, in shallops picturesque,
Unawed they drifted forth,
Directed by the one bright star
That points the stormy North.
And strong pines bowed to earth,
Pale wives, with trembling children mute,
Would cower beside the hearth,—
All sadly musing on the ships
That, buffeting the breeze,
Held but a fragile plank betwixt
The sailor and the seas.
What wondrous tales they told,
Of birds with rainbow plumage,
And trees with fruits of gold;
Of perils in the wilderness,
Beside the lion’s den;
And huts beneath the giant palms,
Where dwelt the painted men!
My spirit loved to stray,
Back through the mists of hooded Eld,
Lone wandering, far away;
When dim-eyed Superstition
Upraised her eldritch croon,
And witches held their orgies
Beneath the waning moon.
To days had Fancy flown
When Canmore or when Kenneth dree’d
The Celt’s uneasy crown;
When men were bearded savages,
An unenlightened horde,
Mid which gleamed Cunning’s scapulaire,
And War’s unshrinking sword.
Thronged past the plaided bands;—
And slanting lay the Norsemen’s keels
On ocean’s dreary sands;—
And on the long flat moorlands,
The cairn, with lichens gray,
Marked where their souls shrieked forth in blood,
On Battle’s iron day.
The ivied Abbey old,
In whose grim vaults the Bruces kneel
In marble quaint and cold;
And where, inurned, lies hid the heart
Of young Kinloss deplored,
Whose blood, by Belgium’s Oster-Scheldt,
Stained Sackville’s ruthless sword.
But, on my eerie sight,
Remained the old dim seaport
Beneath the scowl of night;
The sea-mews for their island cliffs
Had left the homeless sky,
And only to the dirgeful blast
The wild seas made reply.