Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Poems. II. Very Far AwayWilliam Alexander (18241911)
O
Surpassing southern mountain’s snow,
That to far sails the dying light
Lends, where the dark ships onward go
Upon the golden highway broad
That leads up to the isles of God.
Of rarer snow ’neath moon or star
Where, with her graceful sails all set,
Some happy vessel seen afar,
As if in an enchanted sleep
Steers o’er the tremulous stretching deep.
Ere gleams like that upon ye light:
O’er golden spaces of the sea,
From mysteries of the lucent night,
Such touch comes never to the boat
Wherein across the waves we float.
Life’s whitest sail ye still refuse,
And flying on before us shine
Upon some distant bark ye choose.
—By night or day, across the spray,
That sail is very far away.