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				Title:     The Aeolian Harp 
			    
Author: Herman Melville [
More Titles by Melville]		                
			    
_At The Surf Inn_
List the harp in window wailing
 Stirred by fitful gales from sea:
Shrieking up in mad crescendo--
 Dying down in plaintive key!
Listen: less a strain ideal
Than Ariel's rendering of the Real.
 What that Real is, let hint
 A picture stamped in memory's mint.
Braced well up, with beams aslant,
Betwixt the continents sails the _Phocion,_
For Baltimore bound from Alicant.
Blue breezy skies white fleeces fleck
Over the chill blue white-capped ocean:
From yard-arm comes--"Wreck ho, a wreck!"
Dismasted and adrift,
Longtime a thing forsaken;
Overwashed by every wave
Like the slumbering kraken;
Heedless if the billow roar,
Oblivious of the lull,
Leagues and leagues from shoal or shore,
It swims--a levelled hull:
Bulwarks gone--a shaven wreck,
Nameless and a grass-green deck.
A lumberman: perchance, in hold
Prostrate pines with hemlocks rolled.
It has drifted, waterlogged,
Till by trailing weeds beclogged:
 Drifted, drifted, day by day,
 Pilotless on pathless way.
It has drifted till each plank
Is oozy as the oyster-bank:
 Drifted, drifted, night by night,
 Craft that never shows a light;
Nor ever, to prevent worse knell,
Tolls in fog the warning bell.
From collision never shrinking,
Drive what may through darksome smother;
Saturate, but never sinking,
Fatal only to the _other!_
 Deadlier than the sunken reef
Since still the snare it shifteth,
 Torpid in dumb ambuscade
Waylayingly it drifteth.
O, the sailors--O, the sails!
O, the lost crews never heard of!
Well the harp of Ariel wails
Thought that tongue can tell no word of!
[The end]
Herman Melville's poem: Aeolian Harp
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