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				Title:     A Requiem For Soldiers lost in Ocean Transports 
			    
Author: Herman Melville [
More Titles by Melville]		                
			    
When, after storms that woodlands rue,
 To valleys comes atoning dawn,
The robins blithe their orchard-sports renew;
 And meadow-larks, no more withdrawn
Caroling fly in the languid blue;
The while, from many a hid recess,
Alert to partake the blessedness,
The pouring mites their airy dance pursue.
 So, after ocean's ghastly gales,
When laughing light of hoyden morning breaks,
 Every finny hider wakes--
 From vaults profound swims up with glittering scales;
 Through the delightsome sea he sails,
With shoals of shining tiny things
Frolic on every wave that flings
 Against the prow its showery spray;
All creatures joying in the morn,
Save them forever from joyance torn,
 Whose bark was lost where now the  dolphins play;
Save them that by the fabled shore,
 Down the pale stream are washed away,
Far to the reef of bones are borne;
 And never revisits them the light,
Nor sight of long-sought land and pilot more;
 Nor heed they now the lone bird's flight
Round the lone spar where mid-sea surges pour.
[The end]
Herman Melville's poem: Requiem
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