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				Title:     Commemorative Of A Naval Victory 
			    
Author: Herman Melville [
More Titles by Melville]		                
			    
Sailors there are of the gentlest breed,
 Yet strong, like every goodly thing;
The discipline of arms refines,
 And the wave gives tempering.
 The damasked blade its beam can fling;
It lends the last grave grace:
The hawk, the hound, and sworded nobleman
 In Titian's picture for a king,
Are of hunter or warrior race.
In social halls a favored guest
 In years that follow victory won,
How sweet to feel your festal fame
 In woman's glance instinctive thrown:
 Repose is yours--your deed is known,
It musks the amber wine;
It lives, and sheds a light from storied days
 Rich as October sunsets brown,
Which make the barren place to shine.
But seldom the laurel wreath is seen
 Unmixed with pensive pansies dark;
There's a light and a shadow on every man
 Who at last attains his lifted mark--
 Nursing through night the ethereal spark.
Elate he never can be;
He feels that spirit which glad had hailed his worth,
 Sleep in oblivion.--The shark
Glides white through the phosphorus sea.
[The end]
Herman Melville's poem: Commemorative Of A Naval Victory
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