OUTWARD BOUND,

By Sarah Chauncey Woolsey

A grievous day of wrathful winds,

Of low-hung clouds, which scud and fly,

And drop cold rains, then lift and show

A sullen realm of upper sky.

The sea is black as night; it roars

From lips afoam with cruel spray,

Like some fierce, many-throated pack

Of wolves, which scents and chases prey.

Crouched in my little wind-swept nook,

I hear the menacing voices call,

And shudder, as above the deck

Topples and swings the weltering wall.

It seems a vast and restless grave,

Insatiate, hungry, beckoning

With dreadful gesture of command

To every free and living thing.

“O Lord,” I cry, “Thou makest life

And hope and all sweet things to be;

Rebuke this hovering, following Death,—

This horror never born of Thee.”

A sudden gleam, the waves light up

With radiant momentary hues,—

Amber and shadowy pearl and gold,

Opal and green and unknown blues,—

And, rising on the tossing walls,

Within the foaming valleys swung,

Soft shapes of sea-birds, dimly seen,

Flutter and float and call their young,

A moment; then the lowering clouds

Settle anew above the main,

The colors die, the waves rise higher,

And night and terror rule again.

No more I see the small, dim shapes,

So unafraid of wind and wave,

Nestling beneath the tempest's roar,

Cradled in what I deemed a grave.

But all night long I lay and smiled

At thought of those soft folded wings,

And trusting, with the trustful birds,

In Him who cares for smallest things.