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1824–1897

THE FIRST AND LAST LAND

Francis Turner Palgrave

Thrice-blest, alone with Nature!— here, where gray Belerium fronts the spray Smiting the bastion'd crags through centuries flown, While,‘ neath the hissing surge,

Ocean sends up a deep, deep undertone, As though his heavy chariot-wheels went round: Nor is there other sound Save from the abyss of air, a plaintive note,

The seabirds’ calling cry, As‘ gainst the wind with well-poised weight they float, Or on some white-fringed reef set up their post, And sentinel the coast:—

Whilst, round each jutting cape, in pillar'd file, The lichen-bearded rocks Like hoary giants guard the sacred Isle. — Happy, alone with Nature thus!— Yet here

Dim, primal man is near;— The hawk-eyed eager traders, who of yore Through long Biscayan waves Star-steer'd adventurous from the Iberic shore

Or the Sidonian, with their fragrant freight Oil-olive, fig, and date; Jars of dark sunburnt wine, flax-woven robes, Or Tyrian azure glass

Wavy with gold, and agate-banded globes:— Changing for amber-knobs their Eastern ware Or tin-sand silvery fair, To temper brazen swords, or rim the shield

Of heroes, arm'd for fight:— While the rough miners, wondering, gladly yield The treasured ore; nor Alexander's name Know, nor fair Helen's shame;

Or in his tent how Peleus’ wrathful son Looks toward the sea, nor heeds The towers of still-unconquer'd Ilion.

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THE FIRST AND LAST LAND · Francis Turner Palgrave · Poetry Cove