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PICTURES FROM APPLEDORE

James Russell Lowell

I

 

A heap of bare and splintery crags

Tumbled about by lightning and frost,

With rifts and chasms and storm-bleached jags,

That wait and growl for a ship to be lost;

No island, but rather the skeleton

Of a wrecked and vengeance-smitten one,

Where, æons ago, with half-shut eye,

The sluggish saurian crawled to die,

Gasping under titanic ferns;

Ribs of rock that seaward jut, 10

Granite shoulders and boulders and snags,

Round which, though the winds in heaven be shut,

The nightmared ocean murmurs and yearns,

Welters, and swashes, and tosses, and turns,

And the dreary black seaweed lolls and wags;

Only rock from shore to shore,

Only a moan through the bleak clefts blown,

With sobs in the rifts where the coarse kelp shifts,

Falling and lifting, tossing and drifting,

And under all a deep, dull roar, 20

Dying and swelling, forevermore,--

Rock and moan and roar alone,

And the dread of some nameless thing unknown,

These make Appledore.

 

These make Appledore by night:

Then there are monsters left and right;

Every rock is a different monster;

All you have read of, fancied, dreamed,

When you waked at night because you screamed,

There they lie for half a mile, 30

Jumbled together in a pile,

And (though you know they never once stir)

If you look long, they seem to be moving

Just as plainly as plain can be,

Crushing and crowding, wading and shoving

Out into the awful sea,

Where you can hear them snort and spout

With pauses between, as if they were listening,

Then tumult anon when the surf breaks glistening

In the blackness where they wallow about. 40

 

 

II

 

All this you would scarcely comprehend,

Should you see the isle on a sunny day;

Then it is simple enough in its way,--

Two rocky bulges, one at each end,

With a smaller bulge and a hollow between;

Patches of whortleberry and bay;

Accidents of open green,

Sprinkled with loose slabs square and gray,

Like graveyards for ages deserted; a few

Unsocial thistles; an elder or two, 50

Foamed over with blossoms white as spray;

And on the whole island never a tree

Save a score of sumachs, high as your knee.

That crouch in hollows where they may,

(The cellars where once stood a village, men say,)

Huddling for warmth, and never grew

Tall enough for a peep at the sea;

A general dazzle of open blue;

A breeze always blowing and playing rat-tat

With the bow of the ribbon round your hat; 60

A score of sheep that do nothing but stare

Up or down at you everywhere;

Three or four cattle that chew the cud

Lying about in a listless despair;

A medrick that makes you look overhead

With short, sharp scream, as he sights his prey,

And, dropping straight and swift as lead,

Splits the water with sudden thud;--

This is Appledore by day.

 

A common island, you will say; 70

But stay a moment: only climb

Up to the highest rock of the isle,

Stand there alone for a little while,

And with gentle approaches it grows sublime,

Dilating slowly as you win

A sense from the silence to take it in.

So wide the loneness, so lucid the air,

The granite beneath you so savagely bare,

You well might think you were looking down

From some sky-silenced mountain's crown, 80

Whose waist-belt of pines is wont to tear

Locks of wool from the topmost cloud.

Only be sure you go alone,

For Grandeur is inaccessibly proud,

And never yet has backward thrown

Her veil to feed the stare of a crowd;

To more than one was never shown

That awful front, nor is it fit

That she, Cothurnus-shod, stand bowed

Until the self-approving pit 90

Enjoy the gust of its own wit

In babbling plaudits cheaply loud;

She hides her mountains and her sea

From the harriers of scenery,

Who hunt down sunsets, and huddle and bay,

Mouthing and mumbling the dying day.

 

Trust me, 'tis something to be cast

Face to face with one's Self at last,

To be taken out of the fuss and strife,

The endless clatter of plate and knife, 100

The bore of books and the bores of the street,

From the singular mess we agree to call Life,

Where that is best which the most fools vote is,

And planted firm on one's own two feet

So nigh to the great warm heart of God,

You almost seem to feel it beat

Down from the sunshine and up from the sod;

To be compelled, as it were, to notice

All the beautiful changes and chances

Through which the landscape flits and glances, 110

And to see how the face of common day

Is written all over with tender histories,

When you study it that intenser way

In which a lover looks at his mistress.

 

Till now you dreamed not what could be done

With a bit of rock and a ray of sun:

But look, how fade the lights and shades

Of keen bare edge and crevice deep!

How doubtfully it fades and fades,

And glows again, yon craggy steep, 120

O'er which, through color's dreamiest grades,

The musing sunbeams pause and creep!

Now pink it blooms, now glimmers gray,

Now shadows to a filmy blue,

Tries one, tries all, and will not stay,

But flits from opal hue to hue,

And runs through every tenderest range

Of change that seems not to be change,

So rare the sweep, so nice the art,

That lays no stress on any part, 130

But shifts and lingers and persuades;

So soft that sun-brush in the west,

That asks no costlier pigments' aids,

But mingling knobs, flaws, angles, dints,

Indifferent of worst or best,

Enchants the cliffs with wraiths and hints

And gracious preludings of tints,

Where all seems fixed, yet all evades,

And indefinably pervades

Perpetual movement with perpetual rest! 140