Rapids At Night
Here at the roots of the mountains,
Between the sombre legions of cedars and tamaracks,
The rapids charge the ravine:
A little light, cast by foam under starlight,
Wavers about the shimmering stems of the birches:
Here rise up the clangorous sounds of battle,
Immense and mournful.
Far above curves the great dome of
Drawn with the limitless lines of the stars and the planets.
Deep at the core of the tumult,
Deeper than all the voices that cry at the surface,
Dwells one fathomless sound,
Under the hiss and cry, the stroke and the plangent clamour.
O human heart that sleeps,
Wild with rushing dreams and deep with sadness!
The abysmal roar drops into almost silence,
While over its sleep play in various
Innumerous voices crashing in laughter;
Then rising calm, overwhelming,
Slow in power,
Rising supreme in utterance,
It sways, and reconquers and floods all the spaces of silence,
One voice, deep with the sadness,
That dwells at the core of all things.
There by a nest in the glimmering birches,
Speaks a thrush as if startled from slumber,
Dreaming of Southern ricefields,
The moted glow of the amber sunlight,
Where the long ripple roves among the reeds.
Above curves the great dome of darkness,
Scored with the limitless lines of the stars and the planets;
Like the strong palm of God,
Veined with the ancient laws,
Holding a human heart that sleeps,
Wild with rushing dreams and deep with the sadness,
That dwells at the core of all things.
Composition date is unknown - the above date represents the first publication date.
The lyrical form of this poem is unrhyming.
Duncan Campbell Scott
Other author posts
Lines In Memory Of Edmund Morris
Dear Morris--here is your letter--Can my answer reach you now Fate has left me your debtor, You will remember how; For I went away to Nantucket,
Off Riviere Du Loup
O ship incoming from the With all your cloudy tower of sail, Dashing the water to the lee, And leaning grandly to the gale,
Dream Voyageurs
To ports of balm through isles of The gentle airs are leading us; To curtained calm and tents of dusk, The wood-wild things unheeding
From Lines In Memory Of Edmund Morris
RE Morris, on the plains that we have loved, Think of the death of Akoose, fleet of foot, Who, in his prime, a herd of From sunrise, without rest, a hundred