Page:Poems Sigourney, 1834.pdf/169

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With mouldering bones the deeps are white, From the ice-clad pole to the tropics bright, The mermaid hath twisted her fingers cold, With the mesh of the sea-boy's curls of gold, And the gods of ocean have frowned to see The mariner's bed 'mid their halls of glee; Hath earth no graves, that ye thus must spread The boundless sea with the thronging dead?

Ye build! ye build! but ye enter not in; Like the tribes whom the desert devoured in their sin, From the land of promise, ye fade and die, Ere its verdure gleams forth on your wearied eye. As the cloud-crowned pyramids' founders sleep Noteless and lost in oblivion deep, Ye slumber unmarked 'mid the desolate main, While the wonder and pride of your works remain.