English poetry

PoetsBiographiesPoems by ThemesRandom Poem
The Rating of PoetsThe Rating of Poems

Poem by Louisa Stuart Costello


November Fifth


Anniversary of the Loss of H.M.S. Tweed

Oh, what relief to gaze on yonder sky,
    Where all is holy, calm, and purely bright!
Within, the sound of mirth and revelry
     Startles the timid ear of sober night.

And eyes are bright and silver voices thrill,
     As the harp echoes through the glittering hall;
The jest is there that wakes the laugh at will,
     And mirth has cast her fairy spell o'er all.

I turn, fair spirit of light! where peaceful thou
      Art shining in unatler'd majesty;
The thin clouds float across thy placid brow,
      And catch its silver beam in passing by.

To-night!—oh! on this night—nor many years
     Have wasted, since in sad regret and pain,
Upon the wave, the sound of woe, and tears,
     And frantic pray'rs arose—arose in vain!

Thy light was shrouded then in deepest gloom;
    On that dark coast no friendly radiance shone
To warn the victims of their gaping tomb—
    Despair and death and horror reign'd alone!

Shine on, shine on, thou treacherous planet still;
    Gild with thy beams the now untroubled wave:
Alas! thou fair and fatal cause of ill,
    Thy smiles are lovely—but too late to save!



Louisa Stuart Costello


Louisa Stuart Costello's other poems:
  1. Song (I will not ask one glance from thee)
  2. The Return to Paraclete
  3. Spanish Song
  4. Song (When others saw thee gay and vain)
  5. Miranda's Song


Poem to print Print

1129 Views



Last Poems


To Russian version


Ðåéòèíã@Mail.ru

English Poetry. E-mail eng-poetry.ru@yandex.ru