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A Coral Island

Girded by wastes of sounding foam,
  Slumbers unseen the fruitful isle;
Day in, day out, the cloudless dome
  Looks down with its unending smile,
And night by night the voiceful tide
Flashes one glory far and wide.

Never by plash of cleaving oar
  The dreary long lagoons are stirred;
The rollers on the sun-bleached shore
  Beat out their mighty songs unheard.
The rounding fruit in plenty here
Ripens untended, year by year.

High set upon the western hill,
  Twin lofty palm-trees watchful stand,
That keep unending vigil still
  O'er silent cliff and untrod sand.
Nightly they show, when daylight dies,
Dark spires against the saffron skies.

Where dense the hanging tendrils grow
  The remnants of a galleon lie
(The only monuments to show
  How humankind has e'er come nigh);
Some vessel seeking gems and gold
In wild adventurous days of old.

The waters of the dark lagoon
  Lap softly round her mouldering keel,
And creepers hang in wild festoon
  From broken mast and lichened wheel,
And in the gilded figure-head
Bright-breasted songsters make their bed.

Deep in the darkness of the hold
  Where beams and nails have fallen away,
Flash gleams of light from hard-won gold,
  And one great ruby's crimson ray,
That seems as if some tropic bloom
Had budded in the faint-lit gloom.

The white bones lie about the deck
  Of those who trod it long ago,
And little, lying there, they reek
  Of that forgotten hoard below;
Their lifelong quest of wonders past;
Their joys, their sorrows ceased at last.

Notes

From THE FOREMOST TRAIL, by Cicely Fox Smith, published by Sampson Low, Marston & Co., London, UK, © 1899, pp. 68-69.

This poem is the first in a set of "Miscellaneous Verses" that were included in this book.

The poem might be viewed as a precursor to a whole set of tropical island poems including "Port o' Dreams," "Sailor's Farewell" that she would later compose, or maybe it simply shows a familiarity with Robert Louis Stevenson's TREASURE ISLAND.

Charley Noble

Contributed by Ian "Nobby" Dye of Bristol, UK.

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Comments


  • I-Like-Rhymes Moderators member
    June 21, 2006
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    Never by plash of cleaving oar

    What a wonderful line. The way Miss Fox Smith uses the poetic plash with its implict meaning of liquid, colour and sparkle instead of the more prosaic splash, paints a much more vivid picture of water falling fom the oar in this sun-soaked tropical seascape.