Pocahontas and Other Poems (New York)/The King of the Icebergs

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
4068335Pocahontas and Other Poems (New York)The King of the Icebergs1841Lydia Huntley Sigourney


THE KING OF THE ICEBERGS.



Serene the Sabbath evening fell
    Upon the Northern deep,
And lonely there a noble bark
    Across the waves did sweep;
She rode them like a living thing,
    That heeds not blast nor storm,
When, lo! the King of the Icebergs rose,
    A strange and awful form.

Upon the horizon's verge he frown'd,
    A mountain mid the main,
As erst Philistia's giant tower'd
    O'er Israel's tented plain.
And hoarsely o'er the dark blue sea
    Was a threat'ning challenge toss'd,
"Who is this, that dares, with feet of fire,
    To tread in my realm of frost?"

Yet on the gallant steamship went,
    Her heart of flame beat high,
And the stream of her fervent breath flow'd out
    In volumes o'er the sky!
So the Ice-King seized his deadly lance
    To pierce the stranger foe,
And down to his deed of vengeance rush'd,
    Troubling the depths below.


The watchful stars look'd calmly on,
    Girt with their silver zones,
When a flash of bursting glory traced
    An arch around their thrones.
For Aurora Borealis bent
    From her palace above the skies,
And the wondering billows open'd wide
    Their phosphorescent eyes.

Firm at his post the captain stood,
    Clear-soul'd and undismay'd,
And the King of the Iceberg's power defied,
    While night drew on its shade;
On, through the interdicted realm,
    With fearless prow he sped,
Though round him gathering dangers press'd,
    And nameless forms of dread.

And longer had he borne the strife,
    But he thought of those who gave
Their life and welfare to his hand
    Upon the faithless wave;
The noble and the true of heart,
    The helpless and the fair,
The child upon its mother's knee,
    That knew no fear nor care;

And felt, in their far-distant homes,
    How deep the grief and sore,
If the lip of love for them should ask,
    And they return no more.

And so his gallant ship he steer'd
    From the disastrous fray,
And full in the teeth of the southern blast
    Led on her venturous way.

"Not thus shall ye 'scape my stormy ire,"
    The King of the Icebergs spake,
And bade unloose his vassal train,
    By arctic stream and lake;
And swift a countless monster train
    Rode over the waters blue,
With their dazzling helms and stony eyes,
    A pitiless, ruffian crew.

An icy ambush around the keel
    With breathless speed they laid,
And the vengeful monarch laugh'd to see
    How strong that mesh was made;
And, clustering close, that squadron dire
    Spread over the startled flood,
While their arrows of frost flew thick, and chill'd
    The hardiest seaman's blood.

But there fell a gleam of the light above,
    That with Mercy's angel dwells,
And aided the labouring bark to foil
    The King of the Iceberg's spells:
For this, by many a hearth-stone bright,
    A strain of praise shall be,
To him who guides the wanderer home,
    And rules the boisterous sea.