Poems (Curwen)/The Loss of the Drummond Castle

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4489675Poems — The Loss of the Drummond CastleAnnie Isabel Curwen
The Loss of the Drummond Castle.
Midnight on the coast of France,
Midnight on the soundless sea:
Homeward bound, the good ship speeds,
All hearts beating joyously;
While the little ones below
In their berths sleep peacefully.

Homeward bound! a few short hours,
Then the voyage will be over;
Morning's light will bring in sight
The well-known cliffs of Dover;
Soon warm lips will feel the kiss
Of husband, wife, or lover.

Homeward bound! all hearts elate,
As through the midnight gloom
The ship on her mistaken course
Rushes towards her doom—
O, God! that they should come so far,
Then find a watery tomb.

Was it God's will? or man's error?
We shall never understand;
Morning's light revealed the dead
Cast on a foreign strand—
But tended—O, thank Heaven for that—
By Pity's gentle hand.

The kindly priest, who scrupled not
To read his funeral rite
Over our dead, has surely found
Favour in Heaven's sight.
O, what are creeds, unless men keep
The lamp of love alight?

And those warm-hearted Bretons who
Shed sympathetic tears
Over the dead: for every tear
God send them fruitful years;
And bless the sunny land of France
For this good deed of theirs.

And ye who sorrow for the dead—
The lov'd ones homeward bound—
Weep not, for they have reached the port
Where anchorage sure is found;
And now they wait to welcome you,
When ye are homeward bound.