Voyagers

Where are they, that song and tale
Tell of? lands our childhood knew?
Sea-locked Faerylands that trail
Morning summits, dim with dew,
Crimson o'er a crimson sail.

Where in dreams we entered on
Wonders eyes have never seen:
Whither often we have gone,
Sailing a dream-brigantine
On from voyaging dawn to dawn.

Leons seeking lands of song;
Fabled fountains pouring spray;
Where our anchors dropped among
Corals of some tropic bay,
With its swarthy native throng.

Shoulder ax and arquebus!
We may find it! past yon range
Of sierras, vaporous,
Rich with gold and wild and strange
That lost region dear to us.

Yet, behold, although our zeal
Darien summits may subdue,
Our Balboa eyes reveal
But a vaster sea come to
New endeavor for our keel.

Yet! who sails with face set hard
Westward, while behind him lies
Unfaith, where his dreams keep guard
Round it, in the sunset skies,
He may reach it afterward.

Madison Julius Cawein

Suggested Poems

Explore a curated selection of verses that share themes, styles, and emotional resonance with the poem you've just read.