The sea
is calm
tonight.
The tide
is full,
the moon
lies
fair
Upon the
straits;
- on the
French
coast
the
light
Gleams
and is
gone;
the
cliffs
of
England
stand,
Glimmering
and
vast,
out in
the
tranquil
bay.
Come to
the
window,
sweet is
the
night-air!
Only,
from the
long
line of
spray
Where
the sea
meets
the
moon-blanch'd
land,
Listen!
you hear
the
grating
roar
Of
pebbles
which
the
waves
draw
back,
and
fling,
At their
return,
up the
high
strand,
Begin,
and
cease,
and then
again
begin,
With
tremulous
cadence
slow,
and
bring
The
eternal
note of
sadness
in.
Sophocles
long ago
Heard it
on the
Aegean,
and it
brought
Into his
mind the
turbid
ebb and
flow
Of human
misery;
we
Find
also in
the
sound a
thought,
Hearing
it by
this
distant
northern
sea.
The Sea
of Faith
Was
once,
too, at
the
full,
and
round
earth's
shore
Lay like
the
folds of
a bright
girdle
furl'd.
But now
I only
hear
Its
melancholy,
long,
withdrawing
roar,
Retreating,
to the
breath
Of the
night-wind,
down the
vast
edges
drear
And
naked
shingles
of the
world.
Ah,
love,
let us
be true
To one
another!
for the
world,
which
seems
To lie
before
us like
a land
of
dreams,
So
various,
so
beautiful,
so new,
Hath
really
neither
joy, nor
love,
nor
light,
Nor
certitude,
nor
peace,
nor help
for
pain;
And we
are here
as on a
darkling
plain
Swept
with
confused
alarms
of
struggle
and
flight,
Where
ignorant
armies
clash by
night.
