Now autumn comes and summer goes,
  And rises in my heart again,
As witchfire glimmers through a pool,
  The mystic madness of the Dane.

Blue thunder of a foaming sea
  Reverberating through my sleep,
White billowing sails that fill and flee
  Across a wind-swept restless deep

They speak to me with subtle tongue
  Of blue-bright ways my forbears trod,
When time the bearded Vikings bent
  Their oars against the winds of God.

And I am but a common man
  Who treads a dreary way ashore,
But oceans thunder in my dreams,
And blue waves break on creaking beams,
And foaming water swirls and creams
  About the strongly bending oar.

When summer goes and autumn comes
  To paint the leaves with sombre fires,
I feel, like throbs of distant drums,
  The urge of distant nameless sires.

This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.