Page 34 - Poetry-Romance
P. 34

The Sea

             She was rich and of high degree;
             A poor and unknown artist he.
             “Paint me,” she said, “a view of the sea.”

             So he painted the sea as it looked the day
             That Aphrodite arose from its spray;
             And it broke, as she gazed on its face the while,
             Into its countless-dimpled smile.
             “What a poky, stupid picture!” said she;
             “I don’t believe he can paint the sea!”
             Then he painted a raging, tossing sea,
             Storming, with fierce and sudden shock,
             Wild cries, and writhing tongues of foam,
             A towering, mighty fastness-rock.
             In its sides, above those leaping crests,
             The thronging sea-birds built their nests.
             “What a disagreeable daub!” said she;
             “Why, it isn’t anything like the sea!”

             Then he painted a stretch of hot, brown sand,
             With a big hotel on either band,
             And a handsome pavilion for the band,
             Not a sign of the water to be seen
             Except one faint little streak of green.
             “What a perfectly exquisite picture!” said she;
             “It’s the very image of the sea!”

             —(Century Magazine, 1882)



















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