STEER, bold mariner, on! albeit witlings deride thee, And the steersman drop idly his hand at the helm. Ever and ever to westward! there must the coast be discovered, If it but lie distinct, luminous lie in thy mind. Trust to the God that leads thee, and follow the sea that is silent; Did it not yet exist, now would it rise from the flood. Nature with Genius stands united in league everlasting; What is promised by one, surely the other performs. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE THANKSGIVING IN BOSTON HARBOR [JUNE 12, 1630] by HEZEKIAH BUTTERWORTH THE PRETTY GIRL OF LOCH DAN by SAMUEL FERGUSON JEST 'FORE CHRISTMAS by EUGENE FIELD TO HIS WINDING-SHEET by ROBERT HERRICK A HIGH-TONED OLD CHRISTIAN WOMAN by WALLACE STEVENS THE JEWISH MARTYRS by W. V. B. |