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TO A DERELICT by ALEXANDER LOUIS FRASER

First Line: IN ROBES OF SPLENDOUR ONCE MEN SAW THEE LEAVE
Last Line: THAT BIDS EACH FLAPPING SAIL TO TRY THE SEAS.

In robes of splendour once men saw thee leave
Some dipping shore, borne on a swelling tide,
And to the offing thus so proudly ride,
While fancies for thy future they did weave.
We find thee now,—not where far billows heave
Round steaming prows, that sail the boundless main;
But on this tideless flat, where thou hast lain
A thing undone,—for which thy friends must grieve.

Likewise, in quiet coves within life's bay
Are stranded ones, who bring from us a tear,
As we return to some glad golden day
When their clean canvas caught the lifting cheer:
In vain for them now blows the buoyant breeze
That bids each flapping sail to try the seas.



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