Atlantis
By Conrad Aiken.
There was an island in the sea
That out of immortal chaos reared
Towers of topaz, trees of pearl,
For maidens adored and warriors feared.
Long ago it sunk in the sea;
And now, a thousand fathoms deep,
Sea-worms above it whirl their lamps,
Crabs on the pale mosaic creep.
Voyagers over that haunted sea
Hear from the waters under the keel
A sound that is not wave or foam;
Nor do they only hear, but feel
The timbers quiver, as eerily comes
Up from the dark an elfin singing
Of happy as none can be,
And bells an ethereal anthem ringing.
Thereafter, where they go or come,
They will be silent; they have heard
Out of the infinite of the soul
An incommunicable word;
Thereafter, they are as lovers who
Over an infinite brightness learn:
"It is Atlantis!", all their speech:
"To lost Atlantis have we been."
By Conrad Aiken.
There was an island in the sea
That out of immortal chaos reared
Towers of topaz, trees of pearl,
For maidens adored and warriors feared.
Long ago it sunk in the sea;
And now, a thousand fathoms deep,
Sea-worms above it whirl their lamps,
Crabs on the pale mosaic creep.
Voyagers over that haunted sea
Hear from the waters under the keel
A sound that is not wave or foam;
Nor do they only hear, but feel
The timbers quiver, as eerily comes
Up from the dark an elfin singing
Of happy as none can be,
And bells an ethereal anthem ringing.
Thereafter, where they go or come,
They will be silent; they have heard
Out of the infinite of the soul
An incommunicable word;
Thereafter, they are as lovers who
Over an infinite brightness learn:
"It is Atlantis!", all their speech:
"To lost Atlantis have we been."