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CONTENTS
Preface
Introduction
THE OCEAN'S SELF, MAN'S LOVE FOR IT,
ITS MESSAGE AND ITS CALL
PAGE
XV
xxi
Roll on, thou deep and dark, blue ocean
Byron
Shelley
James Thomson
. B. W. Procter
John Wilson
Edwin Atherstone
"Beneath their feet a burnished ocean lay" C. Mackay
"With husky-haughty lips, O sea !'
Bryant II
E. H. Brodie
Whitman
Thomas Wade
12
13
Felicia Hemans
14
Matthew Arnold
17
"I heard, or seemed to hear "
1 Where the piece is an extract from a longer poem the first few
B. W. Procter
18
"The sea is calm to-night'
words are used as a title.
ITS WINDS, TIDES AND WATERS, ITS MYSTERY,
MUSIC AND COLOURS
"Methinks the wind has spoke "
Shakespeare
21
Spenser 23
"Thou remember'st"
Linger where the pebble-paven shore
"Now lay thine ear
The Floor of the Sea
"The world below the brine "
In Prais of Sea-farynge Men: In hope of
Goode Fortune
Sea Fardingers: Theyr Evill Fortune
Milman 73
Anonymous
73
75
"As one that in a silver vision floats
"The helm, to his strong arm
God Help our Men at Sea
The Diver
The Sailor-Boy
"
Tennyson 96
96
Anonymous 98
Dryden 99
Spanish Galleons (As first seen by an Aztec)
99
The Spanish Lady's Love
The Beautiful Lady of Kent; or, The
Shakespeare 119
Old Song
120
121
124
129
Constance and Anthony
Jack Robinson
Bryan and Pereene
The Gallant Seaman's Return from the
Indies
Poor Lycon
Soldier and Sailor
The Inchcape Rock
The High Tide on the Coast of Lincoln-
shire, 1571.
J. Grainger 157
Jean Ingelow 166