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The Iceberg

I was spawned from the glacier,
  A thousand miles due north
  Beyond Cape Chidley;
  And the spawning,
  When my vast, wallowing bulk went under,
  Emerged and heaved aloft,
  Shaking down cataracts from its rocking sides,
  With mountainous surge and thunder
  Outraged the silence of the Arctic sea.
 
   Before I was thrust forth
 A thousand years I crept,
 Crawling, crawling, crawling irresistibly,
 Hid in the blue womb of the eternal ice,
 While under me the tortured rock
 Groaned,
 And over me the immeasurable desolation slept.
 
   Under the pallid dawning
 Of the lidless Arctic day
 Forever no life stirred.
 No wing of bird—
 Of ghostly owl low winnowing
 Or fleet-winged ptarmigan fleeing the pounce of death,—
 No foot of backward-glancing fox
 Half glimpsed, and vanishing like a breath,—
 No lean and gauntly stalking bear,
 Stalking his prey.
 Only the white sun, circling the white sky.
 Only the wind screaming perpetually.
 
   And then the night—
 The long night, naked, high over the roof of the world,
 Where time seemed frozen in the cold of space,—
 Now black, and torn with cry
 Of unseen voices where the storm raged by,
 Now radiant with spectral light
 As the vault of heaven split wide
 To let the flaming Polar cohorts through,
 And close ranked spears of gold and blue,
 Thin scarlet and thin green,
 Hurtled and clashed across the sphere
 And hissed in sibilant whisperings,
 And died.
 And then the stark moon, swinging low,
 Silver, indifferent, serene,
 Over the sheeted snow.
 
   But now, an Alp afloat,
 In seizure of the surreptitious tide,
 Began my long drift south to a remote
 And unimagined doom.
 Scornful of storm,
 Unjarred by thunderous buffetting of seas,
 Shearing the giant floes aside,
 Ploughing the wide-flung ice-fields in a spume
 That smoked far up my ponderous flanks,
 Onward I fared,
 My ice-blue pinnacles rendering back the sun
 In darts of sharp radiance;
 My bases fathoms deep in the dark profound.
 
   And now around me
 Life and the frigid waters all aswarm.
 The smooth wave creamed
 With tiny capelin and the small pale squid,—
 So pale the light struck through them.
 Gulls and gannets screamed
 Over the feast, and gorged themselves, and rose,
 A clamour of weaving wings, and hid
 Momently my face.
 The great bull whales
 With cavernous jaws agape,
 Scooped in the spoil, and slept,
 Their humped forms just awash, and rocking softly,—
 Or sounded down, down to the deeps, and nosed
 Along my ribbed and sunken roots,
 And in the green gloom scattered the pasturing cod.
 
   And so I voyaged on, down the dim parallels,
 Convoyed by fields
 Of countless calving seals
 Mild-featured, innocent-eyed, and unforeknowing
 The doom of the red flenching knives.
 I passed the storm-racked gate
 Of Hudson Strait,
 And savage Chidley where the warring tides
 In white wrath seethe forever.
 Down along the sounding shore
 Of iron-fanged, many-watered Labrador
 Slow weeks I shaped my course, and saw
 Dark Mokkowic and dark Napiskawa,
 And came at last off lone Belle Isle, the bane
 Of ships and snare of bergs.
 Here, by the deep conflicting currents drawn,
 I hung,
 And swung,
 The inland voices Gulfward calling me
 To ground amid my peers on the alien strand
 And roam no more.
 But then an off-shore wind,
 A great wind fraught with fate,
 Caught me and pressed me back,
 And I resumed my solitary way.
 
   Slowly I bore
 South-east by bastioned Bauld,
 And passed the sentinel light far-beaming late
 Along the liners’ track,
 And slanted out Atlanticwards, until
 Above the treacherous swaths of fog
 Faded from the view the loom of Newfoundland.
 
 
   Beautiful, ethereal
 In the blue sparkle of the gleaming day,
 A soaring miracle
 Of white immensity,
 I was the cynosure of passing ships
 That wondered and were gone,
 Their wreathed smoke trailing them beyonf the verge.
 And when in the night they passed—
 The night of stars and calm,
 Forged up and passed, with churning surge
 And throb of huge propellers, and long-drawn
 Luminous wake behind,
 And sharp, small lights in rows,
 I lay a ghost of menace chill and still,
 A shape pearl-pale and monstrous, off to leeward,
 Blurring the thin horizon line.
 
 
   Day dragged on day,
 And then came fog,
 By noon, blind-white,
 And in the night
 Black-thick and smothering the sight.
 Folded therein I waited,
 Waited I knew not what
 And heeded not,
 Greatly incurious and unconcerned.
 I heard the small waves lapping along my base,
 Lipping and whispering, lisping with bated breath
 A casual expectancy of death.
 I heard remote
 The deep, far carrying note
 Blown from the hoarse and hollow throat
 Of some lone tanker groping on her course.
 Louder and louder rose the sound
 In deepening diapason, then passed on,
 Diminishing, and dying,—
 And silence closed around.
 And in the silence came again
 Those stealthy voices,
 That whispering of death.
 
 
   And then I heard
 The thud of screws approaching.
 Near and more near,
 Louder and yet more loud,
 Through the thick dark I heard it,—
 The rush and hiss of waters as she ploughed
 Head on, unseen, unseeing,
 Toward where I stood across her path, invisible.
 And then a startled blare
 Of horror close re-echoing,—a glare
 Of sudden, stabbing searchlights
 That but obscurely pierced the gloom;
 And there
 I towered, a dim immensity of doom.
 
 
   A roar
 Of tortured waters as the giant screws,
 Reversed, thundered full steam astern.
 Yet forward still she drew, until,
 Slow answering desperate helm,
 She swerved, and all her broadside came in view,
 Crawling beneath me;
 And for a moment I saw faces, blanched,
 Stiffly agape, turned upward, and wild eyes
 Astare; and one long, quavering cry went up
 As a submerged horn gored her through and through,
 Ripping her beam wide open;
 And sullenly she listed, till her funnels
 Crashed on my steep,
 And men sprang, stumbling, for the boats.
 
 
   But now, my deep foundations
 Mined by those warmer seas, the hour had come
 When I must change.
 Slowly I leaned above her,
 Slowly at first, then faster,
 And icy fragments rained upon her decks.
 Then my enormous mass descended on her,
 A falling mountain, all obliterating,—
 And the confusion of thin, wailing cries,
 The Babel of shouts and prayers
 And shriek of steam escaping
 Suddenly died.
 And I rolled over,
 Wallowing,
 And once more came to rest,
 My long hid bases heaved up high in air.
 
 
   And now, from fogs emerging,
 I traversed blander seas,
 Forgot the fogs, the scourging
 Of sleet-whipped gales, forgot
 My austere origin, my tremendous birth,
 My journeyings, and that last cataclysm
 Of overwhelming ruin.
 My squat, pale, alien bulk
 Basked in the ambient sheen;
 And all about me, league on league outspread,
 A gulf of indigo and green.
 I laughed in the light waves laced with white,—
 Nor knew
 How swiftly shrank my girth
 Under their sly caresses, how the breath
 Of that soft wind sucked up my strength, nor how
 The sweet, insidious fingers of the sun
 Their stealthy depredations wrought upon me.
 
 
   Slowly now
 I drifted, dreaming.
 I saw the flying-fish
 With silver gleaming
 Flash from the peacock-bosomed wave
 And flicker through an arc of sunlit air
 Back to their element, desperate to elude
 The jaws of the pursuing albacore.
 
 
   Day after day
 I swung in the unhasting tide.
 Sometimes I saw the dolphin folk at play,
 Their lithe sides iridescent-dyed,
 Unheeding in their speed
 That long grey wraith,
 The shark that followed hungering beneath.
 Sometimes I saw a school
 Of porpoise rolling by
 In ranked array,
 Emerging and submerging rhythmically,
 Their blunt black bodies heading all one way
 Until they faded
 In the horizon’s dazzling line of light.
 Night after night
 I followed the low, large moon across the sky,
 Or counted the large stars on the purple dark,
 The while I wasted, wasted and took no thought,
 In drowsed entrancement caught;—
 Until one noon a wave washed over me,
 Breathed low a sobbing sigh,
 Foamed indolently, and passed on;
 And then I knew my empery was gone;
 As I, too, soon must go.
 Nor was I ill content to have it so.
 
 
   Another night
 Gloomed o’er my sight,
 With cloud, and flurries of warm, wild rain.
 Another day,
 Dawning delectably
 With amber and scarlet stain,
 Swept on its way,
 Glowing and shimmering with heavy heat.
 A lazing tuna rose
 And nosed me curiously,
 And shouldered me aside in brusque disdain,
 So had I fallen from my high estate.
 A foraging gull
 Stooped over me, touched me with webbed pink feet,
 And wheeled and skreeled away,
 Indignant at the chill.
 
 
   Last I became
 A little glancing globe of cold
 That slid and sparkled on the slow-pulsed swell.
 And then my fragile, scintillating frame
 Dissolved in ecstasy
 Of many coloured light,
 And I breathed up my soul into the air
 And merged forever in the all-solvent sea.
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