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Poncé De Léon

By a black wharf I stood lately,
  When the night was at its noon;
Keen, malicious stars were shining,
  And a wicked, white-faced moon.
 
And I saw a stately vessel,
  Built in fashion quaint and old;
From her masthead, in the moonlight,
  Hung a flag of faded gold.
 
Black with age her masts and spars were,
  Black with age her ropes and rails;
Like a ghost through cere-cloths gazing
  Shone the white moon through her sails.
 
Not a movement stirred the stillness,
  Not a sound the silence broke,
Save alone the livid water
  Lapping round her sides of oak.
 
Then to her unseen commander
  Spake I, as to one I knew’€”
‘€œDon Juan Poncé de Léon,
  I have waited long for you.
 
‘€œTake me with you, I implore you!
  Take me with you on your quest
For the Fount of Youth Eternal,
  For the Islands of the Blest.'€
 
Then above the bulwarks ancient
  I beheld a head arise;
And the moon with ghastly glimmer
  Lit its sad and hollow eyes.
 
‘€œGrieved am I, señor, and sorry,'€
  Very courteously it said,
‘€œThat I may not take you with me’€”
  But I only take the Dead.
 
‘€œThese alone may dare the voyage,
  These alone sail on the quest
For the Fount of Youth Eternal,
  For the Islands of the Blest.'€
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